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*Hello! Please help circulate this press release from the National Film
Preservation Foundation announcing the web premiere of a newly restored LET
THERE BE LIGHT. Free downloading of the film on the nfpf website:
www.filmpreservation.org. More information and additional films on the
website. A sorely-needed restoration of an important film!*

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*Jenny Horne*

*Film + Digital Media*

*UC-Santa Cruz*

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*WEB PREMIERE OF NEW RESTORATION OF JOHN HUSTON’S LET THERE BE LIGHT*

*Long-suppressed WWII Documentary Spotlights Treatment of “Shell-Shocked”
Veterans*

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*National Archives and NFPF Debut Restoration on Memorial Day Weekend***

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Contact: Barbara Gibson (NFPF, 510-531-4521, [log in to unmask])



San Francisco, CA (May 24, 2012)—The National Archives’s new restoration of
*Let There Be Light* (1946), John Huston’s controversial World War II
documentary about the rehabilitation of psychologically scarred combat
veterans, will screen on the National Film Preservation Foundation’s
website (www.filmpreservation.org) beginning on May 24.  The free
presentation, made possible by Fandor, will run from Memorial Day weekend
through the end of August.



The third in the World War II trilogy commissioned from Academy
Award–winning director John Huston by the US Army Signal Corps,* Let There
Be Light* follows the treatment of emotionally traumatized GIs from their
admission at a racially integrated psychiatric hospital to their reentry
into civilian life.  Made decades before post-traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD) entered the vocabulary, the documentary was created to help
Americans understand the challenges faced by returning veterans and to
demonstrate that the psychological wounds of war, though very real, could
heal through therapy.



Huston’s compassionate portrayal was too much for the top military brass,
which pulled the film shortly before its premiere at the Museum of Modern
Art and commissioned a replacement in which white actors took all the
speaking roles.  *Let There Be Light *was first shown publicly in December
1980, after a chorus of Hollywood leaders, joined by Vice President Walter
Mondale, persuaded the Secretary of the Army to authorize its release.



The restoration will be available for free streaming and downloading and
presented with extras providing historical context, including:

·      *The Battle of San Pietro* (1945), the second film in Huston’s WWII
trilogy

·      *The Reawakening* (1919), about the treatment of returning WWI
veterans

·      A documentary about the National Archives’ film preservation
operations

·      Program notes about the film and its restoration



*Let There Be Light* was added to the Library of Congress’s National Film
Registry in 2010.  “The mental trauma of the soldiers depicted in the
Huston documentary made visceral to my generation, which came of age after
WWII and Korea, just what is the cost in individual lives of any war, even
of a ‘good war,’” commented John Bailey, who represents the American
Society of Cinematographers on the National Film Preservation Board.  “*Let
There Be Light* is as timely and, sadly, as painful to watch today as it
was more than sixty years ago. Its shadow looms over the wars of Iraq and
Afghanistan.”
The motion picture *holds a special place in documentary film history for
its almost unprecedented use of unscripted interviews.  It’s *only now,
with the new soundtrack restoration, that these interviews—many with
battle-weary soldiers who can only mumble or whisper personal stories—can
be heard with their full emotional force.  The services to restore the
soundtrack for *Let There Be Light* were donated by Chace Audio by Deluxe
through the NFPF grant program.  Hosting the premiere is Fandor.com, a curated
on-demand movie service for independent and international narrative and
documentary films.



*About the NFPF.*  The National Film Preservation Foundation is the
nonprofit organization created by the U.S. Congress to help save America’s
film heritage. Since opening its doors in 1997, the NFPF has supported film
preservation in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico
and has helped save more than 1,900 films. The NFPF is the charitable
affiliate of the National Film Preservation Board of the Library of
Congress.



*About the National Archives.*  The National Archives and Records
Administration is the independent federal agency that preserves and shares
with the public records that trace the story of our nation, government, and
the American people. From the Declaration of Independence to accounts of
ordinary Americans, the holdings of the National Archives directly touch
the lives of millions of people. The National Archives carries out its
mission through a nationwide network of archives, records centers, and
Presidential Libraries, and on the Internet at http://www.archives.gov.