‘The Annihilation of Fish’ restored in 4K

Long-lost feature to be released for the first time ever in celebration of the film’s 25th anniversary and the 80th birthday of director Charles Burnett

Charles Burnett

DIRECTOR CHARLES Burnett’s long-lost feature, ‘The Annihilation of Fish’, starring James Earl Jones, Lynn Redgrave, and Margot Kidder, is set for an exciting release courtesy of Milestone Films and Kino Lorber.

The director has been hailed by the likes of Martin Scorsesee as ‘one of the finest filmmakers’ of his era and there is a genuine fervour around the 4K and analog 35mm restoration and release.

The restoration by UCLA Film & Television Archive and The Film Foundation with funding provided by the Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation of the acclaimed independent filmmaker’s missing movie will have its world premiere at the Wexner Center for the Arts at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio on March 2, 2024 as part of the 10th annual Cinema Revival: A Festival of Film Restoration. Mr. Burnett will be in attendance. UCLA Film & Television Archive will host the film’s Los Angeles premiere on April 5, as part of their 25th anniversary Festival of Preservation.

“Charles Burnett is one of the finest filmmakers in this country,” said Martin Scorsese, Founder and Chair of The Film Foundation.

“His pictures speak in a cinematic voice that is uniquely and completely his own. For much too long, The Annihilation of Fish has been in limbo.

“It took many years and endless persistence to rescue this beautiful, delicate picture and get the original materials properly restored and preserved.

“It required the combined efforts of multiple organisations — Milestone Films, UCLA Film & Television Archive, The Film Foundation, and the Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation — to see this restoration through, and I’m so happy that it’s finally ready for the world to discover.” 

Shot in 1999, The Annihilation of Fish screened that September at the Toronto International Film Festival and was acquired for distribution. 

But following a single bad review in Variety, the distributor canceled the film’s release. For almost a quarter of a century, The Annihilation of Fish has been unavailable on all media — it has never been distributed on 35mm, DCP, VHS, DVD, Blu-ray, television, or streaming — anywhere.   

In 2003, Burnett asked Milestone Films to try to acquire the rights for his lost film, The Annihilation of Fish

Thus began a 19-year-long odyssey that included hundreds of phone calls, faxes, and emails contacting distributors, producers and heirs, archives, labs, lawyers, the US Treasury Department, and finally the US Bankruptcy Court for the State of California. 

Even after finally acquiring the rights for The Annihilation of Fish, Milestone spent six months battling a lab to get the master film materials transferred to the UCLA Film and Television Archive — which now holds the film’s 35mm original A/B picture negative, 35mm internegative, 35mm interpositive, 35mm original track negative, 35mm prints and various sound masters. 

Burnett’s feature films Killer of Sheep (1978) and To Sleep With Anger (1990) were both named to the prestigious US National Film Registry.

In 2022, Killer of Sheep was also listed in Sight and Sound’s international poll as one of the “100 Most Important Films of All Time.”

The filmmaker has also made groundbreaking work for television, including Nightjohn; Selma, Lord, Selma; and Warming By the Devil’s Fire. In presenting him with an honorary Oscar® in 2017, filmmaker Ava DuVernay described Burnett as ‘a giant, a legend, an icon, a true artist… one of the most significant American directors in the history of cinema of any colour.’ 

He is also a past recipient of a MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship.

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2 Comments

  1. | Brandon Maggart

    I saw a screening and loved it. Lynn Redgrave was my Friend.

    Reply

  2. | Cathy Winkler

    This film holds a tender place in my heart as it was written by my departed husband, Anthony C. Winkler. It was heartbreaking to learn that it was not going to be distributed back then. It is a story of finding love when all seems lost and would appeal to the masses of boomer moviegoers and the timing seems especially poignant now that the golden bachelor days have been introduced. I have many photos and stories of this odyssey taken on set during the filming and even got a special listing in the credits for teaching Lynn and James how to play 500 rummy! and cant wait for the masses to enjoy this tender portrayal that Charles Burnett lovingly captured on film. Thanks Charles from the bottom of my heart and Happy BIrthday.
    One love, Cathy

    Reply

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