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.
Above, Al Pacino and Francis Ford Coppola on the set of The Godfather and more photos below. [Pickled Elephant/Kino Images]
Werner Herzog and Harmony Korine have a conversation at Telluride Film Festival 1999. [Harmony-Korine.com]
Watch Roger Deakins discuss becoming a cinematographer. [Filmmaker IQ]
In honor of Akira Kurosawa‘s birthday tomorrow, Hulu has made 24 of his films available for free. [Hulu]
The Great Escape is coming to Blu-ray on May 7th. [High-Def Digest]
David Cronenberg and James Woods on the set of Videodrome.
Terry Gilliam on Steven Spielberg versus Stanley Kubrick.
Three silent gangster films from Yasujiro Ozu are now available on DVD. [BFI]
F.W. Murnau at his home office. [@shittydeath]
Martin Scorsese discussing the restoration of Powell and Pressburger‘s The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp. [Criterion]
Watch Terrence Malick’s editor Billy Weber discuss the art of voiceover. [Bibliokept]
Alfred Hitchcock’s earliest silent films will tour the US beginning in June and see an ad he placed for theaters that haven’t programmed Rear Window yet. [NY Times/Emma F. Green]
Watch a 1979 interview with Peter Bogdanovich. [Cinephilia and Beyond]
Photos from the set of Francis Ford Coppola‘s The Conversation. [The Edit Room Floor]
Watch Nelson Carjaval‘s video essay titled Peter Andrews: The Soderbergh Vision. [Press Play]
A restored print of William Friedkin‘s Sorcerer is expected to premiere at Venice Film Festival. [The Wrap]
Watch a one-hour interview with Krzysztof Kieslowski from 1991.
Contact sheet of Robert De Niro in Martin Scorsese‘s Taxi Driver. [@emmafgreen]
Watch a 50-minute documentary on In the Mood for Love and Chungking Express cinematographer Christopher Doyle [Cinephilia & Beyond]
Cars parked at a drive-in theater with a 53-foot wide screen in Alexandria, Virginia, December 1941. [National Geographic]
See more from The Archive here and feel free to e-mail or tweet to @TheFilmStage for submissions.