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FIAF President Eric Le Roy presents the 2017 FIAF Award to Christophe Nolan (Photo courtesy of A.M.P.A.S.). The Academy’s Randy Haberkamp introduces Christopher Nolan, and Christopher Nolan addresses the audience of the Samuel Goldwyn Theater. Photos courtesy of Mikko Kuutti.

2017 FIAF Award

On Monday 1 May 2017 in the evening, hundreds of movie lovers filled the Samuel Goldwyn Theater for a special presentation of Christopher Nolan’s 2014 film Interstellar in 70mm.

The event was hosted by the Academy and FIAF, whose annual congress returned to Los Angeles after 22 years.

The organization honored Nolan, a three-time Oscar nominee, with the annual FIAF Award. Nolan joins a list of other esteemed recipients, including Martin Scorsese (2001), who received the inaugural award, Ingmar Bergman (2003), Hou Hsiao-hsien (2006), Liv Ullmann (2010) and Agnès Varda (2013).

The FIAF Award recognizes film personalities’ “dedication and contribution to the preservation of, and access to, the world film heritage, for the pleasure of today’s audiences, as well as for the benefit of future generations.”

The Academy’s Randy Haberkamp opened the evening with an exclusive 70mm prologue to Nolan’s upcoming film Dunkirk. The preview met with wild applause from the audience, which included hundreds of archivists from around the world, in town for the FIAF Congress.

Haberkamp welcomed Nolan to the stage. The Interstellar director discussed how he became passionate about issues facing the archiving community. It began “as a result of a purely selfish impulse,” he said. “Emma, my producer and wife, and I started to feel a real encroachment on our beloved photochemical film process. It’s the way we’ve made all of our films and the way we intend to continue making all of our films.”

While emphasizing the importance of photochemical to archiving, Nolan hopes “to change the conversation from the idea of ‘film versus digital’ into the notion that we live in an era where, because of digital technology, access to the history of film has reached unprecedented levels.”

He thanked FIAF and the archiving community for the honor, and introduced Interstellar, which was nominated for five Academy Awards and won an Oscar for Visual Effects.

As Haberkamp noted in his opening, Nolan is taking the torch of Scorsese’s cause to ensure that “not only are we able to have film as part of the toolbox for filmmakers to come, but that we can preserve the work of the past, we can honor the work of the past, we can take the best of the past with us.”

An excerpt from Christopher Nolan's acceptance speech can be found HERE.


Text adapted from http://www.oscars.org/events/christopher-nolans-interstellar-2014-70mm