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FLICKER ALLEY: Early Women Filmmakers Anthology Arrives in May

Flicker Alley has announced May 23rd as the release date for their 6-disc Early Women Filmmakers: An Anthology combo set.

Flicker's series collects over ten hours of newly restored material from fourteen female filmmakers working between 1902-1943 on both DVD and Blu-Ray.

Both titles are being released in Blu-Ray / DVD Combo packs. The releases comes with intriguing bonus features (below).

More women worked in film during its first two decades than at any time since. Unfortunately, many early women filmmakers have been largely written out of film history, their contributions undervalued. This necessary and timely collection highlights the work of fourteen of early cinema's most innovative and influential women directors, rewriting and celebrating their rightful place in film history.

International in scope, this groundbreaking collection features over ten hours of material, comprised of 25 films spanning 1902-1943, including many rare titles not widely available until now, from shorts to feature films, live action to animation, commercial narratives to experimental works. Directors include Alice Guy Blaché, Lois Weber, Mabel Normand, Madeline Brandeis, Germaine Dulac, Olga Preobrazhenskaia, MarieLouise Iribe, Lotte Reiniger, Claire Parker, Mrs. Wallace Reid (Dorothy Davenport), Leni Riefenstahl, Mary Ellen Bute, Dorothy Arzner, and Maya Deren.

These women were technically and stylistically innovative, pushing the boundaries of narrative, aesthetics, and genre. Going back to the beginning of cinema, this collection makes visible the tremendous directorial contributions women made all around the world. Beautifully restored in high definition, Early Women Filmmakers features new scores by Sergei Dreznin, Frederick Hodges, Tamar Muskal, Judith Rosenberg, and Rodney Sauer and the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra.

This anthology is dedicated to the memory of David Shepard, without whom these films - along with countless others - would simply not have been made available in such beautifully restored editions. The collection represents one of David's final produced works, completed in collaboration with several film archives, including the French National Center for Cinematography and the Moving Image (CNC), the Film Studies Center at the University of Chicago, and the Library of Congress.

BONUS FEATURES:

  • Booklet Essay by film historian and Women Film Pioneers Project Manager Kate Saccone
  • Audio Commentary for Lois Weber's The Blot by author, professor, and expert on women and early film culture Shelley Stamp