MoMA announces film preservation festival lineup

New York City”™s Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) has announced the line-up for its 19th Annual International Festival of Film Preservation, which presents a slate of newly preserved and restored films spanning multiple genres, era and countries.

This year”™s festival, which runs from Jan. 12 to Feb. 2, includes the restoration premiere of two major silent films from MoMA”™s archive: Paul Leni”™s horror comedy “The Cat and the Canary” (1927) and Ernst Lubitsch’s comedy “The Marriage Circle” (1924). Another silent offering is Tod Browning”™s devastating “The Unknown,” which is presented with 10 minutes of newly discovered footage of Lon Chaney and Joan Crawford.

Other festival highlights include the 1929 version of “The Letter” starring Broadway legend Jeanne Eagels in her only surviving sound film; Luis Buñuel”™s Mexican-based 1953 drama “Él
(This Strange Passion)”; Muriel Box”™s “This Other Eden” (1959), the first feature film directed by a woman in Ireland; “Reform School” (1939), a once-lost 1939 Black-cast film starring Louise Beavers as a crusading parole officer; and “Death by Unnatural Causes” (1992), Karen Bellone and Lisa Rinzler”™s experimental film about the impact of AIDS.

Photograph of Jeanne Eagels in “The Letter” courtesy of MoMA and the Library of Congress.