DependÂing on how you reckÂon it, the “AmerÂiÂcan cenÂtuÂry” has already endÂed, is now drawÂing to its close, or has some life left in it yet. But whatÂevÂer its boundÂaries, that ambiguÂous periÂod has been culÂturÂalÂly defined by one mediÂum above all: film, or more broadÂly speakÂing, motion picÂtures. These very words might start a series of clips rolling in your mind, a highÂlight reel of indusÂtriÂal develÂopÂments, politÂiÂcal speechÂes, protest marchÂes, sports vicÂtoÂries, NASA misÂsions, and forÂeign wars. But that repÂreÂsents just a tiny fracÂtion of AmerÂiÂca on film, much more of which you can easÂiÂly disÂcovÂer with a visÂit to the Prelinger Archives.
Rick Prelinger foundÂed the Prelinger Archives in 1982 with the misÂsion of preÂservÂing “ephemerÂal films.” AccordÂing to the proÂgram of a 2002 series he introÂduced at the BerkeÂley Art MuseÂum and PacifÂic Film Archive a couÂple of decades latÂer, these are “typÂiÂcalÂly eduÂcaÂtionÂal, indusÂtriÂal, or amaÂteur films,” often made to serve a “pragÂmatÂic and narÂrow purÂpose. It is only by chance that many of them surÂvive.”
These pieces of “throwÂaway media” — of which the Prelinger Archives now has some 30,000 — include newsÂreel-type docÂuÂmenÂtaries, works of politÂiÂcal proÂpaÂganÂda, instrucÂtionÂal proÂducÂtions for use in schools and workÂplaces, and a great many home movies that offer canÂdid glimpses into everyÂday AmerÂiÂcan lives.
As any enthuÂsiÂast of mid-twenÂtiÂeth-cenÂtuÂry AmerÂiÂcan culÂture would hope, the Prelinger Archives also has its oddÂiÂties: take the 1923 Felix the Cat carÂtoon at the top of the post, overÂdubbed with voicÂes (and a refÂerÂence to “hipÂpies”) in the nineÂteen-sixÂties. Their free online colÂlecÂtions at the InterÂnet Archive (which conÂtains 9,229 films as of this writÂing) and Youtube, conÂtain everyÂthing from a 1942 proÂfile of the art scene in San FranÂcisÂco (the Prelinger Archives’ curÂrent home); to “You and Your FamÂiÂly,” the kind of home-life primer that would be ridiculed half a cenÂtuÂry latÂer on MysÂtery SciÂence TheÂater 3000; to “While Brave Men Die…,” sureÂly the only pro-VietÂnam War docÂuÂmenÂtary to feaÂture Joan Baez.
If you realÂly want to see the UnitÂed States, as we’ve preÂviÂousÂly said here on Open CulÂture, you’ve got to driÂve across the counÂtry. What holds true in life also holds true in film, and the Prelinger Archives’ digÂiÂtiÂzaÂtion and uploadÂing have made it posÂsiÂble to expeÂriÂence the hisÂtoÂry of the great AmerÂiÂcan road trip through the eyes — or the eight-milÂlimeÂter camÂeras — of travÂelÂers who took it in the forÂties, fifties, and sixÂties, rolling through sites of interÂest from the Grand Canyon and Mount RushÂmore to the Corn Palace. If a culÂture is preÂserved most clearÂly through its ephemera, then there’s a whole lot more AmerÂiÂca awaitÂing us in the Prelinger Archives.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
4,000+ Free Movies Online: Great ClasÂsics, Indies, Noir, WestÂerns, DocÂuÂmenÂtaries & More
Free: British PathĂ© Puts Over 85,000 HisÂtorÂiÂcal Films on YouTube
1,000,000 MinÂutes of NewsÂreel Footage by AP & British MoviÂetone Released on YouTube
The PubÂlic Domain Project Makes 10,000 Film Clips, 64,000 Images & 100s of Audio Files Free to Use
DownÂload 6600 Free Films from The Prelinger Archives and Use Them HowÂevÂer You Like
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities, the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles and the video series The City in CinÂeÂma. FolÂlow him on TwitÂter at @colinmarshall or on FaceÂbook.
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