Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - What are the 25 American national treasure movies?

What are the 25 American national treasure movies?

Since 1989, the Library of Congress has selected a group of rare American films for safe collection every year. At the end of 2005, Librarian of Congress Billington selected 25 more films from more than 1,000 films nominated by the public, increasing the total film collection of the Library of Congress to 425. Billington said: "Sadly, our enthusiasm for movies far exceeds our determination to protect movies." Billington revealed that half of the movies shot before the 1950s have not been preserved to this day, and in the 1920s, 80% to 90% of the films produced in the 1960s have long since disappeared. The most recent of the films selected this time is 1996's "Toy Story" - the first computer-generated three-dimensional animated feature film in history. The oldest is historical image data recording the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and subsequent fires.

The 25 new collections are: "Babyface" (1933) "The Buffalo Flood: One Man's Action" (1975) "The Photographer" (1928) "Beaufort Sea" Church, May 1940" (1940) "Butterfly Blood Behind Bars" (1967) "Open American Universities" (1982) "French Drug Trafficking Network" (1971) "Giant" (1956) "h2o" ( 1929) "Hands Up" (1926) "Basketball Dreams" (1994) "The House of Usher" (1960) "Spring and Autumn Rain" (1934) "Jeffreys-Johnson World Boxing Championship" (1910) Year) "The Making of an American" (1920) "Miracle on 34th Street" (1947) "Moms and Dads" (1944) "The Music of Joy" (1962) "The Power of the News" (1928 ) "Growing Up in the Sun" (1961) "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" (1975) "San Francisco Earthquake Fire, April 18, 1906" (1906) "The Liar" (1973) "The Burning Hour" (1966) "Toy Story" (1995)