[…]h, then of course, there's the famous film London can take it. I don't. You've seen it when the CMI were putting out films, five minute films, in the cinemas, you see. And the newsreels were getting rather annoyed because other companies were being commissioned by the CEO of automated films. The new[…]
[…]ctive contributions were that PressburÂger was very strong on the script and Powell maybe more on a cinematic presentation of the script and then the actual direcÂtion. CH: I think you 1 re abs[…]
[…]rst: His sons have asked me the same question.Roy Fowler: What might be interesting are your memories of a film show at that time, what happened in a cinema.Eddie Dryhurst: Oh well I can tell you that because I used to practically haunt them! They used to have continuous performances from about five[…]
[…]le film on. And I can remember in the art classes that we used to have Bishop's Holt if we ever have to do posters I would try and do a poster of the Cinema or film project I wanted to do with draw film with the variable density soundtrack I didn't understand that they are there and I've always done[…]
[…] on working. And then one day, I went to the cinema. And there was a thing called Canada Carries On […]
[…]g my drawings and my writing to newspapers in Glasgow. And I learned a great deal from that. Linda Wood 1:28Did you were you interested in cinema as a child, Donald Wilson 1:32we had a touring cinema which came around to our town hall. And it was one of the because we had no ra[…]
[…] sort of thing. Social activities of miners, plays they put on, any special skills mariners had or hobbies, and it was very popular. It showed in 300 cinemas, perhaps because it was free to the cinemas. It was a 10 minute kind of newsreel magazine.Speaker 1 20:59 Did the coward not have […]
[…]got any thought of actually making films at that time. But one of the uncles who had been visited on us for a while he had before the war he'd been a cinema projectionist. And although he would, had been sort of drifted into unison's work, he had managed to get permission to leave that and become on[…]
[…]got any thought of actually making films at that time. But one of the uncles who had been visited on us for a while he had before the war he'd been a cinema projectionist. And although he would, had been sort of drifted into unison's work, he had managed to get permission to leave that and become on[…]
[…]ovement outBert Craik 29:50 well why I'm saying I recall and ACTT as a trade union has done a lot to to eliminate this Is the cleaning of cinematic film with carbon tetrachloride. It happened in all the labs in the days gone by when girls or the young boys would clean this film on a benc[…]