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"The images are just awfully expressive and terrifically interesting to look at," Sterritt said. "It has a look
-- I don't want to call it a Hitchcock look -- but I'd call it a more atmospheric and nuanced and effective look than Graham Cutts probably could have injected into a film." Hitchcock, who died in 1980, broke into filmmaking in his native London in 1920, working as a title-card designer and working up through the ranks as a writer and assistant director. His own directing output during his British years, before moving to Hollywood in the late 1930s, included "The 39 Steps," "The Lady Vanishes" and "The Man Who Knew Too Much," a film he remade in the 1950s. Hitchcock's first Hollywood film was 1940's "Rebecca," the best-picture Academy Award winner that he made for producer David O. Selznick. Lewis J. Selznick Enterprises, run by Selznick's father, had released "The White Shadow" in the United States 16 years earlier. "The White Shadow" was found during the second of two searches by the U.S.-based film foundation, which received grants from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to send an archivist to sift through American films preserved in the New Zealand archive. The previous search turned up 1927's "Upstream," a previously lost feature-length film directed by John Ford ("The Searchers," "The Quiet Man"). Other finds in the New Zealand collection included an early feature with silent star Clara Bow, but film foundation researchers are not expecting to uncover any other gems there. "We've gone through every foot of American film there, and I can tell you, there's nothing more in the American collection," Melville said. ___ Online: National Film Preservation Foundation: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences:
http://www.filmpreservation.org/
http://www.oscars.org/
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