Does The Blair Witch Project count?
How about The Manchurian Candidate?
Does The Blair Witch Project count?
How about The Manchurian Candidate?
Performance, with James Fox and Mick Jagger (his only good acting effort), was filmed in 1968 but not released until 1970, I think. Doesn’t seem like a long time these days, now that cultural change has slowed down to a crawl (in the “Western world,” that is), but in the late 60s, that was a long time. By the time the film came out, Mick looked different (shorter hair, no longer dyed black), James Fox was in some Christian cult, and I think one of the actresses (a very young French girl who was apparently treated shabbily by the filmmakers) was a drug addict or maybe even dead, I can’t recall which.
The Day The Clown Cried-41 years and counting.
My goodness. What color *is *the sky on your planet?
Is it an absolute certainty that this film was ever truly completed? Is it an unfinished work or a cinema-ready cut that Lewis has locked away?
Because if we’re going to count substantially shot but unfinished films, both Welles and Hitchcock would swell the list quite a bit. (As they would by their personal bulks alone…)
I was coming in to mention this one, but the real tragedy of the film is that the released version leaves out a lot of the original material, and adds badly animsated stuff, in addition to adding Jonathan Winters voice-overs. There a fan-compiled version that is the closest we’ll likely get to the original vision
Incidentally, that Wikipedia page lists two other ultra-long cartoon production histories
It was rough cut in 1979, but Lewis claims it is ready for release.
They did the same thing with Bette Davis in Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), with footage of **Parachute Jumper **from 1933.
And Sunset Boulevard (1950) used footage of Gloria Swanson from Queen Kelly (1929)
Mad Wednesday (1947) starts out with footage of Harold Lloyd from The Freshman (1925).
There are probably many other examples of this happening, but I don’t think they count, since the reused footage was released.
Because he kept running out of money, if I’m not mistaken. Not purposely, the way Everyday and the Up series were actually planned to be made.
No and no. Blair Witch was shot in 1998 and released in 1999. The fake documentary within the film takes place in 1994 - perhaps that’s what you’re referring to.
Manchurian Candidate was shot and released in 1962, I’m pretty sure.
Yes. It was withdrawn after the JFK assassination.
Probably because it showed the Grassy Knoll shooter or something. :dubious:
Not sure if this counts, but… in 1964, Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters traveled cross-country in their bus, and filmed the experience. The footage was never compiled into an actual film until a few years ago, resulting in the documentary Magic Trip, released in 2011.
Something similar happened with Frank Henenlotter and his first big film, Basket Case, which purportedly took a long time to film because they were chronically short on cash. I can’t find anything on how long it took on the internet right now, but I think it was at least five years.
I won’t hijack this thread. Instead, I’ll direct you to two threads where the relatively fast pace of much of Western cultural change c. 1964-1973 is discussed.
It’s true that this applies more to some cultural things (music, especially) than others, and even within music it is most applicable to rock music and less so to some other genres where change and development occurred during other periods. This thread is about films, where the most obvious change was probably the switch to color films during that same period…but films capture so much else within them (slang, fashion styles, car designs, and of course music as well), that they inevitably reflect the overall pace of change.
You can tell immediately if a film was made in 1965 vs. 1970, but can you tell if a film was made in 2005 vs. 2010? I doubt it. The big changes these days tend to be in countries which are “catching up” to the West (Malaysia, e.g.), or else have to do with technologies (smartphones, GoogleMaps…) which occasionally appear in films but don’t tend to dominate their look and sound.
“Clifford” completed in 1990, but not released until 1994 (some would say it escaped)
I think you’re being enormously selective about what constitutes cultural change.
Principal photography for Joss Whedon’s Cabin in the Woods ended in May, 2009. Release was scheduled for February 2010, then delayed for 3D conversion. Next, MGM went bankrupt.
Lionsgate eventually took over & the film premiered in March 2012.
Ciao! Manhattan (1972) the psychedelic, semi-sorta- autobiographical film about Edie Sedwick was another long in the making, released after being changed and fiddled with over a long time film.
That’s right. The black-and-white scenes were filmed in 1967, the color scenes in 1970.
Orson Welles’s version of Othello began shooting in 1949, but took three years to complete because Welles kept running out of money. It was premiered in Cannes in 1952, but Welles continued to work on it for the US market. The American version came out in 1955.