All film stocks decompose over time. Sometimes this decomposition is irreversible — which explains why an estimated 75% of American silent films are considered lost. We visited The George Eastman Museum in Rochester, New York, to see how its team rescues old movies and restores them to their former glory. The Eastman Museum runs one of the world's top film-preservation programs. Its archives of over 28,000 films include the personal collections of directors like Spike Lee and Martin Scorsese and carefully controlled nitrate vaults containing over 26 million feet of film. The museum's preservation projects include the silent films of Cecil B. DeMille and Georges Méliès, along with Stanley Kubrick's first film, “Fear and Desire,“ from 1953, and Orson Welles' once-lost work “Too Much Johnson,“ from 1938. Its recent restoration of the 1935 Oscar Micheaux film “Murder in Harlem“ screened at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival. For more from The George Eastman Museum, visit: MORE MOVIES INSIDER VIDEOS: How 8 Scenes Were Filmed To Look Like One Take | Movies Insider Why 'The Mandalorian' Uses Virtual Sets Over Green Screen | Movies Insider How Stunt Performers Pull Off Dangerous Falls In Movies & TV Shows | Movies Insider ------------------------------------------------------ #Restoration #OldMovies #MoviesInsider Insider is great journalism about what passionate people actually want to know. That’s everything from news to food, celebrity to science, politics to sports and all the rest. It’s smart. It’s fearless. It’s fun. We push the boundaries of digital storytelling. Our mission is to inform and inspire. Subscribe to our channel and visit us at: Insider on Facebook: Insider on Instagram: Insider on Twitter: Insider on Snapchat: Movies Insider on Snapchat: Insider on TikTok: @insider How Old Movies Are Professionally Restored | Movies Insider
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