Last year, I wrote about a fascinating film that only had a short theatrical release, for my Long Take column in Sight and Sound – but now it will live for a year on iPlayer, and I think it is well worth your time. Three Minutes: A Lengthening is directed by Bianca Stigter and has a voiceover by Helena Bonham-Carter. You may recognise its subject from the book Three Minutes in Poland: Discovering a Lost World in a 1938 Family Film by Glenn Kurtz.
The transfer from book to film is crucial here, as Kurtz’s subject was a three-minute excerpt of a home movie his father David shot on holiday in his old hometown in Poland just before the second world war. The film allows us to pore over these images, moving and still, cropped and magnified for clues. What happened to these people, who were all Jewish? And might any of them survive to tell their story?
The film is a very powerful one, with a very specifically harrowing tale to tell. It is also a tale of screen archaeology, of archival research, digital reconstruction and even more resonantly, of the uncanny pull that faces in the crowds in old films can exert over the viewer. Some faces demand to be seen, and known better.
- You can watch Three Minutes: A Lengthening on BBC iPlayer now.
- Here is my Sight and Sound column on the film.
- Read/listen more about Glenn Kurtz’s research on the film here on NPR.
- Silent London will always be free to all readers. If you enjoy checking in with the site, including reports from silent film festivals, features and reviews, please consider shouting me a coffee on my Ko-Fi page.
Can it be seen in the US ? When I clicked on the link the page had this note: “BBC iPlayer only works in the UK. Sorry, it’s due to rights issues.”
Hello Karen. It looks as if you have several options if you wish to watch the film in the US https://www.justwatch.com/us/movie/three-minutes-a-lengthening
Thank you !
Unfortunately BBC iPlayer is only available in UK. But if I may I’ll send the information to SBS TV in Australia; it’s in line with their programming strategies, I’m sure. They are currently running Ken Burns’s ‘The US and the Holocaust’ which I recommend. Regards – Ross
Of course!
I remember reading about this in a NYTimes article! I’m excited to see this. Here’s a link to the article that got me interested in it: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/03/movies/three-minutes-a-lengthening-documentary.html
Thanks for sharing!