Historic Films Purchases Over 1,000 Titles from Pathe News Inc.

Historic Films Archive recently completed the purchase of over 1,000 copyright renewed titles from Pathe News Inc. The titles document the first half of the 20th Century, and include over 700 “Musical Telescriptions,” encompassing the Pop, R&B, Jazz and Country Music of the 1950s.

The U.S. version of the Pathé Newsreel was acquired by Warner Brothers from RKO in 1931 and rebranded RKO Pathé News. When Warner discontinued production of the weekly Pathé Newreel in 1956 it was purchased, along with 38 short theatrical films, produced by Robert Youngston, by Joseph P. Smith and partners. Smith also acquired from Warner the Pathé crowing rooster trademark and a film newsreel library consisting of over seven million feet of film and over 100 educational and news-oriented shorts. Pathé News Inc. was created and incorporated by Smith in 1956 and all of its assets, except the newsreel film library, were held by the Smith family until the Historic Films purchase.

Also purchased from Pathé News, Inc. are the musical films created by Studio Films who produced the Snader Musical Telescriptions library and a series of thirteen groundbreaking live Rhythm & Blues programs, filmed in 1954-55 titled Showtime at the Apollo. To this day the Showtime at the Apollo series is considered the most comprehensive library of American Rhythm & Blues music in existence.

While the Sherman Grinberg Film Library continues marketing the original Pathé Newsreel film library, (the actual cut-original Pathé Newsreels and outtakes), Historic Films now owns all of the other titles and series that makes up the Pathé News, Inc. film library.

Historic Films CEO Joe Lauro states “While we have repped this collection for a number of years, our purchase of it now makes way for us to go back to the original 35mm fine grain prints and negatives, long in storage, and scan them in 4K. This will enable us to offer footage of key events of the first half of the twentieth century in extraordinary picture quality. I am also excited that Historic Films now owns, in my opinion, the largest and best library of African American Rhythm and Blues music filmed during its heyday. We will be giving that footage the same 4K makeover!”

Bridgeman Images Announces New Partnership with Skytop Drone

Bridgeman Images is thrilled to announce a new footage supplier partnership with Brooklyn-based aerial company, Skytop Drone

Skytop is a professional aerial photography and videography company serving the tri-state area. As drone pilots, they are passionate about what they do and are here to help with those dynamic and cinematic looking shots from above. Their pilots have spent years operating drones and are fully licensed with the FAA Part 107. They offer unique bird’s eye perspectives on everything from major city landmarks, buildings, bridges and skylines, construction sites, real estate ventures, events and more.

Impressively shot above New York City and beyond, Bridgeman Images will have access to a mix of exclusive and non-exclusive pre-shot footage as well as offer bespoke services to commission new aerial shots. For any inquiries, please reach out to nysales@bridgemanimages.com. To peruse the growing aerial collection, head here.

Discover the Films of Robert Mugge at Global ImageWorks

Robert Mugge is one of America’s leading music documentarians, having produced, directed, written, and edited more than three-dozen films and TV series examining various aspects of American and world culture.

Whether it’s Al Green, Sun Ra, Ruben Blades, Sonny Rollins or Gil Scott Heron, Robert’s films provide an insightful portrayal of his subjects. A Mugge film is rich in performance, cultural imagery and contains unique, scene-setting footage.  

Discover and enjoy clips from the Robert Mugge Film Archive at Global ImageWorks, where all footage is available for licensing exclusively. 

For an insider perspective, check out Notes from the Road: A Filmmakers Journey through American Music – "a fascinating exploration of the visual documentation of musical creation” or hear Robert Mugge tell his own story about his films.

Now Streaming: The Martha Mitchell Effect

Martha Mitchell came to Washington in 1968 with her husband John Mitchell, who’d served as Nixon’s campaign chairman before becoming Attorney General. But as filmmakers Anne Alvergue and Debra McClutchy make clear in their excellent 2022 archival doc, The Martha Mitchell Effect, now streaming on Netflix, the role of political wife and Washington hostess never suited her.

“Martha Mitchell wasn't playing the Washington game,” says former Washington Post journalist Sally Quinn in the film. “She was not going to be just the wife who sits in the background and not say anything.”

Brash and outspoken, she became something of a Washington celebrity and media darling, qualities Nixon and his inner circle initially thought they could use to their advantage. And while Mitchell herself was all in for Nixon, campaigning non-stop for his reelection in 1974, it all began to unravel after news of the Watergate break-in became public, straining relations between Martha, her husband and the White House. To distract attention from the growing scandal, Nixon and his top advisers, including, as it turns out, John Mitchell, orchestrated a smear campaign against Martha, setting off a chain of public recriminations that eventually led to Martha accusing Nixon of being at the center of the break-in and cover-up.

As Bob Woodward says in the film, “she smelled it. She knew something dirty was going on. Carl Bernstein and I started to realize that she was a Greek chorus of one, because she was telling the truth.” Even Nixon would eventually concede that Martha was a pivotal figure in his downfall. As he told David Frost in 1976, “I'm convinced if it hadn't been for Martha there would've been no Watergate.”

Bridgeman Images Announces New Partnership with Seventh Art Productions

Seventh Art Productions has been a leader in independent filmmaking for forty years. Their films have been seen on broadcasters worldwide including the BBC, ITV, C4, Five, Sky, PBS, National Geographic, A&E, Discovery, ARTE, NHK, ABC and many more. Its productions have won & been nominated for multiple awards for cinematography, including the BAFTAs.

They are also behind the unique arts brand EXHIBITION ON SCREEN. This brings major artists, exhibitions and art institutions to a cinema, television and home entertainment audience worldwide. Seventh Art Productions is also the world’s biggest independent producer of art films, with an archive that is both extensive and unique.

Thanks to the company’s dedication to storytelling at its highest form, Bridgeman Images will have access to the outtakes and broll from many of their documentary productions throughout the years - showcasing art, gallery and museum exterior and interiors and so much more. For any inquiries, please send us your research requests. To peruse the growing collection and learn more, click here.

GIW Highlights Footage from NYC 80s-90s Downtown Scene

In the 80s-90s in New York, a convergence of art, fashion, music, and theater came together in a kind of cross-pollination where creatives influenced each other by virtue of proximity and co-mingling. It was an extraordinary period in New York City, where clubs, storefront galleries, retail stores and the street provided alternative venues for exhibitions and installations of art, performance, music, fashion and dance.

The era was marked by fantastic and elaborate theme parties, typically performed for one night only, making any remaining archival footage one-of-a-kind and extremely rare. Shows like Dali and Gala’s Mad Hatter Tea Party captured the zeitgeist, combining a surreal dinner party with the performance of Joey Arias and Ann Magnuson as Dali and Gala, as did the Fellini Party, with a cast of circus performers and Felliniesque characters in vignettes throughout the club, and Disco Hospital, which included a wild assortment of characters as nurses, doctors, and patients, a stage show and an absurdist video with a nurse accidentally exploding a patient. 

Check out footage of these exceptional and eccentric events, as well as other images from the time at Global ImageWorks.

Global ImageWorks Reps Five New Historical Photo Collections, Including Some of the Biggest Stars in Music and Film

Global ImageWorks has added five new historical photo collections to its stills portfolio, including the archives of Barry Feinstein, best known for his iconic album covers for Bob Dylan, Janis Joplin and George Harrison; Bill Brach, who photographed the burgeoning hippie scene in San Francisco in the mid-1960s; Talib Haqq, who captured behind the scenes shots of Hip Hop stars on the rise; Tapani Talo, who leveraged his unprecedented access as a sound engineer in the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio in the 1970s to capture images of some of the biggest stars of the time; and Vangelis Rassias, who photographed movie stars at the Cannes Film Festival in the 80s and 90s.

Barry Feinstein

Best known for his iconic album covers, including Bob Dylan’s “The Times They’re A-Changin’,” Janis Joplin’s “Pearl,” and George Harrison’s “All Things Must Pass,” Barry is one of music’s greatest photographers. 

Feinstein, who documented Bob Dylan’s 1966 and 1974 tours, was known for his reportage style and establishing close personal relationships that led to unique, behind-the-scenes photographs at parties, backstage, in hotel rooms, and in the artists’ homes. 

A frequent contributor to Life, Look, Time, Esquire, Newsweek, and Paris Match magazines, Barry’s work as a photojournalist includes images of political leaders such as Richard Nixon and John F. Kennedy and Hollywood stars like Judy Garland, Marlene Dietrich and Steve McQueen.

GIW is continuing to dig through his amazing Archive which includes thousands of never before seen images.

Click here to browse collection.

Bill Brach

As a photography student at San Francisco State University in the mid-1960s, Bill Brach photographed the burgeoning hippie scene in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district, specializing in portraiture that made use of San Francisco’s fog-softened light.

Bill’s photos—which have been digitized here for the first time—include photographs of Chet Helms, The Hell’s Angels, Big Brother and the Holding Company, and many others at the epicenter of the 1960s counter-culture movement.

Click here to browse collection.

Talib Haqq

Talib Haqq photographed a pivotal moment in Hip Hop history. Inspired by Run-DMC’s 1983 debut single, “It’s Like That,” Talib Haqq started photographing the rappers and their contemporaries-–including Whodini, Kurtis Blow, Dr. Jeckyll & Mr. Hyde, and rap super-producer Larry Smith—at parties, in after-hour clubs, on tour, and in the studio.  

Haqq’s portrait of Joseph “Run” Simmons and Darryl “DMC” McDaniels in Hollis, Queens, is on the cover of the artists’ groundbreaking debut album, “Run-DMC.” And his behind-the-scenes photographs of Rush Productions capture the rise of the influential rap management company and its founder, Russell “Rush” Simmons.

Click here to browse collection.

Tapani Talo

With unprecedented access as a sound engineer in the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio in the 1970s, Tapani Talo captured behind-the-scenes moments of the Rolling Stones, Deep Purple and Bad Company while recording and on tour.  

Talo’s photography career started in high school in the late 1960s, when he photographed bands like Cream, Led Zepelin, Blind Faith, John Mayall, and Traffic on tour in Helsinki.

Click here to browse collection.

Vangelis Rassias

Vangelis Rassias was willing to gamble. As an independent photographer covering the Cannes Film Festival, he knew he needed to see things differently. Often working with a 600 mm lens, he positioned himself in unique vantage points where other photographers wouldn’t go, capturing intimate and revealing photographs. 

Rassias took stunning portraits of international movie stars and roamed the streets of Cannes in the 1980s and 90s, capturing the essence of the festival’s scene.

Click here to browse collection.

Reelin’ In The Years Productions Now Repping Friars Club Archive

Reelin’ In The Years Productions has announced that it has signed an exclusive contract with the legendary Friars Club Of New York to represent its archive of filmed and recorded private events spanning 70-plus years.  The Friars Archive contains nearly 1000 hours of never-before-seen or-heard video and audio recordings of comedians, actors, sports figures, and iconic musicians.

Since its founding in 1904, the famed club has been honoring comedians, politicians, actors, musicians and other luminaires at its fundraising celebrity luncheons (aka roasts), testimonial dinners and at private events.

The Friars Archive dates back to 1950 and the list of comedians whose performances were preserved on both video and audio tape is truly staggering. Some of the legendary comics that appeared at these landmark affairs include Richard Pryor, Robin Williams, George Burns, Jack Benny, Don Rickles, Bob Saget, Buddy Hackett, Milton Berle, Lucille Ball, Norm Crosby, Dick Gregory, Jerry Seinfeld, Johnny Carson, Alan King, Amy Schumer, Flip Wilson, George Carlin, Jeff Ross, Will Ferrell, Carol Burnett, Sid Caesar, Gilbert Gottfried, Bill Maher, Chris Rock, Ben Stiller, Henny Youngman, Stephen Colbert, Whoopi Goldberg,  Bob Hope, Lily Tomlin, Jerry Lewis, Sacha Baron Cohen, Rich Little, David Letterman, Howard Stern, Joan Rivers, Billy Crystal, Steve Allen, Martin Short, John Oliver, Lewis Black, Sarah Silverman, Phyllis Diller, Redd Foxx, Ricky Gervais, Bob Newhart, Carl Reiner and a host of others. This collection clearly establishes the Friars Archive as the Holy Grail Of Comedy.

Many of Hollywood’s greatest actors, actresses and directors are also part of this one-of-a-kind archive. Such icons as Robert De Niro, Martin Scorsese, Tom Cruise, Sean Penn, Lauren Bacall, Samuel Jackson, Jack Black, Elizabeth Taylor, Burt Reynolds, Gregory Peck, Betty White, Harvey Keitel, John Travolta, Audrey Hepburn, Kirk Douglas, Meryl Streep, Cary Grant, Bruce Willis, Sharon Stone, Burt Lancaster, and Sylvester Stallone appeared at annual dinners to honor and celebrate their peers’ achievements in the world of film and television. 
 
Along with famed comedy legends and Hollywood royalty that were filmed and recorded by the Friars Club, many of music’s greatest artists spoke or performed at these private events. Some who appeared were Stevie Wonder, Ella Fitzgerald, Sting, Aretha Franklin, Barbra Streisand, The Bee Gees, Barry Manilow, Whitney Houston, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr, The Rolling Stones, Willie Nelson, Liza Minelli, Tony Bennett, Diana Ross and Frank Sinatra who was also the Abbot at the Friars Club Of New York from 1975 to 1996.

Reelin’ In The Years Productions has spent the last 5 months meticulously digitizing and cataloging the archive, which exists on a variety of obsolete media formats. With hundreds of tapes left to transfer, this will take many more months to complete.
 
David Peck, founder and president of Reelin’ In The Years Productions said, “I’ve been representing archives from around the globe for over 25 years; it’s quite a thrill to find an archive where a treasure trove of content has been virtually untouched for decades. It brings out the ‘Indiana Jones’ in me and I am so honored that the Friars Club has trusted us with such an important legacy.”
 
“For many years we’ve been looking for the right home for our recorded legacy of laughter and entertainment,” said Friars Club Creative Director Anthony Trombetta, “and we feel that Reelin’ In The Years Productions is the perfect company to work with us on this historic archive.” 
 
For more information about the Friars Club Archive and other footage in their vast holdings, please reach out to Reelin’ In The Years Productions at www.reelinintheyears.com
 
Reelin’ In The Years Productions (winner of FOCAL’s 2020 “Footage Library of The Year Award”) is the premier source for footage of musical artists, entertainers and history makers. Its unique archive houses over 30,000 hours of music footage spanning 100 years. In addition to its music footage archive, RITY has available for licensing over 10,000 hours of in-depth interviews with the 20th century’s icons of film and television, politics, comedy, literature, art, science, fashion and sports, filmed between 1962 and 2012. 
 
David Peck (founder and president of Reelin’ In The Years) has also directed and produced more than 70 historical music documentaries and programs focused primarily on the giants of jazz, blues and rock & roll, garnering many awards in the process as well as a a Grammy nomination. In 2020, David Peck was one of the Executive Producers on the critically acclaimed documentary on the Bee Gees, “How Can You Mend A Broken Heart” and is currently serving as one of the Co-Executive Producers on a multi-part documentary series on the famed record Memphis record label STAX that will air on HBO.  

Bridgeman Images Announces New Partnership with 4K Historical Footage, an Italian-based Historical Travel Archive, 

Bridgeman Images is excited to announce a brand new and exciting partnership with Italian-based historical travel archive, 4K Historical Footage. Owned and operated by Filippo Carlot, the collection specializes in preserving and licensing a vast array of various locations throughout the decades, offering all material at 4K quality.

With over 10 years of experience as a photographer and video maker, Filippo Carlot has developed a deep passion for preserving history through image. His dedication to the digitization and restoration of footage has helped preserve these unique testimonies of the past. In addition to working as a photographer and video maker, Filippo Carlot is also a passionate historian and researcher. His in-depth knowledge of the history and technology of photography and video has led him to carefully select historical footage of particular value and significance, thus creating a one of a kind collection. Over the years, he has developed a custom workflow for digitizing and restoring historical footage in his collection using scanning equipment designed by himself with which he is able to achieve outstanding results in the preservation of these films.

Thanks to Carlot's dedication to preservation, Bridgeman Images now has access to over 10,000 of his clips - with more than 2000 clips already live and available to watch on our website. For any inquiries, please send us your research requests. To peruse the growing collection and learn more, click here.

NFB ARCHIVES Digitizes Unseen Caribbean Footage for Martinique Workshop

In December 2022, Lea Nakonechny of the National Film Board of Canada (NFB Archives) was invited to a groundbreaking workshop entitled “Producing Films with Archive” in Fort-de-France, Martinique. Organized by a partnership between Eurodoc and the Digital Caribbean Film Institute (CINUCA), the workshop brought together 12 projects by producers from Saint Lucia, the Bahamas, Grenada, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Martinique and Guadeloupe.

Lea coached the producers individually on their use of film archives and gave a presentation on the NFB’s collections and policies, as well as its evolving role in relation to colonialism in Canada. The two other on-site mentors were Karim Miské (director of Décolonisations) and Olivier Marboeuf (producer of Les voix croisées). Thanks to this dynamic combination of mentors and participants, the theme of the workshop morphed beyond simply “working with archives” and became a catalyst for filmmakers to flip the script on colonial narratives while using pre-existing audiovisual material.  

In preparation for the workshop, the NFB Archives team had specially digitized four reels of previously unseen Caribbean footage, including eye-popping Kodachrome outtakes from a 1959 film entitled The Bright Land (directed by Morten Parker). This visually lavish material features the geographical and cultural diversity of the short-lived West Indies Federation (1958–1962) and its 10 territories: Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, Montserrat, Saint Kitts-Nevis-Anguilla, Saint Lucia, St. Vincent, and Trinidad and Tobago.

In 1958 the NFB camera crew was in Port of Spain when Princess Margaret of England inaugurated the federal legislature; they filmed the official ceremony and the unofficial celebrations, and they travelled the other islands, recording daily life, landscapes and cities in vivid detail. The finished film’s commentary may be problematic, but its stunning visuals convey the optimism and cultural richness of a special time and place.

The Bright Land and its outtakes present a perfect case study of the complexity faced by audiovisual archivists,” says Lea. “Here we have a film about an important Caribbean event, made by Canadians—apparently with funding from British West Indian Airways—who spoke on behalf of different cultural groups and glossed over some very important and dark history, including slavery. In this case our records are incomplete, which makes identifying names and locations difficult after 65 years. But the essential thing is that we still have the film reels… they are truly precious, and it was a career highlight for me to watch and discuss them in person with some members of the communities represented.”

For those interested in viewing the raw, archival shots, they can be found at archives.nfb.ca, the NFB’s new footage platform. The Bright Land is available for free streaming at nfb.ca.

Happy Holidays from Footage.net!

All of us at Footage.net join in wishing you peace, joy, and the warmth of family and friends this holiday season. We’re deeply grateful for the continued support of both our footage partners and the footage researchers who use our site, and are looking forward to the new year with a sense of cautious optimism.

More than ever, we’re amazed and heartened by the resilience, grit and commitment of the global footage community. From the start of the pandemic, footage providers around the world have moved mountains to operate their businesses remotely and continue serving customers. Their efforts made a huge difference early on as program makers rallied to fill programming gaps with archive-based content. As things returned to quasi-normalcy this year, it felt like that spirit of determination and common purpose endured.

Whether we are or are not in the “Golden Age of Archives,” the consensus seems to be that archives remain in high demand. And we can see the results all around us, with a cornucopia of great archival documentaries available across all delivery platforms. Archival docs, arguably the lifeblood of our industry, have caught on with both audiences and critics, and are now routinely showing up in Netflix’s Top 10 list and sweeping up major awards, including an Oscar for Best Documentary (Summer of Soul), mulitple Emmys and a Grammy for Best Music Film (Summer of Soul). It’s deeply satisfying to see a form that we all know and love break through to a wider audience and become part of the broader cultural conversation. So, here’s to hoping that this trend is here to stay.  

All that said, myriad challenges remain. Figuring out how to help footage users find the right content, and global footage providers reach active researchers, remain our top priorities. To that end, we’ll be releasing our redesigned site in early 2023, and hope it will make a difference. Until then, stay safe, warm and healthy and have a wonderful holiday season.

Bridgeman Images Announces New Partnership with 8mmezzo Archive

Bridgeman Images is excited to announce a new partnership with Italian home movie archive 8mmezzo. A cultural association based in Livorno, Italy, 8mmezzo specializes in archiving family home movies, scanning the material to Full HD and making this material available to future generations.

Brand new to Bridgeman, the footage offerings range from the 1930s up to the 1990s and includes everything from Christmas morning celebrations and sports games throughout the decades to various family activities and extensive travels across Southern Europe and beyond. Through this global array of slice of life footage, the archive provides a window on the many social changes which took place in the latter half of the 20th century.

Thanks to this collaboration with 8mmezzo, Bridgeman Images can now offer screeners of much of this eclectic, never before seen Italian archive. Clients will also have access to offline content from their large, fully digitized collection - available worldwide. To peruse the growing collection and to learn more, click here.

Streaming Video and 'The Golden Age of Archive Licensing'

Recently, we had the chance to speak at the DMLA’s annual conference about the impact of Netflix and other streaming services on the footage business. Our presentation addressed three main questions. First, whether streaming video on demand (SVOD) services, taken collectively, now comprise the dominant customer base for footage licensors. Second, if the SVOD's are now the leading customers for footage, whether we can expect their standing to endure. And third, whether the streamers are adhering to long-established footage licensing conventions. In advance of our presentation, we spoke with a number of footage executives to get their first-hand perspectives on the evolution and status of this key market sector.

Based on those conversations, as well as other research and analysis, it does appear that the SVODs have become the leading client category for footage companies, that they will remain so for the foreseeable future and that, while Fair Use is on the rise, the streaming platforms are not driving this trend.

The Rise of the SVODs

It’s become axiomatic to say that streaming services like Netflix, Hulu, HBO Max, Disney, Apple and Amazon have changed the way most people consume movies, TV shows and short-form programming. Netflix alone boasts nearly a quarter billion paying subscribers worldwide, despite significant subscriber losses in the first half of 2022. To achieve and maintain this audience capture, SVODs are spending big to produce and acquire high-profile content of all kinds, including archive-based documentary programs.

It's projected that, collectively, the seven big players, including Disney+, Netflix, Warner Media/Discovery, Amazon, Apple, Paramount+/ViacomCBS and Peacock, will spend $50 billion on content by the end of 2022. That’s a huge number, so even if spending on archival-based documentaries accounts for only a tiny fraction of the total, it’s arguably enough to drive real revenue growth for the footage companies that license the archival content used in these programs.

And that was the consensus among the footage executives we interviewed. As one footage exec put it, “these days, either directly or indirectly, the streamers are the biggest clients, and have been a real boon to the archive industry. Of that there is no question. They almost single-handedly ushered in the golden age of archive licensing. Once they realized some doc series were getting more views than dramas they expanded fast into this area. ‘The Netflix Effect’ has been a boon for the archive world.”

Admittedly, we don’t have hard, primary data on the current strength of the SVODs as footage customers. For that, the most recent available resource is the ACSIL Global Survey of Stock Footage Companies 4 (AGS4), which was published in early 2019. The relevant takeaway from that research was that while the SVODs constituted a moderately important customer category, it was growing faster than any of the other key categories. And it should be noted that at the time the AGS4 report was published, Apple TV+, Disney+, Peacock, and Paramount+ had yet to launch. Jump ahead to 2022 and, based on all available indicators, it seems highly likely that, were this survey to be repeated today, SVOD services would outrank all other key markets sectors.  

Impact of Pandemic

But this is a tricky time to make any big projections about how trends in content production and consumption will play out over the next few years, given that we’re still emerging from a global pandemic that upended consumer behavior and viewing habits. There’s no doubt that all the major players, including broadcast networks, cable networks and streaming services turned to the archives as a way to fill their programming schedules during the pandemic, when original location-based production was significantly limited. And while this was a win for archives, the question is whether the interest in this kind of programming will endure now that we’re emerging from the pandemic and original scripted dramas are back in production.

As one source said, “I wouldn't say that found footage projects flourished necessarily as a popular trend, but really more as a necessity during those long months. We would all like to hope that the streamers now see them as a viable and popular programming option and will increase or maintain production in those types of programs. Hopefully that trend may stay with us for a while.”

Cautious Optimism

While nobody can say with certainty how production and consumption trends will play out over the next few years, there are reasons for cautious optimism about the staying power of unscripted programming in general, and archival docs in particular.

First, viewers have demonstrated an interest in good, juicy, multi-part stories, regardless of whether they are told as fiction, non-fiction or both. For example, the rise and fall of Elizabeth Holmes and Theranos is a great story, featuring a compelling, mysterious lead character, high stakes, a cast of bold-faced names and Silicon Valley setting. There was enough interest in this story to support a bestselling book, any number of podcasts, an HBO documentary and a Hulu dramatization starring Amanda Seyfried, for which she won an Emmy. In short, if the story is compelling and the production well executed, it will pull in an audience regardless of the storytelling form or platform.

Second, there seems to be no end to the interest in “True Crime” stories and celebrity bios. Highly localized stories with some broader human-interest angle appear to be of growing interest, and international stories are drawing audiences in US. A great example tying all these trends together is Neflix’s Vatican Girl, which tells the story of Emanuela Orlandi a teenage girl living with her family in Vatican City who mysteriously disappeared while returning home from a flute lesson on 22 June 1983.

Third, because of the sheer number of competing streaming service and the ease with which a particular service subscription can be canceled, the platforms need to create consistent buzz around new, splashy programs to keep viewers coming back, and they can’t depend exclusively on global hits like Stranger Things to meet that need. Non-fiction programming is fast and cheap to produce by comparison to scripted, star-driven dramas. The platforms also have unlimited shelf space, so can take a chance on shows that might be considered too niche for broadcast and cable networks.

Fourth, the SVODs, and especially Netflix, are really good at customizing their recommendations. So, once you’ve watched a few docs, you’re going to get more recommended, raising the visibility and popularity for these programs.

And last but not least, a quick look at the Top 10 programs on Netflix on any given day supports the theory that docs and unscripted shows and series are very popular. For example, as of this writing, Ancient Apocalypse, a series in which journalist Graham Hancock “travels the globe hunting for evidence of mysterious, lost civilizations dating back to the last Ice Age,” is the number two show in the US, just behind The Crown. Down to Earth with Zac Efron is number ten, and Killer Sally, Is That Black Enough for You?, Stutz, FIFA Uncovered and Unsolved Mysteries are all trending. Earlier this year, The Tinder Swindler became the first documentary to take the number one program slot on Netflix, a position it held for three consecutive weeks. And while the streamers typically do not share their viewing numbers, you can be sure that they can quantify the interest in and value of a program at a very granular level. So, if they are continuing to invest in a particular kind of programming, we can be pretty sure that it is working for them.  

Playing by the Rules

As for the last question regarding the streamers’ adherence to long-standing licensing conventions, our findings were less conclusive. Pretty much all of the execs we spoke to felt that Fair Use was on the rise, but did not think the SVODs were making particularly egregious use of the practice. As one exec put it, “regarding the usage of unauthorized outsourced footage, this is also a relatively new reality. There is more info out there on the public domain, more producers are studying and applying the fair usage guidelines and there is as well a general lack of knowledge in the new age of researchers as to what they can freely use and what they cannot.  YouTube and Internet Archive are largely to blame. So as more researchers and producers learn about ‘free’ sources this trend will continue.”

“I do find however,” he continued, “that most producers still want a signed license agreement that gives them protection and indemnification. This is what saves the stock footage houses that offer PD stuff. When producers sign for their E&O insurance on their program or series, they need to outline every clip and its source, so they have to be certain that the footage they are acquiring from unlicensed sources is actually OK to use.”

As another footage exec put it, “I don't know that we've seen any clear changes in licensing behavior by/for the big streamers, except that we are seeing a definite increase in the number of custom license agreement requests.  The legal teams for the streamers all want customizations that, predictably, pivot less liability on them and more on the licensor. We reject many of their specific customization requests, and acquiesce where we can.  Thus far, we've always been able to come up with mutually-acceptable, customized versions so the licensing can go forward.”

Stay Tuned

As the pandemic fades and life returns to something resembling normalcy, we can all hope that the “Golden Age of Archive Licensing” endures and is broadly enjoyed across our industry. We’ll be keeping a close eye on these trends as they unfold. And, as we learn more, we hope to gain greater clarity as to whether the streamers are a force for good in our community. As always, your feedback is welcome. Please email me at davidwseevers@gmail.com with any questions or concerns.

Jessica Berman-Bogdan’s Five Year Journey as Archival Producer on Moonage Daydream, Brett Morgen's New Bowie Film

Moonage Daydream Director Brett Morgen and Archival Producer Jessica Berman-Bogdan in Cannes.

Pulling together the archival materials for Moonage Daydream, the immersive new film on David Bowie from director Brett Morgen, was the challenge of a lifetime for archival producer Jessica Berman-Bogdan. This is her seventh project with Morgen. Previous collaborations include Say it Loud, The Kid Stays in the Picture, Crossfire Hurricane, Chicago 10, Montage of Heck and Jane. She spent five years on Moonage Daydream, sourcing materials from around the world to produce this all-archive masterpiece. We had the chance to catch up with Jessica last week to talk about her work on the film

David Seevers: Congratulations on the film. It’s an amazing film and, if I’m not mistaken, this is your seventh project with Brett Morgen.

Jessica Berman-Bogdan: It was just an amazing journey. What we thought would be a few months turned into five years. And yes, this is the seventh film I’ve worked on with Brett. He is a genius and every one of them raises the bar.

DS: Five years! That’s huge undertaking and a serious commitment.

JBB: Brett was on it for seven years, before I actually got into it.  The Bowie journey in and of itself was amazing – he was such an amazing human from which we all learned so much.  The undertaking was huge indeed. Once we opened the [Bowie] estate archive and walked in that door, both of us went..wow. It was a room lined with video tapes of all his music videos and various concerts with all the raw footage and a wall of film that had never been transferred.

DS: Where is the Bowie archive located?

JBB: It’s fifteen minutes away from our office in a storage facility in New Jersey which was a huge plus for the production. Bowie’s office is in NYC and he lived in the city.

DS: How did this Bowie archive get started?

JBB: Many moons ago he [Bowie] hired Eileen D’Arcy, who ended up becoming one of the executive producers on the film. He said, you know, we have all this material, and he was brilliant because he started taking ownership of all his material from way back, and he said, we should catalog and organize it in some way. So, by virtue of her being there Eileen became the official archivist and worked for him for 17 years before he passed. 

DS: So, was Eileen able to guide you through the archive?

JBB: We worked hand in hand. She has a real sense of who he was, what he liked, what he didn’t like. Although she hadn’t seen everything in the archive (since so much of it had never been transferred) she knew about it all. A lot of it had been shelved, but thankfully she had done a pretty amazing job of labelling everything and entered it all into a database.  The discoveries we all made were such fun. But until we actually got into it a lot of it, there was quite a bit no one had seen since the day it was shot.

DS: So, then you and Brett had to figure out what parts of it would be useful for the film and start bringing materials in for the production, I assume.

JBB: Our approach was to transfer all the film reels as most of those had never been transferred and the contents generally unknown and  there were some wonderful surprises – especially performance material and music video outs.  Pretty much everything was transferred as we did not want to leave any stone unturned – there were multiple copies in different formats for some of the materials so determining which were best copies was also part of what I had to assess.

DS: There must have been a huge amount of material on hand by the time you were done.

JBB: We had hundreds of terabytes – Brett watched it all. In the Bowie Archive alone, we were given access to over five million works— music, film clips, artwork, musings, interviews, photographs and recordings, some of which have never before been seen or heard. Brett’s process is fascinating in that he insists on watching everything in chronological order which enables him to process everything as it actually unfolded.  I think the entire screening process took about two years.

DS: But you were managing the research process from NJ?

JBB: Yes – overseeing the intake and workflow with the Associate Producer and Assistant Editors and team of loggers in the LA office.  All screeners were to be in chronological order as that is Brett’s process of reviewing all the materials.  He must see it as it actually unfolded.  I also was transferring some materials in my office and would hand carry drives with me when I would go out there. So, we had that whole management part as one layer.

GIW also has created our own proprietary asset management database, that takes you from cataloguing all the assets through to a final clearance component to facilitate master orders, clearances and licensing.  Training and overseeing its implementation was another layer.

All this going on while I was searching the world for footage, because we knew we had to bring in “everything” out there. We brought in massive amounts of stuff. And then once catalogued, dated etc, the AE’s had to assemble chronological stringouts for Brett.

DS: But I am assuming that you were finding material from different periods throughout the research process.

JBB: This was by far one of the most difficult films I have worked on in my 40+ year career – challenging because of the massive amounts of footage out there but also because of Bowie’s enormous diversity as an artist in various mediums – so yes – it was finding material from different periods, different art forms, different mediums. 

And yes, there were periods that we had to revisit. The entire screening process took about two years, believe it or not. Brett is brilliant in finding those key moments and connecting it with another moment but understanding the connection or the migration or the development or the maturity or whatever it might be that relates various moments, which you saw in the film. Stringing that all together with the key themes in Bowie’s life (transience, chaos, creativity, mortality) is how the film took shape.

DS: Absolutely, that really came through in the film.

JBB: Although not a documentary as we know it, the film has a chronological flow, and threads from different periods of his life are woven throughout.

DS: The entire film is archival, but there is a lot of what I think of as visual ephemera intercut around the Bowie content.

JBB: Yes, all the influences and visual elements to help further illustrate the major themes that run throughout the movie added a whole other layer of research. Thankfully we had a team who assisted with text research and some of the photo and ephemera research. 

DS: How much finished product comes out of the Bowie archive?

JBB: More than 50%? But that doesn’t mean 100% of that was their copyright. There was quite a bit which had to be separately licensed.

DS: Were there some key archival discoveries that influenced the narrative?

JBB: I think the major archival discoveries were the 35mm film in the Bowie Archive complete with ISO cameras of some concerts as well as the bank of outtakes from music videos that provided us with very rich high resolution content.  I also was able to locate the original 16mm negatives of a 1983 documentary of Bowie’s travels in the Far East.  Although there were copies floating around they were of poor quality and finding the original negs was huge and clips from that appear several places in the film.

DS: Would it have been possible to make this film without access to the Bowie archive?

JBB: Not this film. It would be a very different film. I think the Bowie story has been told more than once. There have been several docs about Bowie but all very linear. He’s been analyzed in many different ways. We’ve seen that film. Even though some of that same footage is in this film, in the context of Moonage Daydream it was totally different. It came away differently. It did not feel like “oh I’ve seen all that.”

DS: It is such an immersive experience. The whole look and feel is amazing, at times bordering on sensory overload.

JBB: Color and sound for Brett are huge. He spent some 650 hours in color correct making sure the colors and textures were right and working on the quality of a few lo res video elements and about a year in sound design. And it shows - every moment that he spent on color and sound design are up on the screen. Which I think makes a huge difference.

DS: Did you have a research team of was this mainly on you?

JBB: This was mainly me but I definitely had some help. Brett and I have our rhythm. I conducted most of the research but the LA office had an assistant producer(s) who I interfaced with and who would keep a handle on workflow and additional research needed and coordinated text research, additional photo research, influence research, transcripts etc.  And my colleagues Chris Robertson and Cathy Carapella also assisted at various points.  And then  Cathy came in towards the end to handle all the music clearances.

DS: What was the biggest challenge, in terms of archival research?

JBB: Archivally it was a huge challenge.  Bowie experimented in so many different areas of creative expression – he was not only a singer/performer, but was a  writer, actor, and artist, -  gathering the extensive catalogue of all he did was so broad and his career spanned so many years – that organizing what we gathered, working with editorial to set up a system for efficient retrieval  in and of itself became a major challenge.  We were managing hundreds of hours of materials. 

Number one, I know Brett needs to see it all. Because damn it if he found something on YouTube or elsewhere that I had not brought in...so part of the challenge is staying ahead of him, and making sure I got everything. What countries did Bowie go to? Where was he? There are incredible resource books, that cover where he went and what he did – and it was my job to make sure we searched each and every country and broadcaster and archive searching for every piece of footage or audio we could find.” 

DS: How does a director ask for those images that are more about setting the vibe for the film?

JBB: It varies - sometimes it was experimenting with imagery needed to illustrate a feeling or a theme - - and sometimes the ask was very specific - the challenge was to try to find the right shot – oftentimes the ask for those images is not at all specific and it is process to figure out what works. 

That became a team effort. His staff out there was doing a lot of text research. It became a real team effort to hand over to me what needed be found visually and cleared. There were people doing massive amounts of deeper informational research.

DS: Who were some of the artistic influences you were looking to include?

JBB: German expressionists, experimental films, writers, painters, existentialism, - Bowie was an avid reader and art collector – so capturing bits of all of that essence is woven throughout as influences.

DS: How many sources ended up in the film?

JBB: We had well over 100 sources credited in the film.

DS: Outside of the Bowie estate archive, who were some of the key sources?

JBB: BBC, Canal +, Reelin in the Years, Sony and Universal, Iconic Images, to name just a few

DS: What other challenges did you face as archive producer?

JBB: We had the Bowie Estate’s approval but we had to earn their trust, and that was part of my job, too. Initially there was limitation to our access to the archive - they did not open the doors to everything at first. Going deeper was a process. And in this situation, I am the representative of the production and interacting almost daily with the archive. Additionally, it was important for us to set up a secure environment for the LA production office and at the transfer facility to ensure that no material ever leaked out or left the building.  We had a security system probably as secure as on some of the major motion picture sets. In the LA office, cell phones went away, drives were locked, the Avid room was locked, there was a padlocked security grill and separate entrance codes for both the door and alarm system.

And then, when we finally were given open access to the storage facility and we walk into this room, actually multiple rooms, at Bonded initially, and it's like ‘oh my god, how are we ever gonna get through this?’

DS: Were they happy with the final film?

JBB: Yes, yes, I mean, that was the moment, when they were all blown away by it. How can you not be?

DS: Well, thank you so much for talking with us and again, congratulations on the film. It is a true masterpiece.

JBB: Any time!

GIW Now Representing Inside the Actors Studio

Global ImageWorks is now representing clip licensing for the seminal television series, “Inside the Actors Studio”, hosted by James Lipton. The series ran from 1995 to 2017 on the Bravo network. Over 270 episodes feature James Lipton interviewing some of the most iconic actors and directors to work in film and television!

Some highlights include:

Ground-breaking directors including Martin Scorsese, Mike Nichols, Francis Ford Coppola, and Steven Spielberg

Celebrated actors such as Jack Lemmon, Harrison Ford, Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino, and Clint Eastwood

Classic Hollywood’s greatest leading ladies -- Lauren Bacall, Shelley Winters, Meryl Streep, Jane Fonda, and Ellen Burstyn

And the funniest talents on stage & screen, such as Eddie Murphy, Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Robin Williams, Dave Chappelle, George Carlin, and Mary Tyler Moore

Visit www.globalimageworks.com/inside-the-actors-studio for more information

Producers Library Now Representing Children's Animation from Marc Lumer Productions

Producers Library is now exclusively representing Marc Lumer Productions' collection of children’s animation for stock footage use. Lumer, a veteran of over twenty-five years in the industry, has worked as an animation visual development artist, children’s book writer/illustrator and a graphic designer. He has artistically collaborated on Warner Bros’ Batman Beyond, Superman and Freakazoid. Later, he worked under Jeffrey Katzenberg at Dreamworks on the Road to El Dorado, and The Prince of Egypt, as well as contributing his skills to Brad Bird’s Ratatouille, The Incredibles and Iron Giant. Lumer also lent his hand to a variety of projects at Disney TV Animation, Turner Feature Animation, Sony TV Animation and Film Roman.

A sampling of Lumer’s animation clips based on his creation of Duchess, starring a high fashion model, designer and spy who shines both on the runway and in fighting foreign evil forces, is featured now at www.producerslibrary.com. Also available is an animation series for younger children. Perfect for playback on-set monitor or full frame usage, the footage can be licensed via the Customer Team at Producers Library.

Archival Docs Shine at 74th Primetime Emmy Awards

Archival docs had a great night at the 74th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (September 12, 2022), bringing home top honors in four out of six documentary/non-fiction categories.

Peter Jackson took home the Emmy for Outstanding Directing for a Documentary/Nonfiction Program for his stellar work on The Beatles – Get Back, besting Judd Apatow & Michael Bonfiglio (George Carlin’s American Dream); Amy Poehler (Lucy and Desi); Ian Denyer (Stanley Tucci Searching for Italy); Andrew Rossi (The Andy Warhol Diaries); and W. Kamau Bell (We Need to Talk About Cosby).

The Beatles – Get Back also won the Emmy for Outstanding Documentary Or Nonfiction Series. The other nominees were 100 Foot Wave; jeen-yus – A Kanye Trilogy; The Andy Warhol Diaries; and We Need to Talk About Cosby.

George Carlin’s American Dream won for Outstanding Documentary Or Nonfiction Special. It was up against Controlling Britney Spears; Lucy and Desi; The Tinder Swindler; and We Feed People.

When Claude Got Shot won the Emmy for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking. It was up against Changing the Game and Fredrick Douglass: In Five Speeches.

Lucy and Desi won for Outstanding Writing For A Nonfiction Program. The other nominees were How to with John Wilson; The Andy Warhol Diaries; The Problem with John Stewart; and the Tinder Swindler.

The News & Doc Emmy awards is set to take place September 29, 2022. There will be a lot to talk about once the winners are announced and we’ll cover it all in our October edition.

Now Streaming: The Princess

At the outset of The Princess, streaming now on HBO, we meet Diana Spencer as the world did in 1980 - a fresh-faced nineteen-year-old plucked from relative obscurity and thrust into global fame by a relentless media fixated on her every move.

The all-archival documentary is both immersive and harrowing, propelled by director Ed Perkins’s trenchant selection and deployment of archival materials, as well as a taut score by Martin Phipps. Though we know too well how the story ends, we watch it unfold with something like dread as Princess Diana is brought into the confines of the Royal Family and then left to fend for herself against the paparazzi’s insatiable appetite for details and images of her private life.

But a more complex portrait of Diana emerges in The Princess. There is a striking contrast between her tone and body language in early interviews, especially those where Charles is present, and the more candid images of her at work as she grew into her public role. In the former, she is numb and something is clearly amiss. In the latter, she comes alive and becomes the woman so many grew to love. And it is the latter self that would prevail as she severed ties with Charles and the Royal Family and struck out on her own.

Global ImageWorks Now Representing Open Memory Box

Global ImageWorks is now exclusively representing the Open Memory Box collection, an outstanding collection of more than 400 hours of home movies from behind the Iron Curtain. The carefully curated footage, all digitized and transferred to HD, captures life in East Germany and elsewhere from 1947 to 1990.

While exploring the archive and viewing a film, simply click on 'BOX >' to see the contents of the BOX where a roll originates. In BOX click on a thumbnail to jump to that spot in the ROLL.

Explore themed compilations in the ANTI-ARCHIVE by clicking on any of the titles at the bottom of the window. 

The full ROLLS are available to view by clicking 'ROLL" while viewing.

An added treat is the Stories section , where you can hear the stories behind the footage from the people who lived it. Their accounts provide wonderful depth and life to the footage.  

To register for a guest account to download screeners, please send an email with your full name, address, telephone number, institution, position, and a brief description of your project, to info@open-memory-box.de .

Now Streaming: Trainwreck - Woodstock '99

Michael Lang, who co-created of the epochal Woodstock Music & Art Fair back in 1969, set out thirty years later to recapture the spirit of peace, love and understanding at Woodstock ‘99. Working in close partnership with John Scher, a leading concert promoter and all around no-nonsense guy, it would be hard to overstate how deeply Lang failed to deliver on that dream. Instead of an homage to the Age of Aquarius, with attendees coming together to build a provisional Utopia, Woodstock ’99 devolved into a riot, complete with violence, arson, looting and sexual assault.

So how did Lang and his team fall so short of the mark? The general consensus, as summarized in the new archive-rich, three-part docuseries Trainwreck: Woodstock ‘99, streaming now on Netflix, is that Lang and Scher got greedy, cut too many corners and produced a sub-par event.

Services and facilities were lacking, the food was too expensive, the venue (a decommissioned military base in Rome, New York) was awful, depressing and fully exposed to the broiling summer heat, and there were too few security guards and emergency personnel to attend to the needs of a quarter million-plus attendees. Pretty soon, the kids started getting unruly and tearing the place apart.

Lots of eyewitnesses show up in the film to make the case that Lang and Scher were greedy and incompotent, from Woodstock ’99 event staff to performers like Jewel and Gavin Rossdale, the lead singer of Bush, to the journalists and MTV VJ’s who covered the event. And Lang and Scher don’t do themselves any favors by sitting for extensive interviews. Both come off as glib, defensive and dismissive.

But there was something else at work at Woodstock ‘99 that the film touches on only superficially. Something that hints at what will come in the new millennium. A toxic mix of entitlement, commercialism, exploitation and free-floating rage were on full display. You could argue that Lang and Scher were just two disconnected boomers, so cut off from youth culture that they thought booking Limp Bizkit as a headliner would somehow revive the groovy vibes of Jefferson Airplane and CSNY. But fans willing travel to Rome, NY to see Korn and Kid Rock are not, generally speaking, hippies, and they have a unique, and often uniquely scary, way of behaving at shows. Looking at crowd shots now, the vibe is more WWE than Woodstock, Coachella or even Lalapalooza.

So maybe Woodstock ‘99 does capture something generationally defining, just not in the way that Lang or anyone else might have hoped. And all that said, at least some people seemed to have a good time. Tom and Keith, two Woodstock ’99 attendees who appear in their adult form throughout the docuseries, speak for that contingent. As Keith says, “it was the best time I’ve ever had, and 22 years later it’s still probably the best time I’ve ever had.”