2ND UPDATE: Fox gave me this statement Wednesday night: “Contrary to implications, we are passionate about film history and about our fox history in particular. That’s why we maintain one of the best and most costly photo archive departments in the business and keep comprehensive prop, art and film item archives from our films. It’s why we organized the benefit for the motion picture home a couple years ago with Swann curating even our old contracts. That, however, is not what the research library is. Rather, it contains a number of general reference, broad interest books and periodicals, like a public library. That collection will be donated to a proper, curated library at a university or a guild, etc., where the public will have even greater access than they do now. The material will be taken care of in a first-class manner. As to the nostalgia that people feel for the days when studios were in many such non-movie specific businesses, we share it, too, and wish the world were still that way, but it’s a muddling of points to lump this change into laments about lost film history, as it’s not what it is.”
UPDATE: I’m receiving a lot of emails and comments from Hollywood folks who say that, contrary to 20th Century Fox’s claims, the studio’s film research library was constantly in use by both Fox personnel and outsiders. I hear Clint Eastwood is unhappy, too, because research for his Flags Of Our Fathers was done there. Also, Warner’s research library is said to still be alive and well and open.
EXCLUSIVE: I have confirmed that 20th Century Fox is very quietly shutting its film research library after 85 years in existence, the second-to-last such facility at a Hollywood studio making available books, drawings, photographs, scrapbooks, samples, and other one-of-a-kind materials. (Most of the other studio libraries have been closed or sold off except for the Samuel Goldwyn Research Library, owned and managed by Lillian Michelson, and housed on the DreamWorks Animation lot, and Warner’s studio library.) ”This is film history used and recycled everyday and also Los Angeles history,” an insider tells me. “Once this goes, it’s gone.”
I’m especially surprised by this decision not only because Fox Filmed Entertainment chairman Tom Rothman considers himself something of a film historian, but also because I’m told the cost of keeping the library open is negligible. But what the film community loses is priceless access to archive material by art directors, costume designers and film historians. ”I cannot tell you how serious this is to the below-the-line people and creatives around town,” another source tells me. “There used to be wonderous film reference libraries at each studio. A designer could walk in, ask about damask curtains and get reams of data. Now there is none. I implore you to take up this matter.” Still another insider complains, “I guess Fox has to tighten its belt — or is it a noose?” However, 20th is claiming that the library is not used enough to justify its cost, and its “contents should be transferred to a more public resource so these materials are available to the entire film community rather than just confined to those on the Fox lot”.






welcome to the world of 4-5 companies owning everything in this town.
Just more proof these Studios don’t know what we do for a living…they don’t understand the word “creative” or pride in our past history. Idiots!
These studio chiefs are soulless cretins.
When they die, their obits should be a litany of all their soulless, evil worthless acts.
I used to work next door to Lillian at DWA; what a wonderful, kind person (and a dead ringer for Ann-Margret)! I sure hope DW treats her well.
I don’t think any of the studios think research departments are worthwhile, but then again I don’t think much of their creative output is worthwhile either. Maybe there’s a correlation there.
This is just the reality of Hollywood, people. These companies don’t care about filmmaking, they only care about moneymaking. It’s sad that money makes people lose sight of what’s really important
Let me guess. There’s no money in operating a film library?
I know first-hand how awesome the library is and how valuable it is to the community, a place that runs for half of what it cost Fox (the makers of such fine films as SPACE CHIMPS) to drive that fucking Eddie Murphy head cross-country. I’m sure some bean-counter in accounting knocked this out on a spreadsheet and didn’t think twice. The only way this could actually work out is if the Academy Library on La Cienega took control of the colleciton. This a short-handed, dim-minded travesty– typical FOX.
I can understand it if all the studios had decided to pool their library resources into one more manageable complex, not only for their costume and production design staff but for outside scholars and historians, but I’m not getting that vibe from this decision. Hell, they probably could land some tax breaks for letting the outside scholars in.
I would like to see a resource like that be available because it would be a shame for it to go. Hollywood’s fascination with “the next big thing” is causing it to forget that you need to know a lot about the past to get the “next big thing” done right.
Unbelievable – that there is no nurturing, caretaking of archival
materials as a source for now and the future. How shortsighted and
part of the ‘defining deviancy down ‘ syndrome that reflects our Culture: we can see where that has brought us to date.
If only a small percentage of $ from any and all film budgets were designated for historical archives as a matter of course, perhaps we would start to reclaim our integrity as filmmakers in a greater sense and not simply ‘ but it’s only business, nothing personal…’.
So what happened when the other studios closed their research libraries? Where did the library collections go to?
George Lucas bought up the Paramount and Universal libraries (in 1988 and 2000 respectively) and moved those collections up to Skywalker Ranch. Who knows, maybe he’ll grab Fox’s.
What a stupid decision. People from all over town used that library, not just Fox – film and TV productions. I worked on a non-Fox show that used it. One of the most welcoming places in any studio I’ve ever been to. You could go in there with a laundry list of stuff and the staff would pull it together with really quick turnaround and boom, you’re done. You could get stuff there that you could not get anywhere else and you could get it fast. After using the Fox library a few times I wondered why every studio didn’t have a facility like this. Well now we know. They had them and were too short-sighted to keep them.
Don’t it always seem to go/that you don’t know what you got till its gone.
Sell it on E-bay.
This is one of the worst and soulless decisions made by studio execs in the history of Hollywood. This library is an amazing resource and the amount of money for its yearly running costs probably doesn’t come close to equaling the salary of one A list star or director per film. This is disgusting.
This library was not just for Fox employees or only those on the Fox lot. As a writer I used it many times, all I needed was a drive on and I could walk right in and it was one of the greatest libraries I’ve ever been to. It wasn’t that big, but picture a library with all the non-creative stuff taken out. No fiction books, nothing but amazing research books of all kinds. And an incredibly helpful and knowledgeable research staff. And many of the books are LONG out of print.
Some of the other studio libraries that were shuttered had their material donated piece meal to places like the burbank public library etc.. So my fear is that Fox’s collection will never exist as a large research collection again. Fox never made enough use of this library. Most of my fellow writers never knew about it. I would gladly have paid a fee to use it if they had just asked. Maybe if they had done that over the years they wouldn’t need to close it now.
Hmmm, maybe the WGA could buy this collection if the Academy doesn’t…
Idiots. Fools. As a writer on a TV show that works out of the Fox lot I have used that library to research countless episodes. It’s an amazing, amazing resource. I never fail to tour guests there (and I do it with great pride) and they are always blown away. It’s astounding to me the utter disregard these companies have for history and for the creative process. How the hell do they think we get anything done? We look, we read, we inspire ourselves to put out their product. Let’s just hope George Lucas buys the collection and preserves this gem.
I realize that Fox and all the other studios are money making entities first. But this is such BS I can’t even write this email without shaking.
First, to the idea that “nobody” goes to the library and therefore it should be closed, BS! I work there and each and everytime I walk in there are always people there. Not just peon Fox workers like myself but VP’s and above, browsing around and taking in the history contained in those walls.
Second, I find their priorities to be completely out of whack. Right, I know, a major media company with priorities out of whack…. No major news there. But while they are closing the library, they are spending the money to have an on lot dry cleaning service, car wash service and all sorts of other cool benefits that while nice, don’t hold a candle to the history and life that the library contains. I cannot, for the life of me, fathom how we have nearly 300 Vice Presidents and above in the television division alone but they can’t find a few dollars to save this national treasure.
And to the arguement that the contents should be more accessible to the public, well let me pose this simple question: How publically accessible are the contents of the other studios libraries now that they are gone? My guess is that they have disappeared into the void. If Fox’s real intention was to make the contents of the library more accessible then I think it could be accomplished very simply by setting up a system for outsiders (non Fox employees) to get easier access to the library. And that wouldn’t take a rocket scientist to create.
I really hope that anyone reading these comments with any kind of cache in this town will do what they can to pressure Fox into reversing their decision. This happened once before a few years back. But public and private pressure changed the studio’s mind. PLEASE!!! I beg all of you to do what you can.
HoopersX
An invaluable resource bites the dust because clueless MBA’s with no pride, vision, imagination or sense of history are in charge. What else is new.
The cost of maintaining that library was probably less than many studio executives’ annual cocaine bills.
When I first came out here in 1987, there were several libraries like this. Libraries in studios, for studios. Remember these great collections were assembled when giants ran the studios, the Mayers, Thalbergs, Warners, Wassermans, Cohns (yes) ans Zukors. Today, studios are run by nervous former accountands and, damn it, soulless lawyers.
And it gets worse. Remember the great bookstores on Hollywood and San Fernando Road? All gone.
There is so little left beyond the library system.
I’d suggest UCLA’s library system, but the books there are slowly being razor-bladed to death by the guys who sell “prints” at antique shows. ALL THOSE “PRINTS” USED TO BE IN THE BOUND MAGAZINES IN LIBRARIES.
Don’t take my word for it. Go to a library and try to find a color photo of a movie star in a 1930 bound set of periodicals.
It’s vomitously disgusting, whether you steal a print or turf a library.
I am so sorry to hear this. Have used this library many times; the people who worked there were amazing.
Another great resource gone. Thanks, studios.
I just found out about this– it’s totally appalling. I didn’t know about the library until a few years ago, but it’s an incredible, invaluable resource. Whoever at the top who okayed this decision deserves no less than the firing squad. It’s just as bad as those stories you hear of MGM junking warehouses full of prints and trims back in the 1980s I’ve never seen an industry milk its history and shit on it at the same time like “showbiz” does.
Its b.s. that outsiders can’t use the fox library. it’s extremely easy to do. the library staff always makes time for outside fox productions, all you have to do is call.
maybe fox could look into getting other companies to pay some of the upkeep in exchange for access if they are really so worried about counting pennies.
I know that the library is used by many departments on the lot, not just the art directors. It also serves as business support.
Yo, check it out. These fine peeps over @ the Fox Research Library helped me out on countless occasions when I was researching stuff for my writings. I’ve been on some weak-ass shows over there, and I’ve done stuff for indie projects, didn’t matter, ladies hooked me up with mad info. For real. Fox can bite it, they don’t know what they are doing, look at the films they are releasing this summer. Rothman will be gone in a few years, the point of a studio is that people come & go, the institutions on the lot are supposed to be eternal. Way to screw yourself and this town, dork!
Warner Bros. still has an extensive research library and archive, although it’s horribly mismanaged.