A New Dawn for Sunrise
The recent restoration of Sunrise undertaken by 20th Century Fox,
the Academy Film Archive and the British Film Institute (BFI) was
unique for a number of reasons, not least of which was the ethic
that shaped the work from start to finish. Throughout the project,
which included the first-ever restoration of the film's Movietone
soundtrack, all three parties were determined to treat the 1927
film as the slightly flawed gem that it is. As BFI technical director
Joao Oliveria puts it, "Sunrise is like an elegant old lady
who should show her age but still retain her dignity."
Sunrise
was a big winner at the first Academy Awards ceremony in 1929,
taking statuettes for cinematography, for lead actress (Janet
Gaynor) and for "Most Unique and Artistic Production," an
honor that was never awarded again. When the Academy began planning
its 75th anniversary celebration, "the stars just aligned," says
Schawn Belston, director of film preservation at Fox. "We
had been talking with the BFI about collaborating on something;
the 75th anniversary of the Academy Awards was around the corner,
and Sunrise plays an important role in that; and Fox Home Video
had recently started the Studio Classics DVD line, which keys off
of Academy Award winners. So suddenly everyone was interested in
Sunrise at the same time." There were at least two original
negatives for Sunrise, one for the Movietone version (1.20:1) that
was exhibited in the few North
American theaters equipped with Fox's patented Movietone sound
system, and one for the full-aperture (1.33:1) silent version that
was exhibited everywhere else. Both negatives were lost in 1937,
when a fire destroyed the New Jersey storage facility that housed
Fox's film materials. When the restoration team began gathering
materials last year, the most viable source for their work was
determined to be a 1936 diacetate print that had the Movietone
track, held by the BFI's National Film and Television Archive.
(Fox had a fine-grain master positive that was in worse shape,
and the Academy had a safety print from the 1960s.) At an archive
in Prague, Oliveria and David Pierce, director of the BFI archive,
discovered a full-aperture nitrate print that had been made in
1927, but it was missing almost a reel of footage and featured
different camera angles and edits. "Restoring silent movies
is always a bit of a conundrum because you're dealing with A- and
B-camera negatives, and sometimes C- and D-camera negatives, that
are all different," notes Michael Pogorzelski, director of
the Academy Film Archive. "The only way to generate more than
one negative in those days was to have more than one camera film
the action, and the A-camera footage was always intended for the
film's home audience. For Sunrise, the European market was the
secondary market." The restoration team eventually decided
to treat the BFI's diacetate print "as the official version
of the film, and fix it up as best we could," says Belston.
Oliveria
began by using a wet-gate step contact printer to make a new dupe
negative from the 1936 print, sections of which were
already deteriorating. "That was the hardest part of the project,
and Joao did a brilliant job," Belston remarks. After transferring
the Movietone track to digital tape, the BFI shipped the new materials
to Los Angeles.
Pogorzelski supervised the restoration of the soundtrack, which
was carried out by John Polito at Audio Mechanics in Burbank. "John
is very, very good at what he does, and he's very patient," says
Pogorzelski. "Sunrise was one of the earliest examples of
sound on film, and we all felt it was extremely important that
the track be restored to what it sounded like in 1927, warts and
all. In the digital realm it's extremely easy to take out anything
that sounds like a defect - a pop or hiss or crackle - but depending
on the studio and time period, that could actually be what the
film sounded like. We wanted to very sure we weren't removing something
that had always been there, so we made a transfer of the print
onto video with the track area visible, and if we heard something
[questionable] we could go back to the picture and determine whether
it was an artifact induced by time or wear. If it was, we corrected
it. It's an extremely rough track, but it's also very good - those
variable-density tracks have such range of frequency response between
the very lowest bass and the highest treble. We left in a lot of
hiss, a lot of noise floor problems, because that's what Sunrise
sounded like in 1927. You can make a 1927 track sound like Jurassic
Park if you want to, but that isn't restoration; it's something
else."
Maintaining this ethic led the restoration team to leave
occasional out-of-sync sound effects out of sync, instead of correcting
their
timing. The most noticeable example is the night scene in which
the Man (George O'Brien) furtively enters a barn and jumps when
a horse suddenly kicks over a bucket nearby. As it plays out in
the film, the horse actually enters the frame before the sound
effect announces the animal's presence and the Man reacts. "That
was always out of sync," Pogorzelski says with a smile. "That
would be so easy to correct, but it wouldn't be true." (Indeed,
in the June 1929 issue of AC, Fox film editor Louis Loeffler wrote
about the difficulties of cutting Movietone films and keeping the
sound in sync.)
One tricky aspect of restoring the picture involved
eliminating the several black frames that preceded and followed
every intertitle
in the 1936 print. "We're surmising that in order to keep
the picture and track in sync whenever they lost picture, they'd
just slug at an intertitle to keep the picture the same length
as the soundtrack," explains Belston. "We had Cinesite
scan the intertitles and digitally duplicate some frames to stretch
them out a bit. It was more complicated than we originally anticipated
because all of the titles feature some sort of animation; often
there's a faint mist floating behind the text, and many of the
words themselves are animated."
The rest of the work on
the picture was done at YCM Laboratories in Burbank. To aug-ment
a few sequences in the new dupe, Belston had YCM copy sections
of Fox's fine-grain and build them as B-rolls. He explains, "Our
fine-grain is inferior to the 1936 print in terms of quality but
is actually more complete. Two sequences in particular, the tracking
shot in the swamp and the peasant-dance sequence in the city, play
a bit longer in the fine-grain, so in an effort to make the most
complete version possible we picked up those sections from our
material."
Whereas most film preservationists' work ends with
the creation of a new print, Belston and Pogorzelski were able
to personally
supervise the video transfer of Sunrise, thereby ensuring that
home-video audiences would see the same film they had created in
the lab. "In doing the video transfer, we were very careful
to maintain the tonal range of what we'd seen on the diacetate
print," says Belston. "It's so easy to make things too
clean and too contrasty in telecine, and the beautiful thing about
the photography in Sunrise is the beautiful middle range of tones.
It's not stark black-and-white; it has a lovely, soft gray quality.
With the beautiful new dupe we had, we could've cranked it up and
made it look like Citizen Kane, but that's the last thing we wanted
to do."
Pogorzelski, who calls the opportunity to supervise
a video transfer "extremely
rare" in his line of work, observes, "When the Academy
gets involved in a restoration, we're adamant about not trying
to turn a film into something that it never was, but one thing
that's a little hard to keep control over with the studios is the
video transfer and the DVD and TV versions. At almost every studio,
the home-video department is an entity unto itself, and it goes
to the beat of its own drum; it's therefore hard for us to keep
a hand on what the film looks and sounds like in its home-video
incarnation. It's painful when you have a print that you've done
all this work on, and then the DVD doesn't look remotely like what
you did. Thankfully, this is happening less and less; cinematographers
are able to supervise the transfers of films they have shot, or
restorationists are able to guide the film through the process.
The high standards of the DVD audience and DVD collectors help
keep a critical eye fixed on these products to ensure they are
as good as they can be."
- Rachael K. Bosley
(with additional reporting
by David Samuelson)
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