Tag: FHF

  • Viacom18, FHF inaugurates 5th edition of Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2019

    Viacom18, FHF inaugurates 5th edition of Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2019

    MUMBAI: The 5th edition of the Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India (FPRWI) 2019 was inaugurated on December 8, at Hyderabad’s State Gallery of Art. Supported by Viacom18, the initiative of Film Heritage Foundation (FHF) and International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF) in collaboration with Annapurna Studios is being held from 8th to 15th December, 2019 in Hyderabad.

    The workshop had Shyam Benegal and Chiranjeevi Konidela as the Guests of Honour. The ceremony was held in the presence of celebrated luminaries including Akkineni Nagarjuna, Amala Akkineni, S.S. Rajamouli, Suresh Babu, Jamuna J, Allu Arvind, Shobu Yarlagadda, Raghavendra Rao, T. Subbarami Reddy, Ramesh Prasad and Govt. of Telangana  IT & Industries and Commerce Principal Secretary Jayesh Ranjan.  Film Heritage Foundation Founder & Director Shivendra Singh Dungarpur spoke about the foundation’s preservation, education and outreach initiatives devoted to save the moving image heritage in India and the subcontinent.  Also present at the opening were David Walsh, Training and Outreach Coordinator, FIAF and eminent members of the international faculty.

    Dr. Nora Kennedy, Sherman Fairchild Conservator in Charge of the Department of Photograph Conservation, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York was conferred with the Film Heritage Foundation Outstanding Achievement Award and Dr. Ray Edmondson, founder of the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia was given the Lifetime Achievement Award during the ceremony.

    Commenting on bringing the workshop to Hyderabad this year, Dungarpur said, “Over the last four years, we’ve been the Pied Pipers of film heritage drawing over 200 conservators, librarians, film scholars, academics, cinematographers, editors, colourists and technicians into our fold, eager to learn to save remarkable film patrimonies from our part of the world and showcase the richness and diversity of a heritage that has been lying dormant and forgotten for decades. And this number will cross the 270 mark this year. We are now ready to consolidate and build the country’s first world-class Centre of the Moving Image, an institution devoted to the art of film and we hope that we can count on the support of the film industry, the government and the public to make our vision a reality.”

    Speaking on the association with this initiative, Viacom18  Group CEO and MD Sudhanshu Vats said, “India is a country of storytellers and the oldest stories in the world originate from here. Over the years, our cinema has portrayed the culture and heritage of India. At Viacom18, we realise the importance of preserving these stories that form a part of the Indian culture for the benefit of our future generations. As India’s foremost storytellers, we connect deeply with this ethos and our support to Film Heritage Foundation is a conflux of this shared sentiment. The Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop is a step in that direction and we at Viacom18 are proud to be associated with this initiative.”

    Shyam Benegal, said, “I grew up in Trimulgherry, a suburb of Secunderabad, which had a sizeable military presence of both Indian and British army units before India became Independent. There were three cinemas in the cantonment area.  Of the three, the Garrison Cinema was in our neighbourhood.  Shows on weekdays consisted of Indian language films – Hindi, Marathi, Telugu, Tamil and Malayalam.  Weekend screenings were reserved for English language Hollywood films. The result was that I saw practically every film shown at the Garrison Cinema during my growing up years.  It is obvious that my ambition to become a filmmaker germinated during that time. Films are an integral part of our lives and archiving films is a way of preserving our visual history, our heritage and our memories. This is why Film Heritage Foundation’s commitment to training film archivists is important not only to preserve Indian cinema, but also the audio-visual history of our country for posterity.”

    Chiranjeevi, who also graced the occasion as the Guest of Honour, added, “Film Heritage Foundation is not just saving physical reels of film, but also our life’s work as well as the memories of the thousands of people who saw and loved our films and the films that the giants of our previous generations have produced. The Foundation’s work will ensure that future generations can watch and appreciate our films and remember us and the craze for films that we saw in our time.”

    Nagarjuna Akkineni, one of the most revered actors of the Telegu Film Industry said, “Here at Annapurna Studios we have created a museum just for the countless awards my father won in his lifetime. When you look back on the incredible films he made – “Laila Majnu”, “Devadasu”, “Missamma”, “Mayabazar”, “Batasari”, “Premabhishekham” it is a magnificent body of work that we must keep alive for future generations to appreciate the work of a truly legendary actor of Indian cinema.”

    Commenting on the inauguration, eminent film director and screenwriter, S.S. Rajamouli, said, “I was very impressed to hear that Film Heritage Foundation has taken up the challenge to preserve every element that makes up the fabric of our cinematic heritage from reels of film to cameras, posters, lobby cards, scripts etc. They have also developed a superb training program in film preservation and have been conducting these workshops around the country over the last few years to develop a local resource of future film archivists. But they cannot do this alone. The film industry, the government and the public must come forward to support this noble cause in any way that we can do to save our films for posterity."

    Veteran actress Jamuna J who was also present at the Opening Ceremony said, “I have acted in close to 200 films in my career not just in Telugu, but in Kannada, Tamil and Hindi. I have received innumerable awards for my work that line the walls of my home and I have photo albums and newspaper articles that capture the richness of my life in cinema, but I don’t know what will happen to all this that I have painstakingly collected over the years to record my life on the silver screen. It upsets me to see the poor quality versions of my films that are available today. I think the Telugu film industry has been very neglectful of their heritage. I have been interacting with Film Heritage Foundation and I am glad that they thought of bringing their film preservation workshop to Hyderabad, the heart of the Telugu film industry. I hope that this workshop will be a wake-up call to the industry that we need to preserve our films.”

    Daggubati Suresh Babu added, “I was very pleased to hear about the work that Film Heritage Foundation has been doing as I know the importance of preserving the work of my father and other pioneers like him. But unlike them we need to think ahead and have a preservation plan in place for all the films that we continue to produce. As a film industry, we must support Film Heritage Foundation’s efforts as it is in our interest to preserve our work so that it can face the challenges of obsolescence and the relentless march of technology in the digital era that we live in.”

    The week-long intensive program certified by FIAF, will train a total of 80 students from India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh Sri Lanka and Afghanistan. Participants will be trained in processes to preserve, archive and restore both celluloid and digital films and film-related paper and photographic materials. Global experts like Dr. Ray Edmondson – legendary film archivist and founder of the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia, Robert Byrne – President of the San Francisco Silent Film Festival, Dr. Adelheid Heftberger – Head of Film Access, Bundesarchiv, German Federal Archive, Dawn Jaros – Head of Library Conservation, Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Science, Marianna de Sanctis, Head of Film Repair, L’Immagine Ritrovata among others, will be a part of the esteemed faculty of the workshop.

    The 5th edition, for the first time will welcome 12 film archivists and film technicians from the Presidential Palace ARG Archive and the Afghan Film Organization including Dr. Sahraa Karimi, Director General of the Afghan Film Organization, who were responsible for saving their films from destruction under the Taliban regime. Practical sessions in chemical treatment of film in serious condition will also be introduced in FPRWI 2019. Additionally, practical sessions with the latest and world class ARRISCAN XT will give participants hands-on training on scanning archival film.

    FPRWI 2019 is supported by globally renowned industry bodies like The Film Foundation’s World Cinema Project, The Academy of Motion Picture, Arts & Sciences, Fondazione Cineteca di Bologna, L’Immagine Ritrovata, Bundesarchiv (German Federal Archives), Cinemateca Portuguesa, Institut National de L’Audiovisuel (INA), Haghefilm Digitaal, San Francisco Silent Film Festival, FIAT/IFTA, A.V. Preservation by Reto, Media Inventions s.c., The Criterion Collection, Prasad Film Laboratories Pvt. Ltd. and ARRI. Previous editions of the workshop have been conducted in Mumbai in 2015, Pune in 2016, Chennai in 2017 and Kolkata in 2018.

  • Committed to Saving India’s Cinematic Heritage, Viacom18 partners with Film Heritage Foundation for the 4th Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2018

    Committed to Saving India’s Cinematic Heritage, Viacom18 partners with Film Heritage Foundation for the 4th Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2018

    MUMBAI: Celebrating a century of Bengali cinema, Viacom18 and Film Heritage Foundation (FHF) announces the 4th Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2018 (FPRWI) in Kolkata. After successfully partnering with the FHF for the past 3 years, supporting the workshop in Mumbai, Pune and Chennai, the objective of FPRWI 2018 is to create awareness on the urgent need to preserve the moving image heritage in the Bengali film industry thereby, making it accessible to global audiences. Applications for the week-long workshop are currently open on http://filmheritagefoundation.co.in/film-preservation-restoration-workshop-india-2018/  

    Speaking about the Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop, Sudhanshu Vats, Group CEO and Managing Director Designate, Viacom18 said: “India is a country of epic tales that weave through every aspect of our life. Our cinema has been one of the foremost tools of bringing these stories to form our nation’s collective consciousness, across regions and languages. For close to two and a half decades, starting circa 1950, Bengali cinema moulded this collective conscious as it saw a galaxy of talented directors, actors and musicians shape not only the region’s cinema but also setting the narrative for progressive Indian cinema. Personalities like Satyajit Ray, Ritwick Ghatak, Mrinal Sen, Uttam Kumar, Aparna Sen, Sharmila Tagore et al not only were revered throughout the world as film personalities but also shaped the discourse of socio-political culture both within and outside of India. Their works define our times and as such it is imperative that we preserve and restore them so that the generations to come appreciate our rich cultural heritage. It is this single philosophy that prompted us to partner Film Heritage Foundation through the last 3 years and after Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu, bring the Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop to the Bengali film industry.”

    FPRWI will focus on the need to skill and train a resource of archivists to take on the challenge of preserving and archiving film heritage. The workshop will take place in Kolkata, India from November 15 – 22, 2018 at Rabindranath Tagore Center and will have participation from India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar and Malaysia. In addition to the workshop, daily screening sessions of restored classics will take place at Nandan and Rabindra Sadan in Kolkata.

    Speaking about bringing the workshop to Kolkata this year, Shivendra Singh Dungarpur, Founder, Film Heritage Foundation said, “When we conducted the first film preservation and restoration workshop in Mumbai in 2015, people were not aware that films needed to be preserved. I am proud to say that after having conducted these workshops in Mumbai, Pune and Chennai over the last three years in partnership with the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF), we are already seeing the impact. Selecting Kolkata as a venue for our fourth workshop was a foregone conclusion with Bengal being the jewel in the crown of India’s film heritage. Unfortunately, very little survives of this precious legacy. “Jamai Babu” (1931) is only one Bengali film of the silent era that survives. We hope to change this scenario by creating awareness and building capability. What is truly incredible about this workshop is that 30 students will get to do the course absolutely free of cost.

    If urgent steps are not taken these films will be just faint memories from another time and the generations to come will forget the existence of the great artists who came before and from whom we learned so much.”

    FPRWI 2018 is supported by globally renowned industry bodies like The Academy of Motion Picture, Arts & Sciences, L’Immagine Ritrovata, Fondazione Cineteca di Bologna, British Film Institute, The Criterion Collection, the Irish Film Institute, the Austrian Film Museum, Eye Filmmuseum, Bundesarchiv (German Federal Archives), the Indiana University Libraries Moving Image Archive, Centre for Creative Photography, University of Arizona, ARRI and Media Inventions.

    FPRWI is considered to be the most comprehensive workshop of its kind, and has become a model for the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF) for its international training programs. The workshop is certified by FIAF and is designed to cover the subject through theory and practical sessions with detailed insight about the best practices of preservation and restoration for films and film-related paper and photographic material. The 2018 edition of the workshop will introduce a fresh format where in the selected participants will be given an opportunity to choose an area of specialization from 4 broad categories including Film Handling and Repair, Digital Preservation and Restoration, Cataloguing and Paper, and Photographic Conservation. The workshop will also have a practical session with the latest and world class ARRISCAN XT giving participants hands-on training on film scanning.

    FPRWI 2018 will be conducted by a faculty of international experts from leading institutions around the world including:

    David Walsh – FIAF – Film and digital technology and preservation strategies
    Camille Blot-Wellens – FIAF – Film identification
    Thelma Ross – FIAF – Documentation and Cataloguing
    Kieron Webb – British Film Institute – Film selection
    Marianna de Sanctis – L’Immagine Ritrovata – Film Repair
    Benjamin Tucker – Film handling
    Mick Newnham – Film in bad condition
    Dawn Jaros – Academy of Motion Picture, Arts & Sciences – Paper conservation
    Dana Hemmenway – Centre for Creative Photography, University of Arizona – Photograph conservation
    Jeroen de Mol – Eye Filmmuseum – Digital preservation
    Dave Rice – Practical digital technology
    Thilo Gottschling – ARRI – film scanning
    Giles Sherwood – The Criterion Collection – Colour Grading
    Cara Shatzman – The Criterion Collection – Digital Restoration
    Oliver Danner – Bundesarchiv – Soundtrack preservation
    Davide Pozzi – L’Immagine Ritrovata – Restoration ethics and practice
    Cecilia Cenciarelli – Fondazione Cineteca di Bologna – Restoration case study
    Lee Kline – The Criterion Collection – Restoration case study
    Jakub Stadnik – Media Innovations – Soundtrack preservation
    Kasandra O’Connell – Archive management policies and business plans
    Jurij Meden – Running a digitization project
    Andy Uhrich – Access presentation and programming

    Applications for the 2018 workshop are open until October 1, 2018. Selected applicants will be notified and scholarships will be presented to deserving local and international candidates.

  • Viacom18 partners with FHF in its film restoration and archiving for third year

    MUMBAI:  Viacom18 announced its support to the Film Heritage Foundation (FHF) for the annual Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India being held from 7 to 14 October 2017 in Chennai.

    The partnership was flagged off for the third consecutive year at an event held today in the city and was attended by Viacom 18 group CEO Sudhanshu Vats, legendary actor and producer Kamal Haasan, renowned film-maker Mani Ratnam and celebrated film-maker, archivist and founder director of Film Heritage Foundation Shivendra Singh Dungarpur.

    The Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2017 aims to train an indigenous pool of film archivists and restorers as well as to create awareness about the urgent need to save India’s cinematic heritage. With previous editions being held in Mumbai and Pune, this year the workshop hopes to not create awareness among  the South Indian film industry to this urgent issue but to build on the movement that has been created all over India as well as in neighboring countries.

    “At the heart of it, civilization is a chronicle of stories across generations. As India’s foremost storytellers we connect deeply with this ethos and our support to Film Heritage Foundation is a confluence of this shared belief. India’s culture and heritage is captured creatively and reflected through our films and therefore, these become historical artefacts representative of the times they were created in. It is pertinent that this content is preserved for reference as well as archived for perusal by future generations”, Vats said.

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    Dungarpur added, “Film Heritage Foundation is committed to preserve the film heritage of India across various genres and languages. Bringing the workshop to Chennai this year, our aim is to create awareness about the urgent need to preserve India’s film heritage including the rich regional film heritage of the South Indian film industry. The programme this year is further strengthened with support of Viacom18 and enriched by partnering with the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF), the Film Foundation’s World Cinema Project, L’Immagine Ritrovata, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, Prasad Corp., La Cinémathèque Française, Imperial War Museums, Fondazione Cineteca di Bologna, the Finnish Film Archive and the Czech National Film Archive and Criterion Collection.”

    Open to applicants from India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh, the Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2017 will extensively focus on repairing damaged and decayed celluloid film, restore and preserve film posters, lobby cards, song booklets and photographs, techniques of digital preservation and restoration etc.

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    There are several scholarships available for deserving candidates along with job opportunities at FHF on successful completion of the course.

    Speaking about the workshop, Haasan said, “I am very happy and proud to know that the Film Heritage Foundation has decided to come to Chennai to run a workshop on film archiving. I have seen them do it once in Pune. There were about 50 students and I was really moved. The film industry should come forward to conserve, save and keep our film heritage intact. And this very important workshop is going to teach future archivists how to go about preserving film.It is a very important workshop for those interested in cinema itself, cinema not only of today but of yesterday.”

    Eminent experts from across the globe such as FIAF’s Head of Training and Outreach David Walsh, Camille Blot-Wellens from FIAF, Tina Kelly from Imperial War Museum, Dawn Jaros from the Academy of Motion Picture, Arts & Sciences, Emilie Cauquy from La Cinémathèque française, and Marianna De Sanctis from L’Immagine Ritrovata, Bologna, amongst others will comprise the faculty of the workshop.

  • Viacom18 partners FHF for Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2016

    Viacom18 partners FHF for Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2016

    MUMBAI: Viacom18 and Film Heritage Foundation (FHF) have joined hands for the second time in a row with an aim to save and uphold the legacy of India’s cinematic heritage. 

    The workshop titled ‘Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2016’ will take place from 26 February – 6 March in Pune and will involve lectures, presentations and practical classes that will be conducted by leading international experts in the field. 

    The workshop will be inaugurated by veteran actor Naseeruddin Shah in the presence of Ministry of Information and Broadcasting secretary Sunil Arora, Viacom 18 Media group CEO Sudhanshu Vats, Film Heritage Foundation founder director Shivendra Singh Dungarpu and National Film Archive of India director Prakash Magdum.

    Extending support to this unique initiative, Vats said, “We strongly believe that every enterprise has to be global and social at the same time. At Viacom18, we know for a fact that India is a country of storytellers; in fact the largest and oldest stories in the world come from here. And so we realise how important it is to preserve our cultural heritage for the benefit of the future generations. We look forward to educate and interact with cinema enthusiasts during the course of the film preservation and restoration workshop 2016.”

    Dungarpur added, “After receiving a great response in the first year itself, we are back again with a longer, more advanced and intensive Film Preservation and Restoration Workshop for all those who understand the importance of the rich cinematic legacy of India and who wish to learn, explore and contribute and contribute to saving our film heritage. FHF would like to thank Sudhanshu Vats for being one of the first people from the media and film industry to have the vision to recognise the importance of our cause and for Viacom’s unstinting support.”

    With a committee of panelists including some of the most influential names from the industry from across the globe, this year the workshop will give practical training to help make abled archivists, which is a dire need for cinema in India. This also opens up a career alternative for film students of many acclaimed universities across India, allowing them to learn more in-depth knowledge on this topic. 

    With a mix of technical workshops on the craft of preservation and lectures specially designed by FIAF Technical Commission head David Walsh there will also be a daily screening of a great Indian classic.

    Extending his support to the initiative, Shah said, “When Shivendra called me and requested me to be the chief guest at the opening ceremony of the Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2016, I was very happy to accept. There has been a growing awareness about how much of our cinematic legacy has been lost over the years for various reasons and the urgent need to preserve what is left of it. I think it’s great that Film Heritage Foundation and National Film Archive of India have come together with FIAF to conduct this important workshop to train people in the highly specialised field of film archiving which is essential if we are to save our cinematic heritage.”

  • Viacom18 partners FHF for Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2016

    Viacom18 partners FHF for Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2016

    MUMBAI: Viacom18 and Film Heritage Foundation (FHF) have joined hands for the second time in a row with an aim to save and uphold the legacy of India’s cinematic heritage. 

    The workshop titled ‘Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2016’ will take place from 26 February – 6 March in Pune and will involve lectures, presentations and practical classes that will be conducted by leading international experts in the field. 

    The workshop will be inaugurated by veteran actor Naseeruddin Shah in the presence of Ministry of Information and Broadcasting secretary Sunil Arora, Viacom 18 Media group CEO Sudhanshu Vats, Film Heritage Foundation founder director Shivendra Singh Dungarpu and National Film Archive of India director Prakash Magdum.

    Extending support to this unique initiative, Vats said, “We strongly believe that every enterprise has to be global and social at the same time. At Viacom18, we know for a fact that India is a country of storytellers; in fact the largest and oldest stories in the world come from here. And so we realise how important it is to preserve our cultural heritage for the benefit of the future generations. We look forward to educate and interact with cinema enthusiasts during the course of the film preservation and restoration workshop 2016.”

    Dungarpur added, “After receiving a great response in the first year itself, we are back again with a longer, more advanced and intensive Film Preservation and Restoration Workshop for all those who understand the importance of the rich cinematic legacy of India and who wish to learn, explore and contribute and contribute to saving our film heritage. FHF would like to thank Sudhanshu Vats for being one of the first people from the media and film industry to have the vision to recognise the importance of our cause and for Viacom’s unstinting support.”

    With a committee of panelists including some of the most influential names from the industry from across the globe, this year the workshop will give practical training to help make abled archivists, which is a dire need for cinema in India. This also opens up a career alternative for film students of many acclaimed universities across India, allowing them to learn more in-depth knowledge on this topic. 

    With a mix of technical workshops on the craft of preservation and lectures specially designed by FIAF Technical Commission head David Walsh there will also be a daily screening of a great Indian classic.

    Extending his support to the initiative, Shah said, “When Shivendra called me and requested me to be the chief guest at the opening ceremony of the Film Preservation & Restoration Workshop India 2016, I was very happy to accept. There has been a growing awareness about how much of our cinematic legacy has been lost over the years for various reasons and the urgent need to preserve what is left of it. I think it’s great that Film Heritage Foundation and National Film Archive of India have come together with FIAF to conduct this important workshop to train people in the highly specialised field of film archiving which is essential if we are to save our cinematic heritage.”