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Lincoln film found in barn cleanup; revived

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MUMBAI: A contractor cleaning an old New Hampshire barn destined for demolition came across seven reels of nitrate film inside, including a solitary copy of a 1913 silent film on Abraham Lincoln.


When Lincoln Paid, a 30-minute film about the mother of a dead Union soldier asking Lincoln to pardon a confederate soldier whom she had initially turned in, stars the brother of John Ford who directed The Quiet Man, The Grapes of Wrath and other classics.


“I was up in the attic space, and shoved away over in a corner was the film and a silent movie projector, as well,” Peter Massie, a movie buff, said of his discovery in the western New Hampshire town of Nelson. “I thought it was really cool.”


It was the summer of 2006, and the film canisters sat in his basement for a while before Massie thought of contacting nearby Keene State College, where film professor Larry Benaquist thought it was a rare find.


In fact, it was one of eight silent films starring Ford as Lincoln.


After working with the George Eastman House film preservation museum in Rochester, New York the college determined that the film, directed by and starring Francis Ford, did not exist in film archives.


The college, which plans to screen the film on 20 April, received a grant from the National Film Preservation Foundation to restore it. It took a Colorado lab a year to complete the task.

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International

Russia-India cinematic spectacle Persimmon of My Love set for grand Moscow debut

Hindi cinema style musical revives Indo-Soviet cinema ties for today

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Russia-India cinematic

MUMBAI: A new chapter in cross-border storytelling is set to unfold as Persimmon of My Love gears up for its premiere in Moscow on 1 April 2026, marking the first large-scale cinematic collaboration between Russia and India in decades.

Positioned as a modern nod to the cultural exchange that once brought Indian classics to Soviet audiences, the film blends Hindi cinema flair with Russian storytelling, aiming to rekindle a long-standing cinematic friendship.

Directed by Marius Weisberg, the musical comedy follows two brothers navigating a lively world of music, family and romance. The lead roles are played by Demis Karibidis and Mikhail Galustyan, with Karibidis also contributing as a screenwriter.

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Shot entirely in India, the production leans heavily into Hindi cinema style spectacle. Filming took place across Mumbai studios and the cities of Udaipur and Jodhpur, whose architecture was used to create the fictional setting of Khurmada. A crew of over 350 worked on the project, with large-scale sequences featuring up to 1,000 extras.

The film also brings Indian creative talent into the mix. Dance sequences are choreographed by Jay Kumar, while music by Zurab Matua features songs in both Hindi and Russian, adding to its cross-cultural appeal.

Backed by TNT channel, MyWayStudio and the Russian Cinema Fund, the project reflects a broader push to strengthen cultural ties between the two countries.

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With its mix of colour, comedy and cross-border collaboration, Persimmon of My Love is not just a film release but a reminder that cinema, much like music, travels well across borders.

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