NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of Modern Art announces To Save and Project: The 21st MoMA International Festival of Film Preservation, the latest edition of the annual festival dedicated to celebrating newly preserved and restored films from archives, studios, distributors, foundations, and independent filmmakers from around the world. Running from January 9 to January 30, 2025, this years festival showcases over 25 feature films and shorts programs in newly preserved or restored versions. To Save and Project is organized by Dave Kehr, Curator, Department of Film, The Museum of Modern Art, and Cindi Rowell, independent curator, with special thanks to Olivia Priedite, Film Program Coordinator, and Steve Macfarlane, Department Assistant, Department of Film.
This years program will open and close with the restoration premieres of two major silent films preserved in MoMAs archives: Frank Borzages transcendent romance 7th Heaven (1927), in a new upgrade from MoMAs previous restoration, and Charles Chaplins World War I comedy Shoulder Arms, in a reconstruction of the seldom-seen original 1918 version, presented here as a work-in-progress.
The 2025 program also includes several major rediscoveries, including Yevgeny Chervyakovs long-lost Soviet film My Son (Moy Syn) (1928), recently discovered in Argentina, and Robert Wienes expressionist classic Raskolnikow (1923), which returns in a meticulous new restoration from Filmmuseum München. Silent films will be shown with live piano accompaniment.
Other highlights include Anthony Manns epic western Bend of the River (1952), restored by Universal Pictures; James Bidgoods homoerotic underground classic Pink Narcissus (1971), as restored by the UCLA Film and Television Archive; and Anthony Harveys searing 1966 adaptation of Amiri Barakas Dutchman. Notable international restorations include Vichit Kounavudhis Dear Wife (Mia Luang) (1978), a sophisticated examination of marriage and class in Thai society, and Stars in Broad Daylight (Nujūm An-Nahar) (1988), a rarely seen masterwork restored by the Film Foundations World Cinema Project. The film powerfully depicts life in a Syrian village through a complex family drama.
Other festival highlights include special related programming:
André Bonzel, one of the co-directors of the explosive faux documentary Man Bites Dog (1992), will be present on January 11 to introduce Flickering Thhosts of Loves Thone By (Et jaime à la fureur), a 2021 film that draws on his familys long (and not always safe-for- work) history of amateur filmmaking to create a moving exploration of how we try to capture the most precious moments of our lives.
Co-presented with MoMAs long-running Modern Mondays series, a highlight of this years festival is An Evening with Heather McAdams (January 27). Known for her work as a cartoonist, filmmaker, and country music preservationist, McAdams brought a distinctive DIY sensibility to Chicagos experimental film scene in the 1980s. Her handmade animations and personal documentaries combine humor with a deep appreciation for American vernacular culture. The program features newly restored 16mm prints of her witty, irreverent short films, followed by a conversation with the artist, moderated by curator Sophie Cavoulacos.