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Updated: Follow-up to classic Paris-Roubaix film A Sunday In Hell secures crowdfunding (+ video)

Documetary will follow Jorgen Leth, maker of 1970s classic A Sunday In Hell, in his current guise of The Commentator

A team of documentary makers including the man behind the Bicycle Film Festival (BFF) have secured crowdfunding for a documentary on Paris-Roubaix that will follow Danish commentator Jorgen Leth – himself the maker of the 1976 film of the race, A Sunday In Hell, that is now regarded as one of the most iconic films ever made about cycling.

BFF founder Brendt Barbur had been looking to raise $27,000 for the project via Kickstarter by 5.10pm GMT on Friday 23 March, and passed that target sometime overnight following a concerted push being made by social media networks including Twitter to ensure that filming can happen around the day of the race, on Sunday 8 April.

The project’s page on Kickstarter gives the background to it, saying: “In 1976 Danish Filmmaker Jorgen Leth made the legendary sports and cycling film, A Sunday in Hell, about the Paris Roubaix cycling race. It defined a genre and helped put the Paris-Roubaix on the global sporting map. Leth now comments on the race for television.

“We plan to follow Leth as he prepares for and comments on the race. We’ll be with him from his hotel in Paris until the end of the race at the Roubaix Velodrome. Along the way our team of photographers and filmmakers will shoot footage of the race, crowds and Leth himself caught up in the excitement of sport. We’ll capture the intense effort of contemporary pro racers, and will be sure to include stars from cycling’s past.

“The Commentator will screen all over the world as part of the Bicycle Film Festival programming.”

As to why they’re making the film, the team, which includes Oscar-nominated documetary maker Albert Maysles as cinematographer, says: “We all have deep respect for Jorgen and are great fans of his work. We’ve had the idea for this film for a while, but have just this year decided to set things in motion to make it happen.

“Everyone on the crew has their own connection to Jorgen, some have worked with him others are friends and still others are great admirers of his work.

A Sunday in Hell changed not just the way sports documentaries are filmed, but the very nature of sports coverage. It painstakingly documents the sometimes-brutal sport of cycling on one if its most historic and challenging courses.

“Leth essentially created a blueprint for cycling coverage that lives on to this day.

“We take inspiration from Leth’s work and hope to discover more about the grueling Paris-Roubaix.”

Various incentives are on offer for people to pledge certain amounts - $50 or more, for example, will get you either a portrait print of Mark Cavendish in the World Champion’s jersey by photographer Stefan Ruiz, who is also involved on the project, or a DVD of The Commentator once it is finished, as well as a book of the project.

We’re big fans of A Sunday In Hell here at road.cc, and we reckon a film about its maker set within the context of the modern race is well worth making.

You can still donate to the film here until 5.10pm GMT this afternoon.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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5 comments

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joemmo | 11 years ago
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if you haven't seen the original then it's available on youtube in its entirety. Worth watching but it is quite dated so don't expect a pumping soundtrack and cutting edge camera work.

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ragtag replied to joemmo | 11 years ago
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Love the way it has aged. Sometimes the soundtrack seems more important than the film.

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fred22 replied to ragtag | 11 years ago
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ragtag wrote:

Love the way it has aged. Sometimes the soundtrack seems more important than the film.

+ 1

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kamoshika | 11 years ago
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Just had a look and they've reached their target. Looking forward to seeing it once it gets made  1

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Gkam84 | 11 years ago
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As much as i'll most likely watch it at some point if its made, just not that much of an interest to donate. Although we could have had a Road.cc whip round for £5000 and got a Road.cc private screening  39

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