[…]ol Haslam.SF: Yes, we know her.Who said ‘What a lovely idea, what a lovely idea. Well, I know that Sue makes films but how much do you know about the legal and financial side’? And I said ‘Absolutely nothing’. She said ‘What I suggest you do is we marry you with a film company’, and we said ‘Oh we’r[…]
[…]y more H-1s to editors at all.
Mm.
But they’ve come in through a kind of loophole, that a guy there has a, well it’s not a loophole, it’s quite legal, a guy there has a company who’s an English guy, and he employs them, and therefore... You know, on sound, he has a sound house there.
Y es.
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[…]eight versions of it had been made I have no idea. But the reason we know a lot about that film, was it was shot in Berlin, there was a celebrated um legal action against my father by his principle artist who he brought from America called Betty Blythe who she maintained er had not been paid.Inciden[…]
[…]ey had bought it from Laughton Pommer and in point of fact Max had been their solicitor, I think, or he was connected with them. He had been with the legal department at Pinewood originally when he came out of the army and then he met Aubrey and they bought the Mayflower Company from the Laughton Po[…]
[…] they spoke to us quite openly. Created all sorts of legal problems actually. Obviously having people expressing their opinions. They […]
[…] he was connected with them. He had been with the legal department at Pinewood originally when he came out of […]
[…]sort of activism? Because, you know, activists tend to get quite bad press now, don’t they? 13 Well, we’d, we’d managed to interview, the illegal side of people like the Animal Liberation Front, the Animal Liberation Leagues, and we were taken in by, they accepted, they knew we were making[…]
[…]y in which people, in which there are so many crooks operating, it seems, Frick's Constantine, I think, probably is known to sail fairly close to the legal wind. It's a bit distressing to hear about Michael Powell that he would well,Speaker 2 0:28 I didn't realize either, because he was […]
[…]e that night there's a tap on the door, and there's the page boy with a sack of money, it's £5 worth of farthings, [pre-decimal, the smallest coin of legal tender] and he said “Mr Hitchcock asked me to give this to you”, and this was his idea of a joke. It was a heavy thing, I now have to go to a ba[…]