Empire (1964 film)

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Empire
File:Empire Andy Warhol.jpg
Two frames of the film
Directed by Andy Warhol
Produced by Andy Warhol
Cinematography Jonas Mekas
Release dates
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  • 1964 (1964)
Running time
485 minutes
Country United States
Language Silent

Empire is a 1964 American silent black-and-white film directed and produced by Andy Warhol. It consists of eight hours and five minutes of continuous slow motion footage of the Empire State Building in New York City. Abridged showings of the film were never allowed, and supposedly the unwatchability of the film was an important part of the reason the film was created[citation needed]. However, a legitimate Italian VHS produced in association with the Andy Warhol Museum in 2000 contains only an extract of 60 minutes[citation needed]. Its use of the long take in extremis is an extension of Warhol's earlier work the previous year with Sleep. Warhol employed Rob Trains to be the projectionist for a screening of the film. Trains miscalculated and mixed the order and speed of the reels for the eight-hour movie. After a positive review in The New York Times, Warhol actually liked the “mistake” and employed Trains for the entire summer[citation needed].

In 2004, the Library of Congress selected the film to be preserved as part of its National Film Registry.[1]

Shooting

Empire was filmed on the night of July 25–26, 1964[2] from the 41st floor of the Time-Life Building, from the offices of the Rockefeller Foundation[citation needed]. The film was shot at 24 frames per second but is projected at 16 frame/s, so that, even though only about 6 hours and 36 minutes of film was made, the film when screened is about 8 hours and 5 minutes long[citation needed].

Synopsis

The film begins with a totally white screen and as the sun sets, the image of the Empire State Building emerges. The floodlights on its exterior come on, the building's lights flicker on and off for the next 6½ hours, then the floodlights go off again in the next to the last reel so that the remainder of the film takes place in nearly total darkness.[3] The movie was filmed with Andy Warhol directing and filmmaker Jonas Mekas working as cinematographer. During three of the reel changes, filming recommenced before the lights in the filming room were switched off, making the faces of Warhol and Mekas momentarily visible in the reflection of the window each time.[4]

Showings

In 2005, the film was projected in its entirety on the external wall of the Royal National Theatre's fly tower in London.[5][6] It was also screened in its entirety on Saturday December 4, 2010 at the Varsity Theater in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, with live musical accompaniment, by The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Ackland Art Museum and Interdisciplinary Program in Cinema. It was also projected in its entirety on Saturday May 11, 2013 at the MIC (Museo interattivo del Cinema) in Milan, Italy.

Significance

In 2004, Empire was added to the National Film Registry in the Library of Congress in recognition of the cultural, historical and aesthetic significance of the movie, as well as the risk of the original movie reels "no longer being preserved" (despite the Andy Warhol Museum's preservation of the huge Warhol film/videotape catalogue, unique in the world of underground film). In 2007, website Nerve selected Empire as one of "The Thirteen Greatest Long-Ass Movies of All Time".[7]

See also

References

  1. https://www.loc.gov/programs/national-film-preservation-board/film-registry/complete-national-film-registry-listing/descriptions-and-essays/
  2. http://www.moma.org/collection/works/89507
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  7. The Thirteen Greatest Long-Ass Movies of All Time, Part 2 at the Wayback Machine (archived March 16, 2008)
  8. http://www.wolfgangstaehle.info
  9. http://www.medienkunstnetz.de/works/empire24-7/

External links