The News
Monday 25 of November 2024

Peter Jackson's WWI film to premiere at London Film Festival


FILE - In this file photo dated Thursday, Sept. 15, 2016, film director Peter Jackson poses for photographers at the World premiere of the Beatles movie, in London. According to an announcement Tuesday Aug. 21, 2018, Jackson's new film
FILE - In this file photo dated Thursday, Sept. 15, 2016, film director Peter Jackson poses for photographers at the World premiere of the Beatles movie, in London. According to an announcement Tuesday Aug. 21, 2018, Jackson's new film "They Shall Not Grow Old" a documentary that transforms grainy footage from World War I into color, will have its world premiere at the London Film Festival in October. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, FILE),FILE - In this file photo dated Thursday, Sept. 15, 2016, film director Peter Jackson poses for photographers at the World premiere of the Beatles movie, in London. According to an announcement Tuesday Aug. 21, 2018, Jackson's new film "They Shall Not Grow Old" a documentary that transforms grainy footage from World War I into color, will have its world premiere at the London Film Festival in October. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, FILE)

LONDON (AP) — “The Lord of the Rings” director Peter Jackson’s new film — a documentary that transforms grainy footage from World War I into color — has a title and a world premiere date at the London Film Festival in October.

The festival said Tuesday that “They Shall Not Grow Old” will be screened in London and at cinemas across Britain on Oct. 16, less than a month before the centenary of the war’s end.

The Academy Award-winning director restored film from the Imperial War Museum using cutting-edge digital technology and hand coloring, pairing it with archive audio recollections from veterans of the conflict.

Jackson said he wanted “wanted to reach through the fog of time and pull these men into the modern world, so they can regain their humanity once more.”

The film is part of the U.K. government-backed 14-18 Now project, which has presented works by more than 200 artists over four years to remember a conflict in which 20 million people died.

“Slumdog Millionaire” director Danny Boyle — who helmed the 2012 London Olympics opening ceremony — will create a mass-participation work to be performed on the anniversary of the Nov. 11, 1918, armistice that ended the war.

The London Film Festival opens Oct. 10 with Ste McQueen’s heist thriller “Widows,” and closes Oct. 21 with John S. Baird’s Laurel and Hardy biopic “Stan And Ollie.”