The Longest Most Meaningless Movie in the World (lost 48-hour long underground film; 1970)

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The longest etc.jpg

A German poster for the film

Status: Lost

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This article has been tagged as Needing work due to its improper formatting.


The Longest Most Meaningless Movie in the World was apparently the longest film ever created at the time of its release, but has since been surpassed. According to various sources, it lasted for 48 hours and contained no original footage, consisting only of commercials, outtakes, strips of undeveloped film, and other similar material.

A German poster for the film, advertising a showing connected to avante-garde collective Aktionsraum 1

Its MUBI page and IMDB credit its direction to Vincent Patoulliard, but its poster seemingly credits it to "Anthony Scott."

The only known image that has made its way online shows a woman with a large dinosaur. A few articles use an image of the 1956 Olympic flame hoax, with this discrepancy likely stemming from a Listverse article which briefly mentions the film before using the picture in a separate entry.

A 2004 article from The Guardian claims The Longest Most Meaningless Movie in the World was produced by the Swiss Film Centre and initially premiered at the Cinématheque de Paris in October 1970, although a 2013 post from "America Fun Fact of the Day" claims that the film was originally shown at Drury Street, London. The post also claims that the film was shown throughout 1968, 1969, and 1970, and that various segments were run upside down and in reverse, including a segment where the same commercial was shown repeatedly for over half an hour.

Currently the only known image from the film

It is unlikely that the film fully exists on VHS or tape due to its excessive length. There are no known releases outside of showings.