Films Restored By The Film Foundation -
This early musical was filmed in two-color Technicolor. For decades, it existed only in faded, black-and-white dupes. TFF funded a painstaking restoration by UCLA. Because two-color Technicolor prints are prone to extreme red/green drift, restorers used advanced digital tools to separate the color records, rebuilding the vibrant, art-deco spectacle. Why it matters: King of Jazz is a time capsule of pre-Code excess. The restoration saved not just a film, but a lost color process, showing audiences how early talkies actually looked.
Furthermore, educational program has taken these restored prints into middle schools, teaching children how to read visual language using To Kill a Mockingbird and Rio Bravo . films restored by the film foundation
Standing as the world’s most formidable bulwark against this cultural erasure is . Founded in 1990 by director Martin Scorsese, the foundation has built a global network of archives and studios dedicated to one mission: preserving the moving image. To date, The Film Foundation has helped restore over 1,000 films. This early musical was filmed in two-color Technicolor