The Archive is a collection of cinephile-friendly findings around the web, including rare or never-before-seen photos, interviews, footage or any other bits related to classic cinema. If you have any suggestions, feel free to e-mail in or tweet to @TheFilmStage. Check out the rundown below.

Martin Scorsese‘s The King of Comedy, restored digitally in 4K from the original camera negatives at Sony Colorworks, will close the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival. See a behind the scenes still from the movie above.

Andrei Tarkovsky lists his 10 favorite films in a 1972 interview. [UCalgary]

1. Le Journal d’un curé de campagne
2. Winter Light
3. Nazarin
4. Wild Strawberries
5. City Lights
6. Ugetsu Monogatari
7. Seven Samurai
8. Persona
9. Mouchette
10. Woman in the Dunes

Watch a 1976 interview with Milos Forman. [Cinephilia & Beyond]

Read an article exploring a lost scene from Roman Polanski‘s Chinatown. [The Edit Room Floor]

Federico Fellini on the set of Amarcord and the director with Michelangelo Antonioni. [On the Set]

A detailed look at the Greenwich Village set of Stanley Kubrick‘s Eyes Wide Shut and photos of the helicopter rig used for The Shining. [Scouting NY/The Over Look Hotel]

Jean Luc-Godard on the set of Contempt. [Film.com]

A documentary titled Beyond the Bolex, focusing on camera’s inventor Jacques Bolsey, is seeking funds on Kickstarter. [Film School Rejects]

Watch a 30-minute documentary on Marlon Brando from 1965. [sent in by reader Andrei N.]

A photo of Sergio Leone on the set of Once Upon a Time in the West. [Cinephilia & Beyond]

A lobby card for Citizen Kane and watch Orson Welles‘ guide to Caesar’s Palace. [@emmafgreen]

James Stewart and Orson Welles temporarily leave the sets of Night Passage and Man in the Shadow, respectively, to extend best wishes to James Cagney at the start of production on Man of a Thousand Faces. [On the Set]

Watch a short film about the history of opening titles. [Casual Optimist]

Early film pioneers Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks would have celebrated their anniversary this week, as the pair married on March 28, 1920.

See more from The Archive here and feel free to e-mail or tweet to @TheFilmStage for submissions.

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