[…]t film. Oh, yes, it was Ross would come back from. He was working on a film called Night of the Iguana. I remember. And that was an MGA. That was the post production was done at MGM. And Lowe's was a sound editor. You know what? Again, it's all about silly games, we all play. I mean, less was always[…]
[…]nna make this film. It was made on a trawler in the North Sea, in the worst possible weather that I could find. And of course a man called - he was a Post Office Film Unit, considered the king man of documentaries, but absolutely bogusRoy Fowler: Grierson?Vernon Sewell: Grierson! He'd neve[…]
[…] you were doing looping in Ireland... Mickey Hickey: Oh yes, post synching... Bob Allen: Yeah, post synching. Mickey Hickey: I […]
[…] you were doing looping in Ireland... Mickey Hickey: Oh yes, post synching... Bob Allen: Yeah, post synching. Mickey Hickey: I […]
[…] applicable insights into costume design as a professional endeavour in post-war British cinema, and shedding light on a whole cohort […]
[…]wn Speaker 16:51 Well, no depression in 1928 2009. Yes.Unknown Speaker 16:55 Yes, itUnknown Speaker 16:56 was the post war slump.Unknown Speaker 16:58 That's the question time that the London Palladium conducted they were both owned by the same managem[…]
[…]bout setting up our own little editing company. And and eventually after looking around looking at premises and stuff we, we did. He sets up tanggram post production, which lasted from hang on my jumping ahead. No, that's really nice last year from 85 to 2013. That's pretty good run. And we bought v[…]
[…]: By the Germans and there was Nazi troops and so on and so forth. Danzig was a strange city because it had Polish schools and German schools, Polish Post office and German Post Office but the German side of everything, culture and everything was the majority rather. We went to a Polish school in th[…]
[…]eat Central in London, you and about ninety-nine others, on a cameraman's course." This is how Pinewood got me. A cameraman's course was a War Office posting. Your regiment could have no say in the matter. So anyway I go up there and of the hundred there's only thirty accepted and, naturally, I'm on[…]