[…] Roy Fowler the Project’s founder interviewed Adolph Simon, an early newsreel cameraman, who recalled filming in 1914.  The interviews are […]
[…] from other participants may be found on the BFI’s Screenonline website; and the BUFVC Newsreel project. We continue to work diligently to ensure that […]
[…] from other participants may be found on the BFI’s Screenonline website, and the BUFVC Newsreel project. We continue to work diligently to ensure that […]
[…] was in his mid-nineties and had been an adventurous Pathé Newsreel cameraman. The day after the 1987 hurricane amid the […]
[…]s and and the V twos had stopped, the the the pictures. Then I remember going to see a Danny Kaye film. And that was Love, fun entertainment, but the newsreels started then showing the the, my mother kept me sating down. She didn't think there was going to be any problem. The Show, the pictures goin[…]
[…]gs and sixpence John Luton 3:28 Erwin. Can I just chip in here, if you're going to explain for anyone watching running the newsreel was actually carrying, what 1000 foot tin It was Ernest Marsh 3:38 between two cinema, yes, it was. It was a two, […]
[…]eaker 2:19 they were in the process ofUnknown Speaker 2:22 transferring all the head a lot of old nitrate film, archive film, newsreel film like theUnknown Speaker 2:28 Hindenburg, crashing, exploding amazing stuff. And they were sending the good stuff off the Nat[…]
[…]ust run 24 hours a day animated cartoon films. I've forgotten the name of one but it was actually I think it was based on Piccadilly Circus there and newsreels rockin usual type of thing. But it was all animation. You know, we all the old Warner Brothers, Road Runners. And that's where I think we go[…]
[…]lves showing film they have scratches down it. There’s someone going to… the film’s about 1944 and they’re going to the cinema in 1944 to look at the newsreel and it’s covered in scratches. Why? It wouldn’t have been it was a brand new print. But, no, archive film always has scratches down it and th[…]