Martin (lost extended cut of horror film; 1977): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Due to passing, changed tense on Romero's name to past)
No edit summary
Line 10: Line 10:
The film was widely released in a 95-minute cut, but a longer cut of the film (alleged to be 165 minutes long) was originally prepared. Despite the film being shot on color film stock, the longer cut of the film would was likely intended to be in black-and-white to reflect Romero's original intentions. (In the final film, only the film's flashback sequences are presented in black-and-white.)
The film was widely released in a 95-minute cut, but a longer cut of the film (alleged to be 165 minutes long) was originally prepared. Despite the film being shot on color film stock, the longer cut of the film would was likely intended to be in black-and-white to reflect Romero's original intentions. (In the final film, only the film's flashback sequences are presented in black-and-white.)


On October 30, 2021, ''Martin'''s director of photography Michael Gornick (under his alias Ronald Gorewood)<ref>[https://twitter.com/dawnofthediscs/status/1454625724825055232 Dawn of The Discs on Twitter. 30 Oct '21.] Retrieved 31 Oct '21.</ref> announced that the director's cut had been found through the efforts of The Living Dead Museum and its owner and curator, Kevin Kriess<ref>[https://apnews.com/article/museums-coronavirus-pandemic-520fc33d5e161ebe5bc71c60cd33a0d8 "Living Dead Museum rising again at Monroeville Mall." AP News.] 20 Feb '21. Retrieved 31 Oct '21.</ref>. According to Gornick, the cut, which is the one Romero preferred, survives on three black-and-white 16mm film reels and runs around three and a hours long, and wrote, "May it soon return safely to the custody of [producer] Richard Rubinstein and Braddock Associates for digital revitalization and distribution to the world."<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/ronald.gorewood/posts/4824368504253697 Ronald Gorewood on Facebook. 30 Oct '21.] Retrieved 31 Oct '21.</ref>  
On October 30, 2021, ''Martin'''s director of photography Michael Gornick (under his alias Ronald Gorewood)<ref>[https://twitter.com/dawnofthediscs/status/1454625724825055232 Dawn of The Discs on Twitter. 30 Oct '21.] Retrieved 31 Oct '21.</ref> announced that the director's cut had been found through the efforts of The Living Dead Museum and its owner and curator, Kevin Kriess<ref>[https://apnews.com/article/museums-coronavirus-pandemic-520fc33d5e161ebe5bc71c60cd33a0d8 "Living Dead Museum rising again at Monroeville Mall." AP News.] 20 Feb '21. Retrieved 31 Oct '21.</ref>. According to Gornick, the cut, which is the one Romero preferred, survives on three black-and-white 16mm film reels and runs around three and a hours long, and wrote, "May it soon return safely to the custody of [producer] Richard Rubinstein and Braddock Associates for digital revitalization and distribution to the world."<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/ronald.gorewood/posts/4824368504253697 Ronald Gorewood on Facebook. 30 Oct '21.] Retrieved 31 Oct '21.</ref>


==External Links==
==External Links==
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_(film)#Alternate_versions Wikipedia article.] Retrieved 04 Apr '16
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_(film)#Alternate_versions Wikipedia article.]
*[http://theghostdiaries.com/movie-review-martin-george-romeros-forgotten-vampire-film/ The Ghost Diaries film review mentioning the longer cut.] Retrieved 04 Apr '16
*[http://theghostdiaries.com/movie-review-martin-george-romeros-forgotten-vampire-film/ The Ghost Diaries film review mentioning the longer cut.]
 
==References==
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Lost films]]
[[Category:Lost films]]

Revision as of 22:49, 31 October 2021

Lmwtan cleanup.png


This article has been tagged as Needing work due to its lack of content and references.



Martinfilmposter.jpg

Original film poster.

Status: Lost

Martin is a 1977 horror film directed by George A. Romero. The film is considered a staple among vampire and horror films and was regarded by Romero as his favorite film.

The film was widely released in a 95-minute cut, but a longer cut of the film (alleged to be 165 minutes long) was originally prepared. Despite the film being shot on color film stock, the longer cut of the film would was likely intended to be in black-and-white to reflect Romero's original intentions. (In the final film, only the film's flashback sequences are presented in black-and-white.)

On October 30, 2021, Martin's director of photography Michael Gornick (under his alias Ronald Gorewood)[1] announced that the director's cut had been found through the efforts of The Living Dead Museum and its owner and curator, Kevin Kriess[2]. According to Gornick, the cut, which is the one Romero preferred, survives on three black-and-white 16mm film reels and runs around three and a hours long, and wrote, "May it soon return safely to the custody of [producer] Richard Rubinstein and Braddock Associates for digital revitalization and distribution to the world."[3]

External Links

References