Feature length films > Dawson City: Frozen Time
Dawson City: Frozen Time
DAWSON CITY: FROZEN TIME named to multiple critics' best of the decade lists
2010 - 2019
2010 - 2019
DAWSON CITY: FROZEN TIME was named to the following critics' best films of the decade lists:
BEST FILMS of 2010s
Jake Coyle and Lindsey Bahr, Associated Press
Jamie Dunn, The Skinny (UK)
Glenn Kenny, New York Times, RogerEbert.com
Richard Lawson, Vanity Fair
Matthew Lucas, From the Front Row
Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times
BEST DOCUMENTARIES of 2010s
Monica Castillo, The Wrap
Kenji Fujishima and staff, Paste Magazine
Alissa Wilkinson, Vox
BEST FILMS of 2010s
Jake Coyle and Lindsey Bahr, Associated Press
Jamie Dunn, The Skinny (UK)
Glenn Kenny, New York Times, RogerEbert.com
Richard Lawson, Vanity Fair
Matthew Lucas, From the Front Row
Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times
BEST DOCUMENTARIES of 2010s
Monica Castillo, The Wrap
Kenji Fujishima and staff, Paste Magazine
Alissa Wilkinson, Vox
CAP UCLA presents the US premiere of Dawson City: Frozen Time LIVE!
December 6, 2019 - 8:00pm
Theatre at the Ace Hotel
Los Angeles, CA
December 6, 2019 - 8:00pm
Theatre at the Ace Hotel
Los Angeles, CA
This film presentation will be accompanied by a live performance of the score by L.A.’s contemporary ensemble Wild Up and a woman’s choir from Tonality.
“An instantaneously recognizable masterpiece.” – The New York Times
A hallucinatory cinematic fever dream, Dawson City: Frozen Time tells the bizarre true story of some 533 silent film reels, dating from the 1910s and 20s, that accumulated at the end of a film distribution line in northwestern Canada and which were miraculously discovered some 50 years later, in 1978, buried in a sub-arctic swimming pool, deep in the Yukon permafrost. Filmmaker Bill Morrison (Decasia, The Miners’ Hymns, The Great Flood) deftly combines excerpts from this remarkable collection with historical footage, photographs, and original interviews, to explore the complicated history of Dawson City, a Canadian Gold Rush town founded across the river from a First Nation hunting camp, and then traces how the development of that town both reflected and influenced the evolution of modern Cinema.
Combined with a powerful, evocative score by Alex Somers ( Captain Fantastic; Hale County This Morning, This Evening; Honey Boy), orchestrated and arranged by Ricardo Romaneiro, Dawson City: Frozen Time is a triumphant work of art that spins the life cycle of a singular film collection into a breath-taking history of the 20th century.
“An instantaneously recognizable masterpiece.” – The New York Times
A hallucinatory cinematic fever dream, Dawson City: Frozen Time tells the bizarre true story of some 533 silent film reels, dating from the 1910s and 20s, that accumulated at the end of a film distribution line in northwestern Canada and which were miraculously discovered some 50 years later, in 1978, buried in a sub-arctic swimming pool, deep in the Yukon permafrost. Filmmaker Bill Morrison (Decasia, The Miners’ Hymns, The Great Flood) deftly combines excerpts from this remarkable collection with historical footage, photographs, and original interviews, to explore the complicated history of Dawson City, a Canadian Gold Rush town founded across the river from a First Nation hunting camp, and then traces how the development of that town both reflected and influenced the evolution of modern Cinema.
Combined with a powerful, evocative score by Alex Somers ( Captain Fantastic; Hale County This Morning, This Evening; Honey Boy), orchestrated and arranged by Ricardo Romaneiro, Dawson City: Frozen Time is a triumphant work of art that spins the life cycle of a singular film collection into a breath-taking history of the 20th century.
Vanity Fair names DAWSON CITY: FROZEN TIME one of the 10 best films of the decade (#3).
11/26/19
11/26/19
"As haunting a film as there was this decade, Bill Morrison’s painstakingly stitched-together collage of old movie footage pulls us into a semi-distant past full of forgotten life. Dawson City: Frozen Time is, most literally, a documentary about the discovery of over 500 silent-film reels buried in a former gold rush town in the Yukon. In showing us clips of these lost movies, all about 100 years old, Morrison also tells the story of Dawson City, a boom town alive with want and opportunity, the locus of a human surge that was at once prodigious and ruinous. Zooming even further out, Dawson City: Frozen Time talks keenly—if not directly—about what it is to be people among one another, to strive for success in collaboration and competition, to seek out shared entertainment and diversion from the lonely harshness of life in the world. Basically, Morrison’s film captures the human experience through images of humans captured on film a century ago. It’s a lyrical movie, a mesmerizing glimpse into the past. There’s also something scary about Dawson City: Frozen Time, in all its reminding that the scramble and noise of our times—as advanced and busy as any have ever been—will one day disappear into their own kind of silence. Overlooked upon its release (by myself included), Dawson City: Frozen Time deserves an unearthing." - Richard Lawson, Vanity Fair
Dawson City: Frozen Time named one of the best films of the year by more than 100 critics worldwide
"an instantaneously recognizable masterpiece"
- Glenn Kenny, New York Times
• Vanity Fair's Best Films of the 2010s (#3)
• 100% Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes with over 50 critics' reviews
• Best Documentary
Boston Society of Film Critics, 2017
• Most Innovative Documentary
Critics' Choice Documentary Awards, 2017
• Best Feature Length Film, Noves Visions Plus
50th Sitges Film Festival 2017
• Extraordinary Achievement
Dublin Film Critics Circle, Audi DIFF, 2018
• Best Editing
International Documentary Association, 2017
• Best Use of Footage in an Arts Production
• Most Inspiring Use of Archive
FOCAL International, London, 2018
Listed as one of the best films of the year by more than 100 critics worldwide, including:
Associated Press, Boston Globe, CBS News, Film Comment, The Film Stage, Hollywood Reporter, Los Angeles Times, New York Times, The New Yorker, Rotten Tomatoes, Senses of Cinema, Sight & Sound, Slant, Village Voice, and Washington Post.
- Glenn Kenny, New York Times
• Vanity Fair's Best Films of the 2010s (#3)
• 100% Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes with over 50 critics' reviews
• Best Documentary
Boston Society of Film Critics, 2017
• Most Innovative Documentary
Critics' Choice Documentary Awards, 2017
• Best Feature Length Film, Noves Visions Plus
50th Sitges Film Festival 2017
• Extraordinary Achievement
Dublin Film Critics Circle, Audi DIFF, 2018
• Best Editing
International Documentary Association, 2017
• Best Use of Footage in an Arts Production
• Most Inspiring Use of Archive
FOCAL International, London, 2018
Listed as one of the best films of the year by more than 100 critics worldwide, including:
Associated Press, Boston Globe, CBS News, Film Comment, The Film Stage, Hollywood Reporter, Los Angeles Times, New York Times, The New Yorker, Rotten Tomatoes, Senses of Cinema, Sight & Sound, Slant, Village Voice, and Washington Post.
The Discovery, and Remarkable Recovery, of the King Tut's Tomb of Silent-Era Cinema
by Lawrence Weschler
Vanity Fair, September 14, 2016
by Lawrence Weschler
Vanity Fair, September 14, 2016
Nearly four decades ago, a treasure trove of film from the early 20th century was found, underneath a hockey rink, in the remote Canadian town of Dawson City. In anticipation of Bill Morrison’s new documentary, Dawson City: Frozen Time, Lawrence Weschler dives into how and why the Dawson City archive came to be.
by LAWRENCE WESCHLERSEPTEMBER 14, 2016
by LAWRENCE WESCHLERSEPTEMBER 14, 2016
Dawson City: Frozen Time
(120 min, 2016)
(120 min, 2016)
Screening history
World premiere
73rd Venice Film Festival
Orizzonti Competition
September 5 & 6, 2016
North American premiere
54th New York Film Festival
Spotlight on Docs
October 2 & 4, 2016
UK premiere
60th BFI London Film Festival
Experimenta section
September 6 & 7, 2016
Latin American premiere
23rd FIC Valdivia
Guest Filmmaker
October 14 & 16, 2016
World premiere
73rd Venice Film Festival
Orizzonti Competition
September 5 & 6, 2016
North American premiere
54th New York Film Festival
Spotlight on Docs
October 2 & 4, 2016
UK premiere
60th BFI London Film Festival
Experimenta section
September 6 & 7, 2016
Latin American premiere
23rd FIC Valdivia
Guest Filmmaker
October 14 & 16, 2016
Dawson City: Frozen Time
(120 min, 2016, USA)
Trailer - 90 sec
(120 min, 2016, USA)
Trailer - 90 sec
Dawson City: Frozen Time
2016
120 min
2016
120 min
Bill Morrison’s new film is a history in still and moving images charting the transformation of Tr’ochëk, a fishing camp at the confluence of the Yukon and Klondike Rivers, into the epicenter of the Yukon gold rush at the turn of the last century. It is also a history of the 35mm film prints that were shipped to Dawson between the 1910s and 1920s, then hidden away and forgotten for 50 years until they were unearthed in the initial stages of a construction project, images from which are a key element in Morrison’s cinematic mosaic. Like all of Morrison’s work, Dawson City is a haunting experience that takes place in suspended, nonlinear time.
Hypnotic Pictures and
Picture Palace Pictures present
In association with
Arte France - La Lucarne
The Museum of Modern Art
A Bill Morrison film
Music by Alex Somers
Sound Design by John Somers
Title Design by Galen Johnson
Associate Producer
Paul Gordon
Produced by
Bill Morrison and
Madeleine Molyneaux
Written, edited, and directed by
Bill Morrison
Hypnotic Pictures and
Picture Palace Pictures present
In association with
Arte France - La Lucarne
The Museum of Modern Art
A Bill Morrison film
Music by Alex Somers
Sound Design by John Somers
Title Design by Galen Johnson
Associate Producer
Paul Gordon
Produced by
Bill Morrison and
Madeleine Molyneaux
Written, edited, and directed by
Bill Morrison
Baseball History Unearthed: Rare footage of infamous 1919 'Black Sox' World Series found in Yukon permafrost
by Tristin Hopper
National Post, 5/4/14
by Tristin Hopper
National Post, 5/4/14
MLB Network's High Heat with Chris Russo
November 19, 2014
Broadcast
November 19, 2014
Broadcast
Bill Morrison discusses the 1919 and 1917 World Series footage on MLB Network's High Heat with Chris Russo