Located in the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, the HFA is devoted to film preservation, exhibition and engagement. A division of Harvard Library, the Harvard Film Archive is dedicated to the collection, preservation and exhibition of film. It maintains an extensive archive of over 40,000 motion picture prints, audiovisual elements and ephemera from around the world and from almost every peri
od in film history. Located in the historic Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts on the Harvard University campus, the HFA cinematheque is renowned for its diverse programming of films which—due to age, rarity, challenging content or format—are not screened regularly or often even available for viewing at all. With a focus on deep engagement, the HFA frequently invites film directors and artists to discuss their work with the vibrant community of students, professors, artists and cinephiles. Recent visitors include legends of cinema Agnès Varda, Wim Wenders, Kazuo Hara, Godfrey Reggio and Frederick Wiseman; younger and mid-career artists such as Ryusuke Hamaguchi, Kelly Reichart, Mati Diop, Alice Rohrwacher, Anocha Suwichakornpong, Alex Ross Perry, Angela Schanelec, Lav Diaz, Christian Petzold, Wang Bing, Valeska Grisebach, Dieudo Hamadi and Dominga Sotomayor; avant-garde filmmakers Jodie Mack, Laura Huertas Millán, Nathaniel Dorsky, Sky Hopinka and Kevin Jerome Everson; as well as special guests such as actress Pam Grier and Japanese benshi Ichiro Kataoka. Some of the HFA's recent programs include retrospectives of the work of Luchino Visconti, Tony Conrad, Chantal Akerman, Robert Flaherty, Howard Hawks, Moustapha Alassane, Jerome Hiler, Jiri Trnka and Lucrecia Martel, as well as surveys such as The B-Film. Low-Budget Hollywood Cinema 1935-1959; Make My Day. The Cinematic Imagination of the Reagan Era; Say It Loud! The Black Cinema Revolution; Moon Movies: Apollo 11 at 50; Romanian Cinema Now; New Thai Cinema and Amour Fou. Ongoing series include our annual all-night movie marathons and the monthly Cinema of Resistance screenings and family-friendly Weekend Matinee shows. The HFA's collection of film and audiovisual material, as well as its many posters, documents, and ephemera are accessible to faculty and students at Harvard and outside researchers through our academic research services.