Assets include writings of famed film critic Pauline Kael, whose biting insights on film are often hard to find on the internet, the story of pioneering aquatic star Annette Kellerman, what critics said about the world’s first feature-length film “The Story of the Kelly Gang” from 1906, and the story of the Lon Chaney monster that inspired Jennifer Kent’s cult classic “The Babadook.” Kael fans will enjoy her updated insights on “Lawrence of Arabia”: “The most literate and intelligent and tasteful and the most beautiful of the modem expensive spectacle films. And I wish it have never been made.”
Classic films with new Tomatometer scores include “A Night at the Opera,” “Double Indemnity,” “Home of the Brave,” “Victim,” “Madchen in Uniform,” “The Dirty Dozen,” and “Gilda.” Diverse film critics from film history have also been integrated into the archives, notably Maybelle Chew, among the earliest female African American critics. Chew was added to the site, as was the Baltimore Afro American, a now defunct paper which originally housed a number of reviews for African American films dating back to the 1920s. As part of its archival project, led by review-curation manager Tim Ryan, Rotten Tomatoes is collecting contemporaneous reviews for 100 lost films. It is estimated that between 75 and 90 percent of films made before 1929 are either lost or only exist in incomplete form, and Rotten Tomatoes is shining a spotlight on the stories and people behind them. (This will in turn make for a good resource to complement the AFI Archive, which houses detailed production notes on the makings of the first 100 years of American film.) The new archival hub will live on Rotten Tomatoes’ site and will be continually updated with more assets. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.