News

These are the final six contenders for the 4 th annual Library of Congress Lavine/Ken Burns Prize for Film: BELLA, directed by Jeff L. Lieberman In 1970, Bella Abzug entered Congress ready for a ...
Library of Congress Festival of Film And Sound Announces Full Lineup of Rare Cinema and Special Guests The new four-day film festival will be held June 15-18 in association with the AFI Silver ...
The National Film Registry at the Library of Congress has selected 25 new films for preservation, including The Dark Knight, Shrek, and The Blues Brothers.
The sixth annual Library of Congress Lavine/Ken Burns Prize for Film will be awarded on Sept. 17 at a ceremony with members of Congress, Hayden, and Burns, along with special guests to be ...
The National Film Registry already has 800 movies that have been inducted since it started in 1989, and the Library of Congress keeps a very long list of films that have yet to be added, if you ...
All films are available from major streaming services. The Times spoke to filmmakers, casts and others celebrating the historic move by the Library of Congress to include five iconic features.
The 25 films added this year brings the number of titles into the LoC’s Film Registry to 900. To celebrate, Turner Classic Movies will host a television special tomorrow, Dec. 18, and screen a ...
Films including “Iron Man,” “The Little Mermaid” and “When Harry Met Sally” will now have a place in the Library of Congress. Twenty-five movies were announced Wednesday as new ...
Congress established the National Film Registry in 1988 at the urging of cinema figures like Martin Scorcese who decried colorization, reformatting for TV, and other alterations that were rampant in ...
The Library of Congress has revealed 25 new selections for the National Film Registry. Each year, the library identifies 25 motion pictures that are “culturally, historically or aesthetically ...
The 1963 classic “Lilies of the Field,” which earned Sidney Poitier the very first Oscar received by an African-American, was added to the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry this week.