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Audiovisual Cultures episode 92 – Horror, Film History and Irish Cinema with Dr Gary D. Rhodes automated transcript


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this is audio visual cultures the podcast that explores different areas of the arts and culture of production with me Paula Blair visit Petri on dot com forward slash AP cultures to find out more and to join the policy welcome to another audio visual cultures podcast I am polo player and deployed to I have a treat for you today I am beyond excited to welcome filmmaker and historian Dr Gary D. roots Gary thank you so much for joining me hi are you and where do we find G. well we find this in many places during a pandemic mainly I suppose the best dancers at home like we're so often confine let me start by saying thanks so much for inviting me to talk %HESITATION I've noted your research for years and so it's always great to have the chance to chat with you though I'm physically in Orlando Florida now my part of my heart always belongs to the north of Ireland where we first met but more than anything else the best answer like I guess we will give us %HESITATION and hold you know in the middle of this horrendous play sets just as you mentioned that there anyway Carrie and just for listeners to carry and I have known each other for I would say it longer than either of us wants to add minutes to remind my grey hair anyway mine's coming might mean well on the way later the batter's eye below there's also there's always hair dye I'm definitely considering that right now so you like you know you're always like fabulous I had the privilege of being taught spicy garlic when he arrives at queen's university Belfast in two thousand five and that was the final year of my undergraduate degree and she also %HESITATION where the internal examiner for my peach state which is very exciting remember all I remember all of it very well I was so excited to get to Belfast means and it was so great the entire cohort of students you work hard on or so such extremely creative intelligent and dedicated students far more than I'd work with at the undergraduate level before it was extremely exciting and of course we shared an interest in Irish cinema and that became of course quirk to your PhD work and so I was so proud to be a small part of that process and and your success with that project no that's very kind Kerry you've been writing more picks than I can keep up west so I think it be nice said start talking about some of the methods okay and really get into a your research areas so we'll see what where you want to go with this it might be you get sick at the most recent thing out of the way because what we're all living through the man it is quite relevant something you from working on anyway which I like to tell us a bit about your hi cinema has been affected by epidemics research of course thank you yeah thank you for that question it's an area of research that became very interesting to me many years ago I was actually an undergraduate at the time and I was going through as it is interested in film history I was going through these old publications like variety The Hollywood Reporter and all of those and I would be turning the pages and looking for things of interest to me on subjects like the horror film one of my other areas of interest I kept seeing over and over again in these old publications yellowing crumbling publications from the nineteen twenties thirties forties I kept saying so many movie theater tragedies that had affected audiences and some of them we we maybe know a little bit about a film like %HESITATION inglorious bastards the queen Tarantino film for example picks up on the flammability of film and the fact that some fire sometimes happens it could kill people and so I was saying those things as they occurred in American these old newspapers these old trade publications and I kept saying over and over again and I started photo copying all of it because I thought there is you know I've never heard about this and it was five years and it was bombings it was sometimes murders that people would use the darkness of the movie theater to shoot another person for example all these very tragic stories but I found quite interesting in that they were so forgotten and it ended up culminating in a book of mine over a debt about a decade ago called the perils of movie going in America you know all these regrettably bad things could happen by just going to the movies but one part of it that I should now introduces the fact that along with everything I've just mentioned and other horrors you know they were they were unfortunately you know people would get groped frankly in the darkness you know %HESITATION so there was sexual assaults and things that would happen I mean a lot of this of course exacerbated by the cover of darkness because you know what it's a rather interesting thing although we're so used to in today's world to go into a movie theater it's set in the darkness with strangers all around as you know that was a rather new thing to do at the end of the nineteenth century to plunge into darkness with strangers but with all of the horrible things that could happen one of the others that became a chapter was the sheer number of pandemics and epidemics that affected movie going a century ago and even a little more recent the most famous of the move would have been the nineteen eighteen influenza the great influenza pandemic so much has been said of it lately where century later it's I suppose and pandemic terms the nearest example the nearest touchstone for us during all of this that's true for our movie going situation as well and so that became so much of what I was writing about in that book although there were other epidemics like polio like scarlet fever those tended to be more %HESITATION regional in America more short term you know shutting down a feature for a few weeks sometimes they were moored strictly demographic you know sometimes that theaters would remain open during polio epidemics but children Morgan made it because they were the ones that would contract Holyoke but the pandemic of nineteen eighteen cost most theaters in America to shop for about half of nineteen eighteen hands in an eerie precursor to today's world to re open and then have to shut again because of the surges of second way each you know the desire for everybody for their own mental health but also on the exhibitor side of the fence to start making money again to not go out of business to be able to sell movie theater seats again take a it's again so so this is something of my research is actually began when I was an undergraduate it ended up being a book and %HESITATION it's interesting how I don't know if it's the return of the repressed or what it is but you can do a project and then years later only years later is its relevance maybe %HESITATION or becomes more Roman you know the research because right when the pandemic fit and everything began to shop in America in March of twenty twenty I got a phone call from the Chicago Tribune saying Hey it looks like you're the only person that you know has written about this before and then that led to me talking more about it writing my own updates about it in the New York Daily News and and elsewhere because it's one of those moments where hopefully you know our research can have meaning for the world outside of a dusty library shelf yeah well I mean in a way it quite fits with your interest in horror because it is quite all horrific in its own way all of that stuff yes very much so in fact my op ed in the New York Daily News was published at Halloween last year and it was actually in some ways drawing the very connection you're talking about including the red death and post famous story the masque of the red death to our present situation because a lot of horror films have been horror stories traditionally have been about plagues both real like the bubonic plague as well as kind of concocted like post story did creating it like for the sake of of scaring people and and these things have continued through the years you know I know there's a getting some slight contagion have obviously been watched probably and thought about probably as much or more the past years when they were first you know released so there is a a very scary you know connection here one of George Romero's stating horror films you know where I'm going is always are at two steps ahead of me crazies your main course Romero having been the director of night of the Living Dead and dawn of the dead most famously but he made some of the crazies about a an epidemic and of course that was remade even World War Z. %HESITATION you know some of some of the zombie craze of recent years some of the stories about how the zombies get started or a pandemic related epidemic related as I recall it was probably the first season of the walking dead yeah where the journey of survival was leading to the CDC Erica Yoon the center for disease control and that's another odd thing I haven't I haven't really thought that much about it or written that much about it but clearly that there is a curiosity however accidental and so many zombie films in America being about epidemics pandemics in the years not too many years before and leading up to our present situation I think twenty eight days later it comes from monkey so there's that species jump that happens is quite interesting to think about it nine oh yes which is very fast and because obviously there's talks about where did this come from was it from a bad or so forth and that's been true of some prior diseases and epidemics and so forth in in human history in order they originating from other species of animals it's true of the folklore too isn't it because you know you get bit by a vampire you know and %HESITATION you know unless you like the empires and sometimes I should go for it but but you know so well either well or or rob but there is that characteristic you're Ryan and twenty eight days later was Gus was such a watershed moment I think for a lot of us that are interested in horror films and interested in British horror films and how it was seen at the time to really inject new life into and may be injected in a pandemic world is even an interesting word but inject new life into the British horror film that was so well known in the sixties and seventies and and it's very much again a key into and and maybe pressing of our current situation would certainly I don't mean to make light of what we're trying to study and understand it and %HESITATION and not make light of it but I do think that there are some interesting yeah there so there's a lot of interesting interactions between horror and %HESITATION plagues including our current pandemic yeah I suppose that's not saying is playing out scenarios I find in the arts so the movies are there a matching necklace what happened this could be the series of events that happens and you know but if people are in their own may face at the minute I specific way of understanding what's happening to us because we're paid in our little boxes were stuck at home I suppose we've only got our imagination I don't really know where I'm going with that I'm just thinking sorry if it's just playing out scenarios of what could potentially happen because there's such a big difference between a maybe like a zombie land and twenty eight days later ones very serious in the other one isn't spring yet there by essentially the same thing %HESITATION yes yes well and that makes my mind go fast and so many places that your faults there because you're raising so many interesting issues and and I think that certainly there's this fascinating connection between horror and comedy yeah you know as genres maybe two sides of the same coin sometimes they've been set aside I think that they're two of the most consistently popular genres in film history they both emerged basically in the eighteen nineties and they they really don't have much of a of a period of disappearing honest in the way that say musicals or western institute the consistent popularity of boats and everything from what we might call dark comedy which can be so often in horror films to the fact the company itself is I think inherently subversive somebody is so often on the end of the joke so to speak you know that maybe a lot of people are laughing children you know on a playground but then there's the one crying because they're the one being made fun of you know comedy can be rather in its own way so cruel so I think that there's some real connections there and I think that that's true throughout horror film history which we see played out in in two basic ways that one would be that the serious horror films in many cases what inject moments of comedy relief comic relief the idea particularly in areas like the nineteen twenties thirties and afterwards forties fifties we'll have something really scary but then we'll have somebody make a joke of it a couple of minutes later to help the idea was to relieve the tension of the movie goer it's just been put through the trauma of screen terror and then across the other trajectory if there's two main ones the other trajectory would be that kind of zombie land approach where the horror and comedy or combined it wants into something that may be dark I mean one of the things that always attracted me about certain types of Irish literature going back you know would be the darkly comic sensibilities and I think horror at times has gone down that road where horror and comedy or in other words he added he ends in creating the sensations and sometimes at those moment very peculiar situate sensations and emotional responses because you know when something's darkly comic does it frighten us do we laugh we laugh is is it an uncomfortable kind of laughter I think all of that's very fascinating and I think you're right that the imagination can help in these ways and sometimes it's maybe life imitating art or art imitating life and maybe it's an interesting I think in the history of horror even thinking back before cinema you know literature painting visual culture folklore there's kind of I think interesting kind of dance macabre here when you talk about twenty eight days later on I'm reminded one of my forthcoming publications is about the unproduced film revolts of the dead which would have been in nineteen thirty two or like thirty two early thirty three film directed by tod Browning okay Brandon was very yeah you know Browning I'm not in the list probably due in may nineteen thirty one Dracula you may nineteen thirty to fill freaks he's considered one of the you know one of the great horror film directors of course like all directors there were projects he wanted to do that didn't happen and I was able to locate all of his notes in the script drafts for a film that he never made in a forthcoming book and it's called revolt of the dead hand of course Browning live through the pandemic of nineteen eighteen nineteen and his film revolt of the dead seems like it's harking back to the nineteen eighteen epidemic because it's about a kind of a %HESITATION route in which doctor that wants to turn the whole world into the living dead knitting which spread across the whole world you know like like twenty eight days later like a %HESITATION World War Z. you know he's basically wanted to create albeit with kind of a supernatural origin a kind of pandemic of the Living Dead and in the script increasingly people start getting knocks on their door from dead relative it's who aren't the same people go to movie theaters they go to restaurants that go to the to the night clubs for young people used to maybe go more often for dancing and music and soon the dead infected dad over populate the living and and M. scary where you literally in the script you go to a restaurant and they're more dead people at it then there are the living and so this is kind of I think what you're talking about you know that it's a I think it's an interesting dance where it's back and forth you know I mean I think as so often he was in horror you know PO weekend with the mask of the red death was kind of a pressing it ahead of the game in some ways you know so it's fascinating it's it's horrifying but it's very from state from a scholarly terms as well as I think moviegoing turns audience terms you know these things can help us I think that's one of the great things about horror potentiality Horace to be cathartic to be scared through entertainment but maybe from the safety of our of our whole social media says it's probably a good please send CV asking a bait probably one of your best known picks UP the birth of the American horror film because certainly those of us who are young we think we invented everything and actually as you say it started right at the start of cinnamon I suppose for anybody listening he might be under the misconception that old films and silent films are very stuffy industry at a fast what would you say about that well I I'm always looking for ideas here about convincing people of the merits of going back to look at earlier years of failed and even how to work with the young filmmakers and %HESITATION young film students and so forth you know how to get them interested in hearing aids before for example in the twenty first century %HESITATION especially a period of black and white cinema of even silent films the earliest days of cinema I don't know the best approach to getting people I've tried various mechanisms to get them excited I think there's a few ways that I try and not least of which is the fact that some of the best known filmmakers today certainly in the western way well certainly in my home country of America would be people like Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino filmmakers whose films and their careers their interviews everything about them exemplify that their achievements and and and and I will be in the limit to just those two but there are two examples of names most people I think now they're films constantly reference built upon the tradition of cinema they are lifelong students of film history and and they of course attribute their success in some measure to their knowledge of film history and we can go back to so many other filmmakers right think that's true as well some of the great film makers are among the biggest collectors of film history and film memorabilia and so forth because they love the cinema and if you love the cinema there's not a starting date on it in other words you can love films made before the year two thousand and I think also I would say to younger filmmakers or trying to convince people to share my hopefully boundless enthusiasm and passion is if you're wanting to make great films the film genres we love have existed so long be it comedy or horror as we've already said or others if you're wanting to develop script ideas if you're wanting to think about cinema in your own ideas being part of the genres indeed we could argue the film itself is a genre I argue that in the same way Mekelle box used to argue that the novel was a genre whatever its topic or focus speed a western novel or a you know a drama or what have you but it all still in other words what we try to argue is that you can find incredible ideas in the past it can be because the genre is always reinvention it's building on what has been done before the cinema is about that sometimes obviously in the form of direct remakes you know as we talk a new Texas chainsaw massacre film is about to come out the first one was made in the seventies so sometimes this of course most obviously happens with the three makes but it could have been more vague ways with story lines with themes it can happen even with you know I I grew up loving George Lucas there still the Star Wars universe multiverse whatever it is universe I suppose with the Mandalorian everybody loves and Amanda Morgan is doing what Lucas did in the seventies by using a lot of white transitions fallen out of favor for decades but that he loved from the nineteen thirties films and serials he watched in so it doesn't have to be about finding old story lines that are interesting about finding some techniques that were popular once upon a time but not as much now and so I think here is in Willits fountain an incredible reservoir of possible inspiration of all types for young filmmakers even in direct terms right before I came to Ireland this spring before I came what I ride in Ireland in the north of Ireland that full in Belfast at queens and met you in so many wonderful students the previous spring I had my last group of American students and one of them wanted to make a short film called director's cut that was going to be a short horror movie and the cut was going to have in the title more than one meeting as you can gather probably going you know the slasher time about ourselves he got fairly far along before he realized and then I met him and had to relay the unfortunate news nectar already did a film called director's cut it was a horror film that at least in the most basic idea that you get from that title it had been done before and so I think even if you're committed to doing something extraordinarily noted perhaps you're interested in all of Asgard or experimental you want to do something that's never been done before it does help to know film history so you're not reinventing the wheel as that student was trying to do and fortunately he moved on to another project and that was wonderful for him but he had gotten far long before I met him with something that was on knowingly copy and past so if you are going to work with the past it's best to do of course is a very knowing away which is one of the things course yeah that we love about people like Quentin Tarantino and again so many other filmmakers that work in this same kind of way no yeah so I wanted to see Askey a fight your work on political safe because you've written probably I I don't know maybe the most comprehensive biographies of lego say and because he is a figure that we certainly anyone who knows her stuff about horror film they know he's out is so I was wondering if you would mind if there are any listeners may be younger listeners who don't know who you were talking about aids or you know as you mentioned earlier he was Dracula he was Dracula yes it's hard grinding struck in that you know and that was back with the universal horror the creature features in a way that they were doing in the nineteen thirties but that was you know one of the first ones to snatch but that wasn't all he did he had such an extensive career and credit tumultuous life I think is while I mean would you be happy to to tell us a bit of bite yes well I I would love to and I suppose in different periods would go see has been known for different reasons for example when I first met you and I was first starting to work with some of the first year students in Ireland in courses like introduction to film I would sometimes show them Tim Burton's movie ed wood because it depicted let go see a very tragic late in his life it was a Tim Burton film that dramatized you know starring Johnny Depp and Martin Landau the dramatized the most tragic Lugosi's life and and I would show it to first year students stand because they they would remember that the film to come out when they were ten years old a war or or and heard about it and of course now it's much further in time from the release of that film and it was in other words a bit of a more modern touchstone for me to talk about legacy then and now it's very much passed into the past so speak from another century now we're now we're much cheaper but more than twenty five years I guess talking with people who may not know Lugosi I suppose now the best way is the white first white would be the way that most people have historically known who he is throughout the world and I think he connects a little bit with our our last exchange because it is a way in which film and by extension popular culture so often reinvents or builds on the past even in ways that sometimes audiences aren't aware in America this past Halloween there was a commercial for a candy bar we would call them here chocolate bar I think you might say called kit kat our colleague as overall used to eat the every morning when I would have T. within United also they're known for their note elsewhere in the world but they're popular they were popular here in America and it was it was a commercial thirty second TV commercial where Dracula in the usual dress the Cape the clean face shape shaven face pretty good looking hair slicked back black hair and affecting a kind of a of an eastern European kind of Hungarian slash remaining accent was on there pouting and of course wanting to sink his teeth into a kit kat candy bar and that commercial is even available to go see died in nineteen fifty six that commercial was him in in a sense refracted at least through popular culture reincarnated through popular culture there is a children's cereal in America known as Count Dracula its mascot from the nineteen seventies until to day is another of those imitators I suppose is another term we could use there's an extent to which even later Dracula's although still not known necessarily to younger people later Dracula's of the screen white Christopher Lee and Franklin Jela their depictions of Dracula drool calmly go see it particularly to the extent that in Bram stoker's novel Dracula was very different in appearance than the way we think of Dracula including on that kit kat commercial at any time if anybody affects the voice the Kate a so much of what we think of of Dracula in popular culture is not from Bram stoker's norm rather from Bela Lugosi actually what most people know most readily rather than say the long white mustache that he hasn't stoker's novel it's much more let go see who played even in nineteen thirty one film previous to that on Broadway and he turned Dracula in some ways a monster yes a supernatural vampire yes into this kind of alluring sexualized vampire so much of folklore the vampire was often repulsive and obviously vampires do repulsive things you know biting people drinkable yada yada but we go see really turned vampire I think we see this again in ways like we even there's a character named Bella in twilight films yes you know and yes different double go see some P. and Baylor would be the proper pronunciation of course right we do it in American a lot of places people did refer to informatics careers Bela Lugosi but regardless this whole notion that the vampire could be sensual the vampire could be sexualized and attractive yet even hypnotic another aspect of the vampire we think about %HESITATION often the hypnotic on ice and instilled throughout the decades sometimes this coincides with cinematography to have the extreme close up of the ice trading on ice it noted our eyes and victims who sometimes maybe don't mind being the victim because the vampire and in later films even as women vampires but the vampire become so sexualized and attractive and sexy frankly in the twentieth century until now all of that begins really most of that I should say not all but most of that begins with Lugosi's on screen depiction in nineteen thirty one and in various respects he keeps crying role throughout the rest of his life to the extent that he was literally buried in his Dracula okay so much for the two intertwined and mild saying and I I you know I don't want to self plagiarize but I think if you announce that you can say it because I've written more than once then life will go see play Dracula after his death Dracula has played Lugosi by that I mean that that again what we think of as Dracula is as much or more like go see as it is Bram Stoker that's how it was and I you know I saw those spooky movies on television as a little child and they will be in the same way I guess go story so often three little children I grew up when they were still showing black and white films on TV so I started singing in the late seventies even though he was by then long since deceased fascinated and have gone on as you kindly point out to write about it and and that's been a great deal of fun and some of the projects that come out of that have been enjoyable I think that Dracula it's a nice example of quite an early sign Diarra film designed area was quite firmly establish I think by that point and I think they were doing some very exciting things with audio at that time I think it's something that you covered I remember in teaching was the influence of a lot of emigre directors because a lot of the directors were talking about you were making the sums were British or they were German or Austrian or that sort of thing so %HESITATION you know there's that influx of that expressionist training coming over here's one of his last teaching I taught am I showed it for signs yes you know so I thought it was a nice example of a film from that %HESITATION already signed area that is actually really challenging said technology at the time yes you know I was wondering if you if that was something that he thought of I know you don't ma'am may be necessary to USA a static so much no I love it and the stakes are so much wonderful part of the horror film and a film history and even the history of a statics becomes I think so fascinating as you're rightly pointing out and I love it and I do try to write about it and I and I love the pier you're talking about because you know there's moments in film and I think we some of us have lived through it with the rise of C. GI the rise of digital projection the rise of motion capture where new technologies because a major change to cinema and this happens I think in some ways very much constantly you know the film theorist Andre Bazin used to say that film is constantly evolving which meant in his mind and I'm paraphrasing that still has yet to be invented exactly because it's always turning as he said rightly into something else you always turning into something else I think what you're pointing out that so crucial is there are particular moments of major technological upheaval because much more maybe profound change than at other moments and the introduction of sound was very clearly one of them but on that point you're pointing out of early sound is so profound because and I write about it in my next forthcoming journal article is for the journal popular film music and it's about the seconds all talking film in America which was called the terror it was released in the second half of nineteen twenty eight a lot of people would have you been seen it in the Halloween season of nineteen twenty eight and it was based on a story by Edgar Wallace and it was one of these kind of we would call them old dark house stories that were popular at the time where a lot of people gather either in an old house original tale in the middle of the night people getting start getting killed and even if the killer turns out to be just somebody wearing a mask there's a feeling that maybe there's the supernatural is a play and so forth it was the first of what we I suppose in retrospect would call a horror movie Insel neck it's playing with sound no it doesn't do it nearly as well as and because your use of and is the very best example and obviously by one of the master renters and one of the master directors who became emigrate as you rightly point out to Hollywood has never some of the others like Karl Freund who work with laying the great cinematographer who came from Germany to America ended up shooting Dracula in nineteen thirty one unit of directing one of the early universal horrors that follow Dracula which was the mummy in nineteen thirty two some people will probably think of it maybe the %HESITATION the Tom Cruise version or something in recent times you never know the remakes or the re inventions of these bottles so much of that was with the immigrate culture or stories coming from other countries and the terror was a British story but what most interestingly did it's a lost film but we have the sound discs because some of the first talkies they would have what was basically the equitable large record if you can imagine a large audio record music record and it would play in sync with the film being projected it was not a great system I mean if somebody bumps the needle the sound would be a synchronous and had a problem but for some early talkies even after lost films we cannot watch the films there's photographs from the terrible we can't watch it but the sound discs are there %HESITATION and I was able to access them and write about them for the first time and we start to get which you would probably expect in film sample we still get it and we'll get it in I suspect like the next conjuring film or what have you and ideas the sound of the human screened for the first time we get the sound of the screen but we also get the sound of the storm the sound of heavy winds through the trees and some of the sounds that we associate it certainly before film sound people associated with things that were frightening you know a lightning bolt or whatever that might frighten a child were you know a pet dog or whatever and they start to show up in the terror the very first time and it becomes very quickly adopted as a static in subsequent mystery horror films in nineteen twenty nine and thirty to the extent that by nineteen thirty there was a comedy a short that you can find on you tube called the laurel party murder case with laurel and hardy and third old house the middle the nights we can happen it's all take off on the second story you know to an extent knives out in more recent times has done some of this so again you know this never goes away keeps being reinvented but in the long run hardy version they so overdue the sound effects as to parity it's a fascinating example in nineteen thirty only a couple of years after you know a few years after sounds felt they were already prepared like we're laying on extra thick for the joke and then taught Browning immediately after makes Dracula in sound what you were asking about and he forgoes heavy thunder and lightning he for ghosts spooky music in favor of much more subtle sound effects like complete quiet except the creaking of the coffin lid opening in and trying to be much more restrained and it's so interesting because it is such an early point in film sound relatively speaking I mean you know three four years he's pulling back rather than laying it on thick and so it's interesting how these things you know can sometimes evolve quickly and how much is that expire role in the horror film including sound whether it's the spooky music or the spooky sound effects or the silence dates for the silence and that's what some of us love the most or or sometimes in horror films it's another reason to think so wonderfully about silent films it's a reason to think about parts of Dracula the talk Browning which are no music no dialogue I think one of the interesting things and we we have guests have the old phrase deals slang phrase you know that silence speaks volumes or phrases like that it it you know in America grew up hearing phrases like that may be used to get me to shut up but you know it was you know there is that I think that's one of the great things it's it's like you know when you can have a special effect when you can have moving camera sometimes the makers forget that they can let it stay still when you can collect extremely rapidly filmmaker sometimes forget that they can have slow paced and when you can do anything with still sound incredible possibilities now we can forget sadly what you've just rightly mentioned which is silence can be so very powerful even when the first impulse is to have twelve tracks or more audio going at once but just because you can use technology in a certain way doesn't mean we always you don't have to and so that's a wonderful point and certainly I think very salient for horror films you know you mentioned earlier it might be nice to see see what your connection with Irish and amazed because it may not seem immediately obvious horror and already sent a man and Irish cinema isn't enough we could get inside because I think there are there are a lot of connections there I suppose a nice segue would probably be interview with a vampire Neil Jordan if we need a Segway yes yes the way to connect a couple of these things when we first met you were teaching our cinema and dot really sparks at massive interested me because I'd had an interest in Irish literature when I was at school and then was really came to carry that on I'm excited in English and film degree so I was saying I researcher Hans Irish film and that sort of thing so is wondering what you know what you're interested in our nation well I I really appreciate that questioning and you remind me so happily of my arrival in Ireland but also so I try to be unflappable that's impossible and one of the spookiest moments and not a horror films okay but I guess it's a nervous moments was when I walked in to teach that course because I felt a little out of place not only is it immigrate myself and living in another country for the first time but I felt I felt a little %HESITATION I would never want to be seen presumptuous in teaching a course on Irish cinema in Ireland I had taught Irish semi actually America previous a couple of times what I ate that was a bit nervous actually going in to teach all of you because I thought gosh I feel ill at ease real ill informed maybe you know to take all that long since as an American and in Belfast what I suppose my interest would be two fold in and one I think it started with horror and they're certainly these tremendous connections between horror and Ireland Irish literature Irish folklore from obviously the pain she threw a film I saw and I I don't think a lot of Irish film scholars I don't know that any of never really talked about it much but when I was ten twelve years old I I was in love with horror movies I was also in love with Francis Ford Coppola who directed the godfather films in Apocalypse Now and early in his career he had made a film called dementia thirteen right early nineteen sixties and it was a gothic horror story set in Ireland it was actually shot in Ireland and you know it's readily available on YouTube it's rather well known film in terms of coklat studies because it was basically a second film but I think Irish film studies it's completely unknown connections go deeper I mean stoker was Anglo Irish they're such a great tradition of Irish gothic novels and as I grew my interest in horror I grew in my interest at heart literature as well as horror films so there's all these fantastic connections and Irish horror stories on film but the other thing to happen to me when I was a teenager was by about the age of thirteen and of course you know I grew up in the state of Oklahoma I grew up in a town that I will in American terms certainly most terms would probably consider small town twenty five thousand people I grew up in I guess I'm trying to think of the the best way to say it but it probably a and as a native American everything you know kind of a masculine type culture in terms or that parameters and so John Huston's films spoke to me greatly as a teenager his films like the Maltese falcon an African queen and these films with Humphrey Bogart who was one of the great cinema tough guys and you know his later films like the man who would be king was Sean Connery and Michael Caine and you know you can kind of see probably quickly understand maybe or or see that you know kind of okay a lot of his films in his life %HESITATION I became fast about Houston's life he was quite an explorer and hunter and you know very masculine and all that very much human waves kind of hit me way of twentieth century American cinema and he was deeply interested in Irish literature and by the time I was in high school he was making his film the debt based on choice and there was a credible documentary film made about it Houston and show the behind the scenes footage showed in talking at length this is before the kind of making of featurettes we know today by by a large number some examples but they weren't it was before DVD years before that cottage industry so to speak so I S. I became entranced by the time I was sixteen and seventeen I became entranced with James Joyce and the dead when Houston said in his mind it was probably the greatest short story ever written in the English language that spoke volumes to me the film version he made which I found to be quite faithful I'm talking at length for question and now maybe exploring what might interest came from these different angles from horror as well as Joyce and then about that same time Beckett because I was also one of my other favorites as a teenager was a Buster Keaton and Samuel Beckett had made keeping film later in king's life of course and and it kind of all on guard film and I was I was also getting in transfer you know it's easy to romanticize thing when you're a teenager and I you know the passion for it all and I was and I was getting interested in basket because of his work with Keaton and I was particularly intrigued because Kevin brown will have made this incredible documentary about cheating and he had forty two Keaton's saying you know you didn't even understand the film you know which I think yes he's one of the yeah exactly the genius filmmakers in my mind he said he didn't quite understand it but he liked packet and everything so I was coming in Ireland for all these different directions to conclude I would say that in the night you know in the nineteen nineties America really what Americans always had this love affair with Ireland is regrettable exceptions during some immigration periods baby in the nineteenth century and so forth but there's a lot of love affairs in in the later twentieth century certainly from you know everybody you know celebrating St Patrick's day to the nineties when the commitments particularly the film version you too there was a particular love affair with a different times before in the sixties I think with JFK for a lot of people but in the nineties it was like it was Neil Jordan and Jim Scherr instills were exploding onto the scene my left footed one you know at the academy award and Chris I was graduating from high school and about to start university right at that moment then there's you too and I particularly fell in love like I heard it on the radio and I was driving I mean I remember the moment so clearly I was driving down I. forty in Oklahoma City are your state that runs around a lot of America and I'm burning down the highway in an old car the only one I could afford at the time I'm burning on the highway and this voice comes on the radio this band what I didn't know the name and I had to ask a friend later that day who is singing this and it was the cranberry so you're gonna set but you know I heard including that kind of Irish weighed in at the end of the song which went from the Irish but meeting pop music even more Irish sound at the end of it just seem to speak to me in ways and again as a more romantic young person a romantic maybe more the German sense of that term my great grandfather was from Ireland cord so on Cherokee and mainly that but I'm you know I have a McCord whose family was actually from the north of Ireland even America from Cork and I've met him once is a little tiny child very memories on more work well on all of that and so I had that connection to Ireland as well so forgive this long biography ladies that I fell in love with this and then I fell in love with an Irish woman who was in America and all roads lead you know what I had to leave but I had to leave and it was this tremendous love affair I cannot tell you how achingly I miss Carrickfergus my favorite places how much I've missed the Belfast city centre the people there there's so many Dunluce there were so many places I like to go and go repeatedly I just unending love affair if it helps any I'm just thinking back said you saying you felt a bit of %HESITATION this American coming in and telling the sorry students about our cinema I don't think one of us ever saw thought not not one of us ever so thought we we were all really excited to he's American he's because so many of us hadn't met an actual American person so many of us just hadn't traveled very much and a lot of us had never even met people from the other side of Belfast because we were that generation that was emerging from the call list yes you know and this is so this is two thousand five and stuff so things were really only just opening up properly at is it took a few years after the agreement relay and a lot of assets I mean may I was the first time ever had friends from west Belfast for example I never never really met anybody from not far away before and then suddenly there's this bona fide Americans whose proper proper American you know and it was so exciting for us to relate maybe sorry maybe improper puts your to your to clients but it was it was such a joy because everyone was so welcoming I mean that was one of the great things about about living hearing role was the generosity and the charity and the welcoming nature of of the entirety of the island you know it was just like a beautiful thing so so it's so nice to hear that and it didn't seem like such a fascinating moment at that point one of my biggest memories of Belfast at that moment was the sheer number of cranes %HESITATION yes construction rains around the city it seems like a truly under construction obviously and reconstruction with the cranes but it felt to an outsider and admittedly neophytes our eyes to Belfast it seems almost as metaphorical as it did physical construction cranes and this coming together of peoples and and I suppose some of my great memories stand would have been with the film students and how film students working together on projects from those two different communities and film production or film studies in you know bringing them together it was really a remarkable moment in Belfast you know it really was it's so nice to remember all that actually it's so good to hear your side of it I mean we all just felt like kids you know so we didn't know what where you come from or anything and but that was back at that time when I think students and certainly undergraduate ins had reverence for he ever researching them it didn't matter who they were what age they were or whatever the person at the front of the class was the authority and that was it I mean if we didn't even think to question anything like that where is I think it's become very different certainly my experience was very different when I was teaching it's so good to hear it from your experiences while because I think we even though we were from there we were it was all new to us as well so that's pretty interesting to think about it that way yeah well it's it was it was a wonderful period and one of the my favorite periods you know as we look back and there's sometimes a few years that we're so happy here and sometimes maybe a year to that's not and so forth I was one of the happiest periods in my life and a lot of it was queens and was filmed queens and was all of you there and and of course you know the tremendous colleagues who were there at that time like because overall and and Raymond in the network you know some people who are no longer even at queens that moved on or retired but it was quite a %HESITATION wonderful meeting of everyone I think Cynthia I have very special memories Terry said Kerry is there anything we haven't covered that you would like to touch on just so thankful for having me %HESITATION that allowing me the chance to chat and chat probably chat too much but I I love talking about obviously all these issues and %HESITATION so it's it's great to have the opportunity to do so I have so enjoyed it it's been great because I mean we've known each other for a long time but I think this is the first time I've heard a lot of all of thought so that's been really a treat for me and it's been so good to catch up it's been a while and yeah it's good to reminisces while back home with somebody who loves to fight yes indeed it well even hear your accent now and back to hearing American accents every day and some of them are quite nice but I miss the accents of people essentially ready but but it was such a beautiful thing really the Irish accents from throughout the island needles are are are so beautiful and almost melodic to here and I miss that so much I sometimes I had to you know with some of the Belfast people talking so quickly I had to listen very carefully well I got I got better at it over time so it's great to hear even the accent I missed so much well it's great to hear you eating yeah come thank you enough for your time saying this it's been really really fun and I hope pretty informative for lots of people as well it certainly has been for me to sign K. ands take care and all the best with everything you're working on thanks so very much all the best to you and all of the listeners including as we trudge out hopefully soon the last of the hand
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Audiovisual Cultures episode 13 – British Silent Film Festival Symposium part 2 automated transcript


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hello and welcome to episode thirteen of audiovisual cultures the podcast exploring sound and image-based cultures. I'm your host Paula Blair. this is part two of recordings made at the British silent Film Festival symposium organized annually by the fabulous Lawrence Napper at king's college London. last week we heard from Brian a Jackson Tony Fletcher Terry Turvey and Stephen horn were all involved with it screening venue and festival side of things this week we focus on the symposium with chats with some of the speakers and creating Lucy Dutton Alan Cheshire on the sample of Andriy Shiels paper before that Andrea night give an overview of the papers and creating what we talked about it with some of the speakers during the breaks and in the pub afterwards I had some really lovely conversations with Peter to Mongkut's Nash some Banda and Neil Parsons which weren't recorded but sometimes it's more important to just have a nice time with fellow humans without the pressure plus the pope we were in was super glide given that it was a Friday night in central London any height here's me first of all chatting with shield plan to share right what a conference I'm quite pleased that you fell in with the early film club yeah and didn't find it alienating another solid this amazing book great fun to pick those so the fly in a sense the US night that it's been awhile since I've been to a conference that spend not to fail and everybody smiling and happy and just chatting away to everyone so they really lovely atmosphere it's hardly a good report on academia the conferences which in most Kelly jet and friendly the ones which have the highest proportion of non academics and it's not the the academics of withdrawing feisty and unsociable and the non academics or not it's that that sense of this isn't a strictly academic environment means even academics of producing papers which are jokes yeah bound to those interests I suppose one of us is if the subject is there are images galore so your presentations can be quite visually rich %HESITATION yeah real quick and easy answer I wrote in part thanks to the very warm organizing the source of large number it was lovely and was still holding court in the upstairs room at the alcohol is PO box nine nine o'clock when we left the off the conference drinks last night with no sign of letting up surrounded by his loyal followers right so this was the purchase silent film festival symposium twenty eighteen supposing to support to a company as far as the price on some festival this year the first time film festival isn't actually happening I have lost two and it seems I'll have next year the British silent film festivals opposing these last two days what's it been it's been the twentieth and twenty first of April and on the twenty eighth it was a day of screenings and twenty first first day of papers whose it was fourteen of the other one of which is why many and so the fact that there was a day of screenings initially meant that this wasn't just the British arm from festival symposium this was for intensive purposes this year it was in many fast yeah amid the festival was to feature films and I think it was six short films that's a substantial piece of art she programs by Tony Thatcher had a lovely chat with every one of these options we've had a bit of turning sixty so knowledgeable and very keen to talk about everything really passionate about it but he doesn't find any sounds it's appropriate that in talking about late Victorian Edwardian Georgian asking George the fifth film culture that we have a bunch of people who are devoted Amasis this is a very when he said that somebody was not much of a professional that was actually a company yes to be announced it was to have a lot more time on your hands a lot more neutrality in your investigations than professionals would so we have a lot of promises in this sense working in this field to turn is one of them he'll just go and rummaged through archives and he spent on time and we don't have enough so these people are essential you would think you'd assume reasonably the it's quite a boy subject cinema in Britain before about nineteen thirty but we're doing rush head counts yeah you already high representation of women almost half and half it was half and half and the presenters only and not serenade a staff tend to present her colleagues Jonas %HESITATION does that he's passed on his okay so it's nice it's paper because he couldn't be here concerning the program is nearly half an hour the actual prison to support country office yeah let's just run through the who spoke the first was early inventors and scientists and in Christie kicked everything off okay he was talking about the tarnished image of British precedence that was a fantastically needle I was like a little pocket paper because I want to say I'm not gonna delve into the ready for question who it was first invented a phone camera or printer or developing even for projects in the U. K. but what I am going to delve into is this myth that circulates about William Friese Greene twenty first successfully managed to get a piece of projection technology together celebrating so loudly that he attracted the attention of a local police officer and then have to demonstrate why he'd be celebrating and Wayne Christie was ever shown quite conclusively is that that never happened in pre screen if I happen to love a poll no when you manage to get something projected but in February eighteen ninety five twenty finally managed to get a piece of a film he made using a camera that he invited because mothers together to try to produce a film that I could show it in and connect the scope which they had been making as an on approved copy of the Addison county scripts that were already widespread in the U. K. they've been widespread in the U. K. for think about three or four months by that point and this was only some issues like it's so happen that next week kind of proceeding in good timing give ideas not process that there is ever conclusively show that film historiography particularly from historiography rental amount of national pride and which if these inventive figures you champion even within a single machine has become an octa core splash of mistakes maths and whole foods and so he did some great clearing away of nonsense to recreate a scene in local polls haven't gotten scientific instrument workshop where they managed to punch holes into a strip of film they had themselves made and show it in the Knesset scope of the project again this projection was about a year often are protesting in Christy stuff and I do not blame Lawrence for putting in first round of celebrity everybody in the moral and I think it's worth noting as well that in Christie is currently working with any connection artists say make a graphic novel telling a lot of these histories we'll have a special moment it was amazing he showed examples of that notice from toxic is such a wonderful idea and it really brings that to life and I'm sure at some point the you'll be able to edit a little footnote in here with the graphic artist name all I remember is that in service for some sample find that yeah we had a lovely chat with him last night and the pope the cities and dogs for quite awhile by people asking him to write his memoirs she's telling me that he's stuck on the period that he spent in Belfast he'd studied Arafat queens and it's just revealing more and more more stuff than the Belfast doesn't dates get under your skin I'm ready to come forward slash coming I eventually some that be amazing to raid it's so common from cities to hear about these mythical bird and his book honorable pull estimates for awhile and now suddenly it's going is the ins and then once sat the next paper rainy beautifully because that was Peter DiMarco it's talking about when you're free screen on the art of collaboration again with both had fantastic chats Peter last night it was great to get a recording with him but didn't make it work I was allowed we've got some pizza Peter had done sterling detective work on the actual contribution of William Friese Greene to changes in first graphic technologies that wobbles towards the invention of a film camera in the U. K. in the late eighteen eighties and eighteen nineties really clearly demonstrated how he got that and it was through successive collaborations with other experiment is he was a photographer collaborating with people who many simple mechanical devices Peter said he's a filmmaker rather than a fractional researcher or academic I'm sorry someone whose work I haven't come across before someone here on the scene safe before he said himself it presents a lot of this work something like twenty years ago and then done some more research on it and that he's found out the on call if you have questions they seem to have really solid evidence for a lot of things one of these people who may very well be the best person in the country to write up the C. acts from this guy Cisco you work yeah what we have pre screens pond in the invention semi wants him self quite openly acknowledge that he's used a lot of work for Stephen Hampton during this so he's you know encouraging collaboration in one's own work this was working on a collaboration with studying to be a fundamentally important it's a great example of somebody who's not a professional family story and but is nonetheless the authority on essentially everything he was telling me the problems not because there was more we're going to stay at least half of the US bank stuff everything is timing the PO box nine about motives for inventor is taking certain actions of certain times indicated that the major story that's going on here is that a lot of people collectively constitute senior medium via which technologies reproduce with small variations manager is not one of where the the agent in the situations inventor is going to be done now what can we do to improve that what are you looking to produce what's the dream we'd love to get to the end of this process no that's not it so no one's really the agent technology simply reproduce with variation they do it via people which is the reproductive organs of these technologies and at a certain point selection pressures going to bring about a situation in which ten which is changed to finish in the license agent Nish was running a piece of roll film with sprocket holes vertically in front of a lens and I was shocked I was in the gym the environment into one fact so we're gonna come back I'm willing myself towards some work on the idea that technologists involved exactly in species to pieces Sgarbi seem to fit that morning entirely so I was very happy bunny outside has to be defenseless Walken's range of that panel looking at scientific photography and the fantastic and polar expedition films reading an opex of France against specific name plus the survey because last year when they were %HESITATION up and and then we went to an exhibition by the Shackleton exhibition a lot of the photography from an official name we can't Bevis illustrating an expedition and I think it was an Irish Australian guy Liz what comes out of the name of the guy had gone with the adoration okay yes I got yet another school so our memories are terrible and as you'll hear in their asses focus and haven't railed memory problems and basically when that's what my brain with the lovely the man that %HESITATION he was at a conference the reason is that anything can have brand as SunTrust they we've got morning off to come from sprint which is nine months after the conference signage of the fact that that was really nice to learn about that mark I thought what was really interesting was that this is a description of her expeditions and what we associate with that is white one of the great if you come to college yeah what's the best thing to go on first awfully something that's are the black and white however it is not as she was crossing the soft piece of the piece by have accounting where he was mocking about the color one observes when one is surrounded by ice crystals so when is ice crystals in the ad when your ice skates for example is talking about the way in which light refracts when he's hitting such tiny ice crystals surrounding here and he's talking about the images that you get when you turn the snow goggles to prevent snow blindness and you can you need to look at the sun when you put them on and they're these halos on the side of what's different colors they was doing all these names about color rich environments you know it's just it's not always that way she was very and a lot of detail pointing out how even though he couldn't we used to consider the process will also cry but also did lots of black white faces and how in printing those photos and instructing others about how to print them he got those columns writers anyway through the standard post printing dyeing and printing processes of the terms of the color aspect of photographic culture of the time this is something we're supposed to draw attention recently and she name checked sure sure you may pay for a member currently has done some great work on collecting data from an appendix working three to some films as well as the photographs and those were very detailed in the coming as well the color aspect of what we associate with just black and white so it's very important that got some attention in this conference has the things that were solid phone pressed for symposium and we had stuff on color yes I just don't sound with the coming of same class and not to twenty seven before the current town politics this meeting at the time the next time this is Jerry it's and the nineteen hands and he presented first on the U. K. hallmark in nineteen oh seven to nineteen twelve I have recorded your papers I'm actually gonna skip over here uses sample of your actual paper a bit later on and then focused so laci Jordan thank you have a reading off a paper titles from clips may stones travelers to cabbages Morris elevate and British distribution and then nineteen times and I've got a bit of a recording like today say talking about our paper but do you have any reactions I really enjoyed that I didn't know anything about Marcel thingy and that's so amazing to see somebody who's such a great plan F. S. director he's been largely forgotten and overlooked because of what we would regard as Baker named British actors like Hitchcock or my compiler Lucy I'm sure at some point in life has given a paper note to Marcel there's a lot to do and every time she gives is an Englishman of Marcel V. as a case study of how people in the industry functions in the industrial context of the times and this wasn't just myself it's great it was myself we did this because of this aspect of his surroundings and so I thought it was about the process behind the filming and editing of Nelson which is nineteen nineteen if I remember I don't know and as I entered when I was in tears at a certain level I made very few notes on it because I'm just gonna yep yep that makes sense all the expense that budget one thing that was quite a big point in that paper was that Nelson was finished inverted commas souls to a rental company by this point in the last ten years the principal was exclusive rental where you sell a film to one rental company and then that rental company would then rent it to just one or two cinemas in each district and then it would slowly over weeks spread out more and more Simonson a distinctive service limiting how available if someone sees that thing you do with prestige film filament sold to rental company and then and only he hadn't she seen the finished version returned from another job he was doing and when all right we still need to work on that and so even after it's been sold the product was basically I'm to his hands he went to the rental company man I want to improve and date and leases over service how we did so consummate professionalism of somebody even though the product is on the hands already wants to go in and prove it nonetheless but it also said that I would be like we can expect from this in lots of cases muddied those distinctions between past and I work in production companies and personnel working for the rental companies by basically doing both and then no person say I had a read of the chat with the great before this panel this okay I am American maybe maker Harold Shaw as an agent of British influence nineteen sixteen to nineteen twenty they spoke actually quite effectively hello we're very problematic films made in Africa he's got this coming night if I thought %HESITATION yes so we took the whole show who initially worked as a film actor in the US and directed films for the Edison company and everything for the M. company in the early nineteen tens then made the trans Atlantic slave London some companies in the middle nineteen tens and that was my next stop because I just got carried away by his paper and it was intriguing so existing mainly about what how what's your date for the rest of the night so many of these papers were about films that we can never really hope to hear about this is the payment but which nonetheless really reveal stuff about the status industry segments national politics particularly with this because it was about the phone about land migrations in South Africa but yeah that's what my next step the afternoon sessions kicked off with a panel on wartime and afterwards I'm not started with Chris Grosvenor and he was talking about British cinema break of war on the fallen tree recruiting movement nineteen fourteen to nineteen sixteen and a highlight is quite a bit of propaganda yeah this is an important distinction sessions with the first football because what first quick shout out to Chris because he's a PhD student at Exeter where I did my PhD and he's using the politically cinema museum which I did for my PhD anyway what point out was that and this is something which I think Nicholas Reeves observed in his book about propaganda films during the festival which is it's important to make a distinction between unofficial propaganda official propaganda we tend to think that something is propaganda is produced by a government and therefore the word officials unnecessary because the what officials in the definition of propaganda anyway that particular definition to a propaganda it has come about only as a result of the folks will go before the first war and for the first half record for school perfect and does not by definition official it was not by definition but produced by government you could produce propaganda from Gundersen feedback which attempts to propagate a position vis propaganda whoever you were what Chris Pratt Matt was that it was in the very late in nineteen fifteen that the UK government started to produce film propaganda but in spite of that through the first year of the war on official from propaganda it was plentiful and it was produced by companies have been making factual films for years and they simply consensually started to endorse a strongly pro war and pro recruitment as well stops to get lots of details about these films not produced by the government but produced by from companies who've been operating for years encouraging recruitment in various ways through the simple act of combining encouragement with shaming of any one consider not doing well in training stuff and a very concentrated account of any little over a year of a very specific phenomenon in film but we left a lot can be gleaned from really zooming in on a specific phenomena lessons faked their relationship as well between that and what happens socially she and the kids with public shaming of conscientious objectors and people being chased into joining up periodic sightings say what his PhD comes up with several next so it was Alan Cheshire talking by the lots of the village from stage to screen to court I've got quite a lengthy chaparral and coming up where she details pretty thoroughly her paper was there any response you would like to make this one of the signal Alan is right on the borderline between being one of the norm Scully from historians and being a scholarly film historian because she's G. to soon start doing a PhD in from Southampton I got a but like all of the other I'm into in the good sense affirmative from stern's that we have at the moment absolutely full of beans and enthusiasm and devotion to getting things right well Sir I was momentarily and given that because virtual moment by the fact that Alan mentioned that during what we should talk about a play that was performed at the king says in Portsmouth where she currently works as a special projects coordinator I think I played a permanent at the think they from Portsmouth in June nineteen seventeen according to the synopsis of the pleasure of thinking might even have been a full script actually but she ship itself display contained to bio script scenes and so place which give over seating or even to to a film actually intriguing stuff and then pushes many talking about was a film version off that made a couple of days later I was called to let the village and how that fed with the public and apparently offended very very poorly for the public and it was the subject of a court case and that also gave me another special moment because when you hear something about a scrape with the local for a bio a civil court case you know that somewhere out there there are some records turning to the cinema that will give you a gorgeous little story and detailed story went normally the story with the setting of the film is that the record to go on the films are lost and so on it's a little bit like doing genealogy I think if you're doing genealogy find I. with this relative had a run in with the low you can actually gives a open the back because you never heard that somewhere there will be some records about this often uniting geology and its births marriages deaths from that's it it's over things that automatically credit records thank you wanna bet this and I mention this in part because somewhere and I've yet to get around to doing this the county court in Newcastle there was a court case about months or six months or seven about obscenity information when they want to go and have a good record for processing stuff and again a real precise just zooming in on a few pixels kind of piece of work but one which total little bits of a much bigger story yeah some of this so I'll be talking about all of that with Alan to pay later but also it is just beautifully presented so much energy in them and it's really fun filling up with Christina Hank this is mentioned last week and my discussion with Brian a Jackson because Christina was talking about wonderful London in the nineteen twenties and this was a series of travelogues that were relating to the marketing of the same title and these films have been made available for free to see on the BFI player Frannie was saying about how wonderful it is that young scholars coming straight from making really since this resource it was quite an interesting papers files showing a feast of the images and of course %HESITATION and London at the time so it makes it a bit more meaning because we're actually seeing some of the things she was referring to when we were walking around things that we wouldn't really have noticed like a gated off tunnels for the old term waste your terms of use go down the middle of kings were originally sent into trenches here sort of trying to them but actually having them had referred to in seeing images of them on the screen made us aware of what those are love yeah Christina was the home team yes okay yeah her name I didn't catch so well this is one thing about this conference a lot of the usual for stripped off so they went to the station's original titles Fanny's numbers getting an interminable it doesn't really matter I don't know where Christina was doing a PhD have done a PhD I've been imposed for awhile but she was just asking in the grand scheme of things this was a new type of non fiction I would say series for making robin serial filmmaking because they had been series nonfiction filmmaking around before and for a good fifteen years by this point but the wonderful London series was specifically adapted from magazine and the magazine as a neat little cliffhanger principal Christina toes about where the last article in each issue of the magazine would cut a hole in the NFL we continue to the next issue the magazine so it was either the travelogues and they were the kind of a combination of showing you London for people who've never been to an England as well as corners of London for people who've been to the city many times because they might not come across before service was his a new form of non fiction series for making is that magazines are issued on a weekly or fortnightly or monthly basis December this woman's weekly and sort of bring out non fiction films which is supposed to come out regularly to be a part of the film program before the main feature was a way of course strongly encouraging semi manages to take your next product and to take it on a reliable basis because you could do series films before then but the idea of having a weekly was relatively tricky to nail services adopting a magazine which has a built in regular teacher and I was looking for stuff and again I find it so difficult to pick up someone whose visuals were an addon shows above the rest because everyone was pining surveillance clips and %HESITATION because of stills and %HESITATION serve great stuff and I've been on that for this kind of stuff Christina going out and taking photos yeah these locations as well and was marrying them up against shots taken from the films from nineteen twenty nineteen twenty one inch rain nice comparison in fact that panel was rounded often by the weather Chapman he I think is a bit she shouldn't have to university of East Anglia issues talking about government policy on filming at Hampton court palace nineteen ten to nineteen thirty this is another one of mine things that will give me a special moment which is when someone is gone mmhm I wonder if any records exist at this institution pertaining to filmmaking during this time period and the situation which about seven had gone off to war because the office of works because the office of works was what you need to apply to you if you wanted to film at Hampton court palace will the tower of London judging from what was stamped on the various things that she was showing a scans of the office of works records seem to end up with actual archives serves one of many relevant archives that want to have the word film or cinema or cinematic often have any of these terms on the title of the archive but the no election for you will delve into that and you find little scraps here and that our hearts the fact conversations going on about some of the time and specifically what the government was saying about what Naspers civil service saying about using historic buildings for filming and the answer is far as %HESITATION Chapman points out was never actually works interested matter to most applications until about nineteen twenty five this is the firm I'm to go promise some exceptions are made and then that policy center changed and she gives an account of a film which did include firming and wrinkle palace and it was called haunted houses income Great Britain which was another series and one installments of factors on how trickle powerless she pointed out that as a result of this being quite exposing sensitive Israeli Corey way of putting it as a result of it being quite a laughable representation from to go Polish because it included some historical fiction and some guards things that the office of works when to go on to say yes to anyone again for awhile even though they're being pressured to do so as part of fostering for making for instance either she prints out that the office of work didn't budget total in the tower of London that would be interesting why was it okay maybe it's time to go promise but no project too on the town this is chair softener paper were we talking about it after it's set the haunted high staying circles Parker %HESITATION and it's still an object of fascination you on T. M. initial channels devoted to this kind of stuff on TV I do wonder why copus said yes for the series it was cool haunted houses and houses of Great Britain within their full hang on this is not the kind of stuff she wants them to go close to be publicly known for our stories our services with the lower rates their solutions with overactive imaginations don't we want this place to be known for historical importance a nice they thought or were talked into believing that it was maybe about eight past occupants Sereno's historical something like that so probably a bit more taking into that would be interesting the final panel then west toward signs and John nice suit paper because he couldn't be there was actually read by his colleague serenading from university of starting on it was a by Arthur J. and John Grierson fitting drifters creations from drifters from nineteen twenty nine this is the first of four papers in the last panel and speech delivered by a person who's the best manager %HESITATION for the part of the HSE transition to sound project which has been going since as long as I can remember but actually they said how long it's been going for it's been going for upwards of three years now what they have been discovering in lots of gorgeous in depth research about transition to synchronize sound in the U. K. has been a feature of this conference for several years this year and last year at the very least they spoke on a panel and same thing last year was lost pounds thanks we've been feeding this including the observation that mechanically produced sound was a feature of the expensive guarantee some cinemas of these for quite some time before the inspection of synchronized sound so we're not talking about headmaster of the sound in cinemas everywhere being produced by live performers and then there was the abrupt kind of point where they'll get the sack and synchronize Sam's protein and there was some %HESITATION analysts said most of the clothes and Y. for sound and open again and now it was certainly mechanical sound experience left notes opening was a huge mechanical sound practice in cinemas before nineteen twenty seven nineteen twenty eight when the conversion after fifteen I suppose there's one of those titles tonight those papers to a fitting and it and it was one of the subjects specific words which needed to be explained are you through the paper and when it was explained I went I write I understand now there's a whole practice going on here which is part of sound culture and cinemas so by fifteen John by Serra meant fitting a film to pre existing music I felt that fitting used to describe this position was telling us about actually meant fifteen music to a film here's what she was describing was often delays list of two different musical accompaniments for drifters the first was a list of suggestions for live orchestras to play alongside drifted scene by scene have included how to play it as well because you can play it fortissimo or you can try it pianissimo with complaints is it sometimes repairing suffering from some suggestions about how to do the entire thing scene by scene with a live orchestra and the next event suggestions about widely available gramophone records in the specified with the reformation feel Columbia for example to plan a mechanic to produce them along side into the scenes of drifters and so it's the latter that Jones strikes terrible referring to rise fifteen Saracens are described as taking a film and fitting it to you this page is the music for a releasing the ball was happening was fifteen of bits of pre existing music to the film that's the best of my knowledge this principle of getting a film which we're going to be shown without synchronized soundtrack but issuing instructions to come in the film so that whoever was showing the phone would have some idea of what would be suitable music played alongside it this goes back to at least nineteen twelve fifteen examples of this in Popular Front magazines are still even in specialist cations with popular from magazines from nineteen twelve of suggestions by the production company as buy American production companies of canon music that a life pianist would do well to play alongside bits of a film so it's kind of the first double crossings towards the sound track that we were recognized and here we have quite a sophisticated version of that because this is quite the loss of the man it scene by scene for an entire non fiction from across a lot of this paper was about the problems this gave rise to it because one of the things you mentioned was the idea of the films have rhythm and the if you get a piece of music music and play this existing piece of musical oxides the firm itself in a matter of putting two different rhythms next to each other and it's very difficult to get them to fit and so I think I would fifteen was deliberately chosen to be starting on one X. because the lack of faith was part of the point John structure was making one thing I wanted to point out one of these free sim cry sound methods of including mechanical sound alongside films was mentioned by one of fifteen last year and it was sound effects machines which were made available in nineteen twenty five months and twenty six years period as a way of replacing the person with coconuts aspect of life accompaniment central to refine and things that weren't musicians Oscars recommending that every is gramophone records was also returned to refine that musicians as well this is one of things we find cost me about this is people doing something that was very very similar to something that will be introduced via and nothing date way just a year or two later some have people using mechanically produced sounds to accompany films and then within couple of years most cinemas will be wired for sound for the new synchronized sound technology read the fascinating picture suppose much of what I have just said for supplies to the next paper forms Jeff Brian giving it radiant entertaining a kind smile and answer to the question did Britain Rini invent films signed Jeff has closest I think anyone in the conference gets to a perfect radio voice it's got such quality yeah that's how many nights I have for Jeff the Britain really invent from sound there's interesting stuff I just kind of sucked into it like wildlife and African maintenance it was exceedingly hot at this point and then out of tourism I think we're all just trying to get to the finish line at this point after Jeff was Nash Sibanda he had just submitted his PhD thesis on every thing we still get around I didn't want to talk about tonight with that kind of courage for thank you didn't think everybody around because of that and it is awesome that's a very difficult thing to do is coming in to pitch J. Nash gear radiated off the paper that was the kind of side projects from his research and it was signed arrives at the cheater on the cheaters in Leicester where he's the starting in nineteen twenty seven to nineteen thirty one he had great fun because it was a rainy so Tesco and in a way gave here on for your money with the craft so I certainly don't my hat to Nash I had a rate of a discussion with Nash and the pub that night shift would have been a beautiful recording fat as a sad sometimes it's just nice to sit and talk to him in for a bit he was shining eyes some rainy fastening figures because he's going through a a lot of letters from this cinema and deciphering quite difficult handwritten notes and bought ministrations of because of course ninety years ago the people having to write these things aren't considering that people doing research on them and nearly hundred years time because why would die so many passing figures up by a high much films were costing to hire and to show and how much income they were generating and over what period of time and stuff for emerging and there's a really cool moments where because we don't really think about the things we just know the bank names from the silent era and we'd probably make assumptions based on he survived in cultural parlance one of the spread sheet shows that there is a really popular film I can't quite remember what it was but that a close second was Charlie Chaplin's the circus and made almost as much in three days as the top firm had made and sex but underneath that a film starring Sydney Chaplin me it's almost as much again and that day as the circus that mandates even the privilege of the surname referring to chaplain we issued in Charlie Chaplin but what a great set name and what a terrible thing Sydney Chaplin miss a popular actor popular success electorate CM time as his brother yeah we don't really hold him and he doesn't have the cultural currency of his younger brother even just things like that %HESITATION merging from the speaker set of data was really interesting mash was so modest about this but I had to come across %HESITATION credits him he denies that he hadn't come across and he's been told by %HESITATION by Sunday if I had come within sight of business ledges for cinema deterring that business every day engine for about a seven year period I would have been shouting about the amazing this of my phone and your kids he was sentenced to five debility to work out exact ticket sales I know couldn't do the scans the shelters quite diligently filled in these lectures exotic it sells her day for the main feature and the ability to work out how attractive each of these films was two ordinances in Leicester that would be such a treatment have absolute significant data at my disposal what inspired me to try and do some similar work because if he's been looking at the children last %HESITATION but also one in Birmingham is tomorrow and the fact that he kept accidentally sent the other one is less than that for the past three or so years that means that it's rather simple but I can't remember the name of the other kings something kings but then if Portsmouth place with the kings theatre show might've been kings way error I'm not too sure of something along those lines only the same kind of thing within miles of here in the northeast because member find records for both of these venues I think it's business like just for the other one the fund business does for this one and quite a few records for everyone inspired me think architect must survive someone or someone he did say he was hoping to create a database so the other people could start filling this kind of thing in on a broader scale also I think it's probably important to know two hours talking to me saying that this from their medical people and he was coming across that he was fading effect where she where she for doing some arts and humanities stuff and I said to him and on certain terms that your scientific at the top of your crunching in the stuff you put together the mouths here tags for all of this this is absolutely scientific empirical research this is where we need to fly the flag first and humanities this not being a soft subjects and Akshay being embedded in empirical data someone who has an absolute wealth of evidence and his command not willing to misrepresented or vaguely describe it or disregard any of it to speak to model he's reflecting evidence I see many examples of scholarship and %HESITATION field where evidence just seems to be optional some people well maybe some people out there really tarnishing the reputation of humanities by demonstrating that it's a soft touch they're doing so by just doing scholarship very badly I'm I'm not representative of everyone in our field is one thing I want is a I have rich is that one of the take home headlines or flashes paper was that he was able to show the average attendance for a feature film at the cheerleader it works out you by year I was able to show the average attendance while shrinking nineteen twenty seven to nineteen twenty nine and then the cheater got wired for sound and that trend was reversed in the fifties the wiring for sound did seem to reverse shrinking audiences at the screen and so if a big picture history of cinema in the U. K. includes the remark that the switch to synchronize sound revived the fortunes of failings animals that remark may sound like it's completely reasonable and therefore self evident is no reason to provide maintenance and support of it will it isn't necessary so far Vident may seem intuitive for the permanent sovereignty needs to be shown in Nash was able to in a case study at least show written as such important section best insisting international which brings us to the right yes eleven Porter rounded up the day and she's also one of the people he is behind said British silent Film Festival she was talking about the L. street melodies and the Charmouth English voice musical moments and early British talkies from rehearsals of radio equipment for weakening our fingers in the at the location marks it was the third child of English voice and that which is a quotation taken from an advertisement for one of the many early British sound films that she was referring to so yes this is Lorraine one of the long term still with of the field of early cinema she crisscrossed trends amongst filmmakers about what sorts of films will be made out of sync I found was a fan and she unsurprisingly revealed that a common impulse was to make musicals and the different sorts of musicals that were made on both sides of the Atlantic support out that review musicals are quite common in Britain and the British musicals did financially do quite poorly analysts are reviewed quite negatively in spite of being championed in the trade press as highly prestigious pieces now one thing that did seem to become great Kay was that the Hitchcock idea about how to use film sound which is the you ought not to have from sounds Doyle entirely on people singing and talking fifteens you sound so that it was used as creatively as cinematography and editing please be incidental sound that would be just as prevalent in some picture as speech was commissioned by and a lot from his shirt the fact that they've fared very poorly economically seem to confirm that people wear gloves to be bored with singing and dancing just talking talkies principal singing talkies principle this is the point at which will very much ready to go out and pull the rain is almost always lost because she's the head of the project and rounds of the day and %HESITATION so I'm going to pass a law so that they can then be a quick announcement and gamma ray in with briny about the actual British silent film festival for this year and it's not good to be honest but there will be a day that therefore is going to put on the Korean cinema yeah the it's going to be the closest thing that with a gift card with Lorraine I didn't manage to get to talk with her in this big project has been going on for awhile as been contributing a lot of papers to this conference for the past few years saves of the park our website is silent to sound all one word dot org dot UK doctors share thank you so much for bringing me into your world I think you said it earlier because probably one of the friendliest conferences I've ever been today it was an absolute pleasure I feel so lucky to go to the Phoenix animal which I've heard so much apart from listening to mark her most of the past couple of years I learned loads and had a great time thank you Sir I think I've once been to a conference that was as friendly and committed suicide and that was of course one of the organized but it wasn't my organization that make the difference it was the fact that it was a conference about menstruation it was everyone kind of bonding together over the fact that they were studying a subject that was deemed not just for the general public but also by our colleagues to be to better answer there was a real reason to be collegiate there wasn't any kind of exceptional Hey are we all doing something read out thing going on although there was a after criticism from festival symposium over the walls a Hey are we doing something that the general public Jemele deems to be on interesting and therefore aren't we lucky to occasionally get together with each other because we in this room are the few who did I agree with this that was one of things that make it friendly as was another thing that made the friendly is there's no particular ranking their preferences in the room that our people have been studying this for fifty years the %HESITATION people you haven't even started PhD via their people who do it as a hobby all in the room and there's no particular passing around right the unifying force as the sheer love of all of this were not qualified for some of this it's the love of cinema for some of this is the level of studying something and as long as known prices too hard that that distinction all will remain for that was nice for me as well because in my new find capacity as a freelance researcher and writer and Michael caster it was very different because the previous conference I feign today was a really great conference but I did feel like I was defending myself to some delegates you know what calling myself a nonce because over that and hits a year higher well I haven't because I have no money and %HESITATION I had last year %HESITATION don't give up on that boat and nearly killed me so yeah I think I have a right to go it was nice to say I am free now to start sure and I ET this podcast and %HESITATION would you like to be on my podcast and people going over really oh oh gosh yes please and trusting me with their voice the rating of the thing I hope is out and everybody just us and I think we'll go on night to a hearing some of the steps ahead with some more people I think the worst is a very much earned voices other than yours and mine for a little bit next I chatted with Lucy Dutton about her work bringing director Morris selfie to the form and during this time I had significant memory perhaps so my profuse apologies again to you they say as well as Nelson and Shopee Kerr sandy survey talking ten dot one seven of seven A. side and phone festivals symposium they say would you mind just giving us a by yourself and your broader research well I just submitted my PhD thesis about our systems are exemplary so %HESITATION the paper that I gave this morning through on some of these in a bit more of mine why do we set about the way they work with distribution companies in the nineteen ten to create commercial features that you would get shown on the cinema screens I don't think it's right he was Britain's most prolific director he has a really really long the making in nineteen thirteen and didn't that's awesome fifty seven from nineteen oh six I found it because I have a personal interest in women's popular fiction from before nineteen twenty I'm not surprised I feel I'm a lawsuit nobles primarily aimed at women I want to see if anybody had my films of them and I was looking them up Nate made let's see what's the smallest I didn't know very much about and when I tried to find out more I would be told that he was the west direction you haven't made any phone call he was ready for the study and I saw a film of his from nineteen twenty seven which is just brilliant I'm not the will he call the band if you made a concert in the restaurant and so that's how I found him my focus is on his way to read the full ninety ninety because he's coming for so long I'm sorry yeah you know he's yeah yeah research yes that was the it's a disturbing the like to show you versus films whenever he could I'm on the phone so he was particularly keen on with this Nelson L. V. made in nineteen eighteen and he ran a competition both local school children's rights essays about sets and so those are some really great examples of what he was after I'd submitted my thesis I have been able to use that research for the project because Nelson left so much to it was because it was re edited that was a very troubled production history that's a huge amounts and not phone in a night full of what we think of the navy and %HESITATION so it does always fill light you could explore Nelson for a masculinity yeah yeah I don't know if it is I went to see a comedy show the person yeah yeah how many comedy you know and it was %HESITATION nursing now I just came to mind yeah yeah yeah I know it's something that just reminds him of the culture and you know the number of Nelson streets and Nelson terraces some lines of dialogue to deliver really powerful cultural figure nine nights is just last week I think it was a historic England one six talk about historical figures and how we still treat them in the imagery that they used is called absolute outrage particularly on fortunately growing right wing in this country I use this image of Nelson's column being knocked down which should have been going to do did you know that the right wing also said no this is terrible I think they should be closed down how dare you say that about Nelson well you know the way people react to historical changes and they're always debates to be had about these things so it's still very very powerful and emotional what he and you know what's next since they all mean I'll carry on working on L. because that's another forty years of history at the yeah I was it would be a foggy at beginning of the week introducing one of the films that he met in nineteen eighty eight well wolf which makes you want to look at the way he represented the festival will both during the war because it was something with which she had a very ambivalent relationship seems quite possible this is a possibility around doing so much about to be honest I'm waiting to have my five you mentioned that you know he's got this reputation of being one of the worst this is well he did he made some moves in the history of it you might want to quit he's in the thirties you know some of them are very good quality you might have a two hundred films is gonna have some stuff I think you know I mean the other issue that we have in verses focus of Costa defecation of Alfred Hitchcock and anybody and so being considered an LP predated Hitchcock one of the people he adds to discounts on the raffle I can remember being told me ten years ago now that I was never to set him up for Hitchcock only seven seventy seven the not true lazy and it's not imaginative design just continues to dominate and continues to get most of the funding restoration you're very strong David this is yeah yeah yeah thank you I also forgot to ask for a seat to tell us where we can find more of her work she tweets about all things healthy and more as micelles fate on Twitter and that spelled M. I. S. S. E. L. V. E. Y. she tweets of reading of a things by myself among other things smile Alan Cheshire next expands on her paper on the lots of the village as we were mentioning already it's quite an intriguing case from stage to screen to court and she also talks about her work at the kings theatre in Portsmouth %HESITATION my name is Alan Cheshire my my how close I think they gonna pull thirty year career so every day is a different have different jobs different back broadly I spend half the week voicing the lecturing about film with a particular interest inside the cinema suffers a books on Charlie Chaplin is still making studios down showroom on the south coast just recently purchased some rice and think of a hole for the week I do also heritage marketing of fundraising %HESITATION including the king's theatre in Portsmouth answer today I was able to combine both of those jokes eighty one page which was graced by it's very hot day diet the prasadam Film Festival symposium I talked about the loss of the village coon from stage hence the theater to screen the film to Colton did so I can see if the hot lost yeah what's with all you have to focus on all community education departments come over the projects to pitch to the heritage lottery fund World War one pops of money %HESITATION so we came up with project about looking at how the fiesta Hayden posted role in the vessel tool at B. C. ninety four fifty so there's a lot of people we should go out come back being wounded to hospital it was a really very simple since it's a state during the first World War say we pick stocks because the funding which is great and they also put us in touch with an agency project that was looking at the Fiesta Bowl during the war picky trying to track down we spoke often plays so we think the first World War one plays you kind of think of the one direction often like Japanese and good looking back and all on the whole point believes that this project was looking actually what was owed in taxes between nineteen fourteen and eighteen and they have got a database of what of about three thousand new plays that would produce enough patriots off which they reckon about cool to have direct links vessel tool that was really interesting to talk to them and then it was through them that we discover that the kings had probably at about six of these guys that's kind of cool because people even more important so we've been pitched lots council Tuesday did you know the answer would be great to do community projects around one of these plays and put almost all of the heritage lottery fund project so yeah we got the funding for the arts and also staged a place to live see the play and it was a very happy we close down the project and complete last last minute sh station C. one is interesting and then at it is yeah some banks of on Facebook or something how it came about because it already nothing who organized a conference at which you know that it was a film %HESITATION thoughts about it today and they do the exam is free to walk from the BFI player amazing results so I watched it and it was based on the state shows a booklet so Google to make sense of my reset to that point there was very little written about the station which I will hear you but that was last on the film of this treating bets on IMDb trivia that set this film stuff too early could bite cases between Tatum Thomas and that was a mistake two men and that was a bit of a detective story by Susan good paper for the British silent Film Festival suppose you so I have pitched the paper and carried on do some research so it was interesting research process in trying to uncover more about the station which is saving the film and then the school okay in the court case we had a bunch of guys who have been working together on various projects for about twenty years by that point Tate was one of them with %HESITATION kick that Harris and Ballantine had written it and on the music and the lyrics for the stage show which is produced by this judge each month that he was doing the film because they haven't got the same we brought this station which if used excessively still touring in nineteen twenty three and it was every week a different fifteenth of sixty is just what's in the book came out in June nineteen seventeen still going in nineteen twenty three and then the film that came out in nineteen nineteen the court cases in nineteen twenty one the people the station was suing the film basically the guy you didn't calculation we want to destroy because of their own money excellence as a quick cool but there's a piece of mine who had to produce the station had also produced the films that he was on the other side of the course that he was against his former creative collaborative say be doing various projects for two decades he was going well I came here I did for them not a very good film anyway the film was so different from the stage I bought all the advice of the film goes based on the same show even the first time to cover the bill is based on the stage and it's pretty much all of them like a few deviations in the playoffs the space shuttle and the auction of the case was that they found in favor of tapes in the past and Valentine that the copyrights even they should've got permission from a kind of seeming that the because it's a silent film Peter Michael well I'll produce the stage yes it is mine anyway I'm not using the music service fourteen songs which clearly on his phone second only to put it need that connection but this is the film was finished in October nineteen eighteen I still think it's ready got released properly there's a few out that's almost a year later but this seems to be very little help them on the film tells of Libya for my class and luckily the Phil copies were destroyed because of the very ephemeral nature of the asset we have known for months about anti life that we have the script but we don't actually see the pool muskoxen to find any photographs of it they produce the sheet music for six of the songs I jumped onto them interesting but the main village we have all three shows so it seems like that's a really important example that's an RT case and copyright law he was part of a much bigger narrative in itself yes I mean I think that had to be in some cases earlier I think it was really kind of a time when they were still trying to find their feet really about what is this new medium of film one the most famous cases from the silent film here it is the German film left for all to see if I ever W. man now which is that all of the lines of factional from state constructed a again that was a legal case %HESITATION yeah I guess it does one and %HESITATION copies were destroyed thankfully something something %HESITATION occurs in the spring of two is an amazing phone they're all all the instances all of this still trying to get here it is it is yeah so %HESITATION clearly you've got these filmmakers god well I'm going to make a film this is the way to go but actually copyright do we need this different medium now they're critical copyright %HESITATION tools in today's but then clearly there was a different attitude I would imagine all say film would be seen as a different social casino there was others compared it with it being see also yes literature and then that would be felt as though they would be needed maybe a bit before going head office team for months the filmmakers yes and I think there's definitely some interesting workout that'll needs copyright cases and the movement between the difference all four rooms at this time so bear research process so then if you're working with quite restrictive archival materials from the theater itself what was your journey No shoes this was quite an interesting research I live in my foster off of my paper I had a lot more about the research process because it was quite an unusual gents go that would be interesting if they all put notes in twenty minutes the king steps up and pulls us has it own all call youth which details built in nineteen eighty seven the fifth %HESITATION but we go all kinds good pool that is part of a much bigger group of staff to support us so we've got to details of many books I would like to build a new theater and chest of the kids lots of it and then a whole lot of stuff about the actual physical buildings which is a great to stall the stitches that's designed by Frank Matcham says it's up to fifty walked up to me one of the best of this exam you know this attacks in the country the goal that but then we also go to archive material %HESITATION yes the programs of the filing cabinet if this program and then just like real things like ball taking action short circuit %HESITATION different parents the particular interests of all volunteer office space what went on stage a common belief that they did is they have basically tracked down and on the database of every single shot that was one of the theaters it's nice in a separate kind of week by week and then when we started having often in my state of films in the nineteen twenties there in that too so we can have a look yeah yep I yeah I see week by week what was on so we need lots of the village of the one in June nineteen seventeen and we knew who was in it %HESITATION the weather we've had the theater program on offer that they found a review of a toll knocked on the stage all kinds that's that database of biodiesel could still feel the wider context all flood the village we didn't know about until we put into this world with projects in the past is up with these other projects and I think this is what's great about research now I mean I did this other project of couple years ago and but then sure looking at a film studio is a sure amount you know the shore medical history what what's being done the history is being done that's nothing new to fine okay well open the Roman %HESITATION went off that that's something in terms of what's out the dish talkies yeah all because the big dog conferences like this the papers are out this is this is more information on the fact that something is a long time ago I think there is nothing you should find it is a matter of going through and having someone be interested enough to look at this yeah so we have that the last rule projects had found the script the British Library they've got some bridge library system that see the scripts and I think there's two groups in the state showed how to film sequences what I would have dropped and local recruitment felons and the secrets of invocation of Papa was in the script and see the lord chamberlain's laptop that was in the British Library so have the physical script was then trying to find more about the response to the stage eight Michael most of that material from the British newspaper all colleagues from that flight just doing a search of it you could get a sense that it was still nice to do three because they were still out of it and so I kind of went through and found a few choice reviews for the paper the law is talking about today that was that easy but it was already out about through the British newspaper archive the same was the same for the film so I went to the British Film Institute has digitized on the microfiche hello everybody some of the film magazines which is fantastic but not great with the microphone okay at the cinema museum in London they have physical magazines for many of these they don't have as much as the British Film Institute but you can go to the cinema museum in Kennington and say can I have the film magazines from nineteen nineteen and they bring the boxes of the %HESITATION magazines which is still such a completely different way of engaging with the material because when the BFI for instance digitized bees magazines they were black and white R. as in in the actual class you get to see an amazing color double page spreads in the office of the TV they were investing money in that because I do have a double page color ad for that but even that is like to take because of full colors and beautiful to take if you get completely it would just be passed to go dog to lose the whole day so I tried everything to complete this parrot the just gorgeous all black but seventy films that he does not have so much to go to so I went to that salty looking I didn't find very much on the film but that's okay because I've eliminated a lot so I double people today but I know that there's nothing in the whole year provided that in that magazine about my disease and that was nothing even the kinematic growth yet okay just meant to list everything how to trade screening so we suppose that actually they didn't even bother having a tray screening of the film whether that's because again it came out to the ends of the pole whether he knew he'd done something slightly still so we've got to you can only surmise what might have happened but the fact that it's not the system can be accessed off yearbook is as interesting testing the fact that is listed in them so basically the whole day the music which is lovely over controls instead of all they have at that sweat that link to this day basically what people kind of putting up that just finished making this film I'm just making this just about yeah like directors and screenwriters nothing's going to happen so I think what they will say and I found it listed as a completed director of love to the village but it was never a factor in his company making section which had up with them to get out of it intriguing that they're up to no good so I went to the M. British newspaper all copies of the hundreds of hundreds of hundreds of entries of lots of the village maybe some of these well linked to to the phone a bit more let the village plus this was just a narrowing it down the pier it's %HESITATION and I eventually found through that process three advent season the announcement in the trade to it finished it was in October nineteen eighteen and then I found three of us from November nineteenth to January nineteen twenty all of which made reference to the film being based on state check and I will say that balance three newspaper cuttings linked to the court case that's also my whole journey in the past practice so through those items go set goals who said what in the trial but as with all these days and all this stuff opens up install but none of those Peter told you what the end result I couldn't find a thing you know like a few months later anything already went back to the PFI library and concise scrolling through now that IT was November nineteen nineteen well that might be looking more around October nineteen eighteen still couldn't find any reviews of that product look in the king of mask off yet but we're going to twenty two eight so they come out a year away and they had to thank goodness of rights of all of the case including the outcome so I did have an end of my paper I was like I've come home and go cool cookies but I didn't like him triumphantly revealed today that takes %HESITATION comparison Valentine %HESITATION the station one of the cases %HESITATION the pizza man until they couldn't prove that they owned the copyright office about their all new songs to the music and lyrics were done since they found in their favour of lucky that planned to have local Pacific destroyed it didn't happen to us we can watch it on the basis of what what do you think you'll do you know with the research was it just for paper I mean this is worth right yeah it will receive just the paper was a bit of a challenge from let's get it going I went back and even the best you can people who don't have a Brooks lied about who can teach one of the HLC yes it will project company me as the budget officer from the king's sister who had helped get the funding didn't know about the other half of my life %HESITATION is fighting a lecturing about film taking some of them so I just let you know who that is paper and do some of it will be joined on because she found a lot of the village she and her team and had forty two K. so I see yeah let you know how it's gonna say that I would say that a little about the film and the cool case with cookies the heightened level three thousand ways to deal with %HESITATION so they've also I can offer the bloke full circle so when someone generally Google inbox it could not only will they find the I. N. C. trivia but they should be able to volumes up to do this more consolidated festival project that is is out that because this demonstrates this information is out some full it just takes someone so find this one filled out the thousands of films and stage shows and books hopefully you will find something and then the next day we got the hook and his my slider through reviews I found but I just told you guys I think I'm not sure I've seen something someone to go to reference of one so someone else might have found little someone out but be flicking through the different magazines in the A. M. the mummy is able to pass five %HESITATION that's the thing to do was to do a quick scan they would say oh at least let me know that is that what's really have these events conferences and things on social media Facebook and Twitter and staples because you know I've been able to share that information yeah Chris who spoke to me full happened two days talking about recruitment films in the festival tool five some ways because it's also she's document tree loss yeah I was really struck by an image of a symbol on the front line and I just took a photograph of my television screen and treated us and it somehow got it he doesn't follow me on Twitter someone knew he was doing K. C. all symbols on the front line they called me back to a two guys it's taking a bicycle for your television where is it from so I was able to tell him I'm not with the prostitutes he actually Sierra old system on the front line and that was just my made to string together yeah yeah someone knew someone who knew someone that I think the whole helps this kind of research and how it's like saying so you know it will be with us social media is a waste of time we'll call it the wrong in the end it's you talk to people on Twitter and then it's like which in the past when it comes to events like this yes the next day when we first met %HESITATION so happened again this morning it's a political dispute I was out hunting something either to have a time sometime do this and it's a real community yeah we have students on film but you saw the film is even kind of a bit more niece with inside of them and you know you see faces from place to place and it's a real community here for us to social media I think has really helped with that and we did something and then people come to find out more about what we're talking about seven this just while we're on not then do you want to plug any use or for yourself cherish Ellen someone have Michael nine three two three times a week to get the does not pulling for the kings VS about kings to reject to say anything about what time in the king's theatre moments yeah we have a year round program shows up but we do have a thriving community education programs we do lots of projects with schools and we just wanting to do a six month pilot all the people living with dementia right %HESITATION film screenings ticketing comes to shows and job performance that kind of stuff we day proves that he's got a really exciting project with all kinds of wood into the campus into open areas feature pieces of the server went out to search that come up on the seventeenth yes me personally %HESITATION all you have to put coming out in the next month or so not silent film debut is going to book coming out called in the scene Jane Campion for looking at them to Jane Campion so my other area businesses women directed I Tatian of women so delighted to be able to write a book about Jane Campion although I haven't felt in detail in the book because it's more of a kind of a fifty eight on command film by film she interestingly uses quite a lot of silent film techniques some of her phone second watch in the cost of a fantasy dream sequence of the main character hospitals a sepia toned like Jackie saw the film that gets real nightmare ship different stages and you go somewhere else okay that is British and then I've also contributed to us posted by taking a full the news a little film textbook wonderfully having outrageously you see the best of the W. J. E. C. K. mountains lofts at Temba answer this because coming out next upcoming may just type in the box some person Barry sections not call the silent film so Roberson about some rice says look at the silent film is on the set of US actions should schools and so special the thought of film she's in the best Keaton I just love the written about strike but this move is a lot of them in the top it was more of a reason about the other things like Trainspotting is short of the day taxi to Roland so whole range of films right now thank you so much the notion so nice talking to you thank you very much a hoax and sync as well perfect pope many thanks to both of the sea and island I'm not pay you some of the country's paper which was full of graphs but hopefully the gist of his discoveries on film issuing from nineteen oh seven to nineteen twelve still comes across less giving access to the number of production companies sure enough so now first quarter it's just seven point loss culture of nineteen twelve at seven PM so even more than tenfold increase that these tech companies the second call seven hundred corpses because I didn't see much work look at the second quarter of nineteen seventeen at ten companies issue films into those companies from the U. K. thank you for the whole family includes the open company headquarters across town from France and the US ambassador program runs in seven Italy and Denmark feature on this list then Markle's Nordisk what is the most welfare seventy eight companies there from the UK France Italy the U. S. Denmark the Netherlands Germany Spain Sweden and Japan so it seems to be an expanding market as well as increasing international market to look at just how many films and those are like three feet of the some status complete with issue this is a life the firm history of any of his first month of March intercept nineties thirty seven films in nine seven that is just over sixteen thousand feet footage but it goes by the end of nineteen twelve we're looking at one thousand six hundred and forty films quartet and certainly negative footage one million three hundred fifty one thousand six hundred feet issues do you have a market so again we're looking at something like a ten fold increase also hundreds of calls thanks you can see a small increase profit or loss closer each year this is for me to see which is still just a little bit seasonal still doing stuff Moscow if you wanna bring someone actuality distinguish between if you hang in French films every single phone coming out of either you can reference company this is because at this point the government company when is this government and less on the French company and it's huge Hey initials of centuries of our company so some of these films are from U. K. some French and German company in France so just because this has been the case summary UK some of French Open to work out which is which in some instances but not the whole service blue line here these numbers are issued by the union funds combined your thank you for example you can say that they are clearly is in the main hall quite some time the line Orange Line is the United States the story at is two hundred also in nineteen twelve among the films this year in the course of a U. S. embassy you can on phones combined no sensible here is that in the US phone market thanks very much this is a is also quite substantial this is in Denmark is small but consistent I basically go to confuse them so you can from US if you can turn off all the major production from national yeah now this is getting a number of factors the US companies produce generally speaking the owner of the house and the Senate from surgery redo this I was elected footage you she proposed one when the US companies you can find somebody who's actually so actually happens here in the second quarter of nineteen eleven not that many of you would be able to six previously but it was before the first World War the US production companies outpaced you have constant Boeing's B. U. K. so market every student to show it quite recently resigned as sure these two longer off sure the number of films and they can push and just spread is different sorts of cross so historical films but this time display so you can frost already which very very yellow the market but companies banks do not register you can see that early on you can process basically dominates production market the film's been deceiving U. K. and then by the end of it really the majority just about their own movies the most prolific nationality is the U. S. and the U. S. is increasing what we have in the process yes definitely increase initially something about finals it's in nineteen twelve if we do the same thing for negative footage we can see the mall or use of US and in the end is even better because the U. S. mainland do the same thing so the system's not percentage drops to lose that phone calls arms US financially sensitive films being put out more than ninety percent coming from the U. K. France so this is Monty becoming increasingly National Committee last eliminated by the major players like halfway houses crack down on these %HESITATION service which will become quite tricky this is again negative thirty five from federal the US companies is fine with that enough sometimes it is but it sounds you can fronts but it is interesting that we're starting to see those sweet some links so just looking at the number of phones issues because they're looking at on the storefront three simple averages using back so we can clearly see the average so much media coverage one of the most needed average respecting longer despite short notice %HESITATION flatlining surgical most of nothing or seven nineteen or it's taking one for the second one second the project these are roughly the generations average one of those around the sixty seventh minute mark the first couple of years but by the end of this month because of nineteen twelve averaged only it's not around the fourteen minute knocking on the door fifteen minutes it's not your fault thousands fees to see the beginning feature phone number is there's a downfall for average film life differently down by the national production company we can see we also just do the fine even a simple average phone line for the U. K. welcome is consistently lower than it is for the U. S. perhaps even some of the phones that are going on the shoulder what happens in Denmark join us on Thursday who is pushing back thousand foot warm related to multi vehicle direction it's no this is not expected to be in the company %HESITATION on a small number isn't going to shorten get around six inches in alliance one of the film's movies she well in the one thousand nine nineteen eleven something really fast this is probably talking about the number of films being issued to the U. S. %HESITATION market and delivers the using the same issues wrong the release because there's there's there's there's a release date for the whole month no not research it release and we just making available to the public it's kind of a synonym for publishing releasing since your phones available to people who are going to share them with Verizon will not be shown before a certain date you might get is something that you beforehand but they cannot be shown police say listen this is borrowed from the U. S. sure bucket is used in the UK for market companies so the very first he said on three three she and the feminism nine decision by the checks from companies hi then the next month we have ten songs five point one percent in the forms of black on his films within the state and it's mostly zero percent one is one hundred percent from the same place in Los Angeles next month hi I'm doing films seven nine selling ages it's a planned Williamson the similar to normal surgery yes we're going to see if some specific respects and pacify jumps on this as well it seems to have a fundamental difference because then he simply offer back office consistently getting phones at least I mean it's just two months before the effectively this is not the way the phones on the market for when the film is a behind the scenes basically start off not only it's now headed out of the industry realizing that what everyone is doing these days things are at on the basis on which to base that's your house burning hello well before making the storm now estimates are making films available about four weeks ahead of one minute respect for sending these results indicating just how frequently it expects the economy to be able to replace everything that okay now Jonas Jumanji sequel obviously there is some information before they turn sixty on what I've been trying to avoid guessing can also got from Lansing weekly list how many some comics one it's just the things we talked about the film's central coal's troubles duster will cation almost sporting guns %HESITATION sarcoma read the fiction comes and this is a cross which reminds me of the office of the section of urban populations in the U. K. the only songs off yes already fiction films are the majority of my life thank you for reading this is significant because still coming out but and there is a growth in mass gravel road courses very but it's coming by increasing growth in fiction as what happens with world population during the nineteenth century when this happens here across just a few close calls yes three this transaction from making has already had finally gets my vote he's the principal owner of world and business production we do the same thing by negative footage the fiction films or even longer and so they still corner which is actually the filmmaking classes how does this increase is represented by the U. S. I must wanna take just another case that's the second courses a month seven the last April to September seventh total number of phones and phones yeah going the majority home phones you came from struggles really substantially more companies like Williams and Christian shop Newman for example they say in cedar this point is that the same information on the number of phones but for all right certainly the footage giving launches hi okay every part of the story in the middle of March second in fact if we simplify it get rid of all of these different companies not just state defined national service have all of the other European comes only our company Sensoria one of the first quarter market share this is a world leader this one company several miles right and your courses a large right now Mr market this is what happens if we stay for five years thank you for subscribing smart shatters Hama by this point the okay from the central portion but because the change in the story about the US companies announcing a substantially more films and substantially more expertise as well having bring back one to leave a mark set feet Marcus that six month period so this is the point when they see the world from market to market diminishes now US film industry as a special program yes this is exposed to you can go to certain delights with the U. S. pharmaceutical this is the point when the situation at yes a patent discussion I'm not coming so we can see that these listed business practices in the U. S. associated with an increased ability to export to the U. K. I'm personally and no one and the PC companies no I didn't have any companies the stock market in the U. S. here they take a long time to get the best way to get a sufficient stocks for by the nineteen ten to traction war in the U. S. stock index for the U. K. that's number films presenting by negative footage in action takes even longer because these known entities and companies the ones that would ultimately become universal for example that's going to be some films that kind of stuff take someone to appear on the fight in the margins if we show it the staff there often is mind off the amounts of persons being issued by these new independence chamber commerce some companies it's not increasing foster family although some companies out there is increasing he is aligned with the owners much I wish I could but I was dying many thanks to everyone that the British silent Film Festival symposium it was wonderful to spend time in your company and learn from you if any listeners ways to find out more go to the British silent Film Festival dot com and you can look up British silent Film Festival symposium on the king's college London websites or date you can go to the site and London dot co dot UK which is a website dedicated to silent film based in London and they usually advertise the festival and the symposium as well there there was also a hash tag on Twitter B. S. F. F. S. Etain if you want to search that and see more of the goings on at this time if you can support the podcast and the development of the audio visual cultures websites and online resources more generally pledges if any of mine to to Petri on dot com forward slash P. a prior art very much gratefully received money goes toward sustaining and improving the podcast thanks so much and catchy again soon
transcript

Audiovisual Cultures episode 12 – British Silent Film Festival Symposium part 1 automated transcript


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hello welcome to episode twelve of audio visual cultures the podcast exploring signed an image cultures I'm your host policy this addition as part one of the double recorded that the twenty eighteen British silent Film Festival symposium on the nineteenth and twentieth of April next week Andrew Scheer night give an overview of the symposium and I talk to some of the speakers about their work this week focuses more on the Film Festival and screenings there isn't a folk festival this year but it is G. to be held again and September twenty nineteen there was however a day of screenings at the wonderful Phoenix cinema and east Finchley later we'll be talking to film historian Jerry Turvey topic the history of the Phoenix musician Stephen horn by providing live accompaniment for silent film screenings and it was such a real traits hearing and seeing him performing an improvised score for a film he hadn't sane and I talked to Brian A. Dixon from the British Film Institute bite the festival film restoration and stupid cation firstly though I speak to RT film historian and then Stacey asked Tony Fletcher who programs much of the day of screenings in the Phoenix on the nineteenth of April the recordings were made in public so please forgive the noise of London and the back lines here's me speaking with Tony sure the thirty film the story involves cinema museum about thirty years most of my time looking at the Sundance Film sometimes now and this morning at the British silent film festivals you should really wonderful collection of films right yes and this is a lot of film festival films only shows were made when someone fills the spill the seventh on the screen services what we could transition period in Britain in nineteen twenty four nineteen twenty nine when making all the sources making over a hundred school sound films Kaplan in nineteen twenty five six seven and then they moved to Wembley is twenty percent AMPLEXOR missions today in nineteen twenty eight and can you and then make a feature document Rosen survives in nineteen twenty nine they had a fire and then the company merged with exile government German group when she gets continued what makes it expensive could still be as many many wonderful things that somebody like me I work for and the contempt learning all the time more of a %HESITATION so it was really fascinating finding well most of the films that survives in this documentary so but most of the civil rights acts of many of the folders got some some of them are popular songs of the face some of them attention there is a day to celebrate the survey will be pushing music sheets by medical knowledge right who composed as section eight twenty eight two names in fact with a big archive of his music she had a night a twenty six twenty seven maybe the foreign office he said three summer shows one in black one in the art of nine and one zero two and what they did to a twenty seven twenty eight is a recorded number of his own system so some of them today he was a kid the jazz band at the end of their American they actually paid on the Isle of man in December of nineteen twenty seven this is the reason why we have to fill and then the Coney Island six losses %HESITATION control over America they came close to prison principally because they could drink capitalism Hey eventually after this infant children the twenty nine that I came in twenty nine they tell you that losing immigration I know lots of the American jazz players couldn't get permits I had to return to medical went to Germany France hello prohibition was fine then I think he was a little bit at LAX %HESITATION so let's see if I could go back in time in some places to me that was the best film but it left us because that's when you will see it might be a fun staying back let's get twenty four ranked the second resumes with Celtic twenty one things the second will be a five seven twenty two so you can really only hear them at the right stage zing right state when they showed in the cinema please what this service is still a few bookkeeper the eldest still I think today was the one the man that we just all and I can find those references that that pairing in Britain in the years they made the phone as hell and I think it may be made in the states and that was at the county's dog photos show from nineteen twenty five so that could well be the earliest film on the program and the sound quality is very good yeah for that particular hello and it's fascinating to see the reunions because it wasn't just people talking to me the comment or conversations or just dating musical numbers there was a lot of dancing in there as well and the likes of the client that kind of thing is so you can hear the topic yeah the sales lady would have been able to the fields that Santa black balsam at the time which would of just being introduced into Britain in that time so there are actually several photo films which %HESITATION dot C. section films where dance instructor will show the audience have the doubts on fill one survived a we did show it once many years ago we Lawrence cannot sing with removal can you help us with a as he did try to do that to us is that June written by the male who is very well known musician did appear in at least one photos with them so %HESITATION you have never seen them before %HESITATION photos so eight and ten probably the best telesales and certainly one of the best by the way good I haven't shown this conference these three classes the one of the problems and he's got a mission to asking some what was that sometimes the high pitched voice of the woman does because it sounds like the screen we did a bit and there's some of that I still don't know who's singing but they were obviously is in America the photos it was an American although it may pop into focus is also trying to emulate the fight to sign of doing a little it was an attempt to collected that not that successful the more popular dry T. one census they will be shown mainly in small cinemas around the child's hand twenty six to twenty seven twenty eight probably four to five or six months from April through September the program would just be about half an hour forty five minutes it would be added to the regular sauna film program that was going on a lot of them didn't work because the sound effects but that was given to the project is asking the technicians did not have to work in an office in the sand with the hand saying old with sound right and Bill Clinton court cases against the forest phone is filled by men just want to get that money back because they were so take this is a tough in fact if the film was shown by the company sells they will normally not a problem but the problem is having other people knowing health issues that have the system has consisted of it will cost me ten question which account %HESITATION so the way it would be the consequence to their normal project this would know that see how it stacks was active the reason is taken up speed this will sound a little bit on the side of the field which they would have had to hi with the films that I spoke to last me I'm not going to get out I know a lot more than nineteen you were talking about the person yeah I mean it's somebody they certainly me in my generation aren't really aware it was very famous at the time that was the first time the show G. and I and my counselor he's very funny comedy songs again E. specialize in power these he made twelve eighteen nineteen twenty six and seven nine twenty six the only thing he famously would stop will build some of the other poems missing would not be top of the bill he was very big name as I said he did also makes a solid films in the team he made seven three refills I needed to use his immense sadness and know what what do you like being in his mid thirties and probably to see how we would have made excellent film six of the penal language makes sense investment involves some of it some action special something task of items I don't know maybe it's just a cultural difference and then charges at the time my goodness what do you mean some of them are funny but they're testing over and resent being no issue today will be thirteen correct and some of the click throughs what should the homeless with tents in mind for this when we do get through to see and also the black button down there was a reference in there which would say today he could I mean all listings on in fact there's one film that Brian would say that Brian he's done these things showing okay it's fascinating I think the maison but also I mean I think it's still important to revisit them because where we have come from and to go back there yeah yes there's a lot of time and when you go back to Northern Ireland well that's where I'm from yeah you can do some research and find out which cinemas in the I think it's shown on this well I don't know what I mean the local papers can tell the effect you know Jerry turvy who is involved in the cinema %HESITATION able to book about the Phoenix cinema is here he told me that Donald was shown here in nineteen twenty nine because when sound on film payment became popular they re issued the photo sales at twenty four frames per second so actually some of those to survive but they didn't show them here when they came out in twenty six twenty because this musical nail right to hold and they were not allowed to be shown anywhere near a musical the full after businessman to single announcer makes the sometimes you find them in six so if you went to for example Belfast the chances are you will find to mention though five people have to go to a smaller town ten miles from bell font but as the musical right and that's where less often research a new counselor with specifically on the Tyne theatre that was %HESITATION pictures I'm sure many of these kinds of phones will actually shown in Yukon yeah and the medical tools back hi developers and a twenty thirty twenty seven will still have a full and a half three research me counsel for the spill but definitely a reference to Thoreau's back in many big impresario of showing the film some wing Abadi from December twenty six through to June twenty seventh I'm not sort of thing that may be that the bigger the musical possibly he may have done a deal that it may well be that some of the doctors didn't want to be a cost effective he said if the Iraqis didn't travel to certain places in the pub circuit then show the films that shows through %HESITATION possibly stole most of those still most faith in that town the company controls yeah I also signed up for the phone is sample based on these states for the first time today one of his %HESITATION is the nine zero LOL with a string and he basically ran the resistance %HESITATION for the first three full years and then when it flew off because of trouble with the satellite being shown properly a medical is it'll slash and Jeff was Africa came in and took over the FOT changed the name to produce talking pictures which you probably have heard of said that he still can pages is actually the first phone of him under different names and he moved from Clapham will soon was shown in the weeks to Vivian van Damm you probably know ran the windmill if you can find them who is the manager of the pharmacy marketing in nineteen twenty five six and seven before he had to leave he described his old about the three three studios in not very good terms the Fulton block a lady's levels however I think because that's probably what they would use around the ground level that's when they develop the film that'll run north of that they could do it at sea is it too so you probably have and the whole time we have a grand room they probably would have had the studio and then ending in the face they would have had the Toyota since he's with the troops to develop weapons and is that a puzzle about how the food with Vera because in nineteen twenty nine Sam was shown in several in nineteen twenty five six seven and eight photo was shot in the same so this is a puzzle hello one defendant could you develop the seventeenth season same chemical solutions we know that when they were different chemistry different services provided little soul about that although the sound strip is different looks different came the closest and then in the late yeah thanks it's a terrible area so they actually do look like two different physical component thank you very much and good luck with the rest of your thanks again to Tony facades next is Andriy Sheila nice speaking with Gerry Turvey can I get your name and okay Jerry I suppose these things I pour myself a film historian and may as saying east fifth St written there pretty thorough history building give us a better something okay you stop me the basic building was erected in nineteen ten the third party that actually went bankrupt and consequently we didn't get to yeah they were hold sort of chain of cinemas around laughing says background what is interesting about the original is that once this is thanks strong the front of the he was quite different recently it was a kind of a little extra something it is a very gentle smell from consequently the rich rejected with the far right of the screen he made it clear that maybe it would have been the San Marcos river had %HESITATION now I'm in the auditorium was right and there's no prescription no fees who's back there seven dollars sure we have a front row yeah in the nineteen twenties because that was a cinema HM the fiction because there are three yeah competes in terms of their own so when you look at the advertising pressing yeah I think we should be focusing particularly the need to we also this and in the other competing I have so not only fill the office live music connectedness I've got a couple of lines state road consequently the sort of film this morning we were the first local Cinemark to combat the sun okay the major stuff like it says on the address on the side of his building yeah Los it's the shorter company he's an amazing breakfast can be shown close this place because the orchestra and the displays and live entertainment which I suspect must be reduced that's a question still hangs in Moscow that sort of stuff this is one thing is not to say what to say okay obviously the satellite is different the okay let me okay this licenses to safety the Middlesex County council was responsible for by this this is the most ready for pickup one minute sixty order hello this is calling on behalf of the city four we want to show a lot yes at the same time of course this is the second single building the oldest the big simplicity and the muscle hill the other thing means soul some of the most impressive all of the things that isn't the same number so if you look at books on the history of cinema hold on to the next six months early and you guys can fix the mess so we had to one the deadline that was given to us by six K. so owners decide to switch more than this consequently the paper that said Hey thanks for certain projects and change for her followers to hand the interior was reset sorry the decor that you see that places those war powers within the Hartlepool Mullaney who were very supportive here is the size of the city and a few years ago this model is filled with K. you should never say that they deserve to get the other transformation of course was in the back to school so much %HESITATION I think from what we have said in this design Dr back consequently they said much about the civilized focus of course was the pick of said about this country and we had lots of fans on C. of the Phoenix is really is there a story behind that as well really the Coliseum in the twenty where he says he actually said the shipment side with some the children the second big crisis in nineteen thirty eight was the first because there could be a crisis within the eight nineteen eighty four was the trough of seven are going to cut hi this is Rajib full right everywhere ironically enough so that you for the third they were big so consequently they needed stiff today will be closed out of the way we were back to being in order yeah yeah this is like everywhere else we sat eight forty six before that at the start of the set please sounded similar to another this is a great draw the young guy that was not a Jew he was allowed to go inside and he tried C. so an organization the film is to consider the distributed but they want to check the house so they had access to lab results have come from so they that was really recklessly on Harris I would love to say New Jersey Sen but never the less they have to face the fact that all this is all going to show you can you can you please suggest it may be trucks for this yeah hello to save some of what was then the impact was interesting that we face between the GAO said which was at night he Tory prime minister there was convicted last yeah we see a local trust money just a single the trust because charitable trust and from nineteen ninety five they set a buy rating conclusions about his actually being a charity and consequently you know yeah it's been the same doctor shows our house how to reach into the low the Jewish festival for example pretty soon so I have a whole lot of education because we became unique I can't trust government mandate your last decision or not we said we still thank thank you for this Saturday we have to have %HESITATION so something which I think is she was in the house three oh one I think when she was hired to John two thousand Texas we got money from her she's not to reset the system so the interior lives down the I think at the actual and the architect yeah this to the cafe yeah studying the cinema because you're always the service was %HESITATION because it became a challenge for us when we were putting me five so like the whole process is why did I hear from a lot of the time retirement is when you actually get to do the work this was a mythical took a good fifteen years ago I think when you when I first met this is accountable how may the eleventh doctor's considering whether they're taking it's it yes yeah president Clinton was an underdog when it first and quickly and in the nineteen in nineteen inches restrooms in the final phase one of the biggest forty well if it comes out anytime soon all references case study in the source the yeah on the left and the public appearances yeah someone who does seem to be thanks a lot BMC this is please hold instead it has to really be as we've been seeing is that even even what it actually stands for on the Phoenix these these let me %HESITATION numbers for ninety nine okay eighty three seven hundred remember we have expect nothing I mean when you go to other countries which have Phoenix thank you for thanks again to Terry it was really informative and so great learning more about that beautiful sent a man next Andrea nice speak T. musician Stephen horn and quite a noisy pope thank you yeah I can you know for and that's a nine twenty eight by the summer never seen it before processing credit we've been talking about it was blind and sort of program and given given the advise of the Spanish okay thank you very much in the background the voices of the people is the main cause among the he's coming out with German name by the end of yeah some of the German states some of them and serve yeah right Germany road was Frederick yeah thank you I think that kind of gets just a little bit of a when you did have a couple of screening of ever yeah today with the right tools and today which makes it is always good in the cinema sign they tend to be called the yeah strumming I had %HESITATION this this means the other thing I loading thank I he worked out with the string is as yeah cool what is the signature well I think it uses doing since I used to play out of it I've been doing everything is Philadelphia Nickelodeon but I tend to only do that if I because I am not alone it's more than the physical action in the new the dominance of another according to the time you I mean can you envision just having a I use it to the same time because my yeah when I do those I don't go to yeah three the one that struck me was nine strokes Israeli yeah you could have been doing this I think right yeah I think it's not I'm not convinced you can teach people how to thanks a lot what was the month one the difference between being a musician playing music but I for that purpose hi the engine not using your really unless you want to turn into a different the one thing yeah it's improved the music we had seen some that the second guessing health is doing a lot of not everything was the same about ten minutes and you get a sense this is exactly what kind of so this is a they did set when you stand in the dock at nine when the guys working going into Sunday what if it had cooled enough for being such a difficult one because the coding and some of it like a harmonium but it will be will be right because of the but okay this is but then by the end of during that from the ride okay yeah again any sickness the reaction does anybody create a free online one I can see with momentum I was glad I was one of the things the other than just doesn't sound the way that seems to have a single one of them was how you doing really talk about this is yeah but I think for me and use the disease I think from I think whenever someone said and then when it's time for a long finishing just I can use the search for someone and in some the usually held on the screen number three they would generally how long enough to be the first I would really it was a really excavations at thank the question is are we right we recently twenty sixteen a new printer okay using the they I was wounded is it possible to do that that is what you do is I've been doing some I started off as a I didn't come on it's going fifty one school and so I got one the whole started getting on the international circuit so yeah for the day was getting at a difficult question maintain the dons the way that but it's not just laying in the middle of the moment the thing is when you can reset the five live could it be a fight animation it's going to it's going to be this is for all the things okay right with the DVR yeah may not be ready until this most of the time one and you can with a completely original that was originally so the next one of things that at this moment it is very certainly what you're using yeah yeah when I play see the full and there's a lot that's something I usually go to the defendant if I know in advance that that's gonna maybe recorded in the minutes leading up to the so that when the young lady but that and I was playing yes it was maybe romantic entanglements in the Nick of something about the size of a segue into that and then okay moments again and so I didn't see that before I was going for something and like us we and they just right when I when I get this way just basically hanging over the what I'm looking at the film so that's probably why right because I'm more than concentration it is everything is whenever people ask twenty three because it might take some time to do something the description of having to make a decision about what service it's even more intense yeah yeah yes the government the the the the looking old man you know the moment of everything instead of something else the T. you have a rec room it is like the longest continuous we were both six Olympic apple but then the with that done today with like disproportionately so that that was but other than sometimes where is your favorite actors or anything like that my favorite film okay even though I it takes using handheld everything about the store we would and you need some music which but it seems like it's about fifteen in the second yeah HM no I am no no U. K. it gets lost New York they arrived about midnight and then they would if the new president Margaret may yeah he lives in yeah the yeah right from the do you ever get to see the city's sometimes no money get a free by the with the amount of time that they need to but some maybe one day the film one of the things we're three days see this is one of with the place of eighty one they feel thanks very I have done thanks one like this is a question the event is but it could be six months there is but that did not happen yeah yeah I had to say about it do you have any insight and I have said today that some of those shops are just wait the motion reaction mmhm the latest in the some say right now thank you click on place what's more that is the big thing we gonna fight against to a great music SA I want us to move on you have to go with the end up with music one of the things it held for review on the record the next related for about fifteen seconds it seems to me that it is speaking that's right we'll be waiting for you you can yeah cool maybe it was one second rate retention we can just have cable service a little bit lightly from this this is the customer support yeah what they thought of it is just the in general as a general and the other thing is yeah my dad without the thought that people think they can have a second sectional yeah right right one time I've seen something in contemporary the read the full right well over but what we hundreds of students and everything they do is very very nice gestures speaking and we were given the onus of yes what it is that people one thing that one can when was something acceptable for our I lived in for a second because this was the shift in coming but second fifteen minutes winding up coming second answer the second one three minutes to say that thank is that something you can do as much as it is your strength three zero three as long as it takes you back with with with someone on that point today the day of the meeting by necessarily needed to be but that Liverpool expression the meeting servicing something which is surprising expecting action place my guess do you have a website or anything I see my name's Stephen one of the few days and we're facing for the rest what did we learn and it's you know we love the flood I had to find my new York and then going straight to voicemail the I may have a week the general pretty busy but still caller from an official American yeah podcasts I'm trying to start a website all the visual cultures I think give a platform to under study those kinds of cultures and and a very broad very interested buyer sentiment converge with other media because I don't think it's yeah okay researchers one station okay these store so this is a nice area where your choice other things there weren't all different this is the first time sign up for my and your senior high scores before and somebody came to learn more I could have no no I think the more mark by signing with them in the same way a lot because I more a facial person I think signs in general and so let's take it as seriously as I'm just trying to take in some yeah one you know thank you and I think he's dead because the music was the view original lights in them all right now you have like secret cinema right it was at this line yeah which made the screening at six different performance every time so you can have the same family sizes different music I don't see the %HESITATION composable with about the night and it provides a semi flexible little with the defense and I'll see you can have the same company but if it's if it's quite nice now it's quite the days when you have to have a great thing maybe not like tronic score and it's a different from every time yeah yeah the legal unique in addition so yeah and they will always have a soft track that right it's like music the freedom to choose your own okay your favorite you some people like to do that me that would be my high scoring from humiliation receive the Giorgio Moroder with respect right around like for example so it's like having a serious humiliation the night singing the synth sound is a date I was in the original soul from the camera the %HESITATION Michael five one sort of very this has been a great cities yeah posted a new photo Michael yeah with some of them have a commission no one in the long something's going to do what they do that's cool so we will have the potential for is the one for yeah because it's been sixty the people like it maybe it's going to I think so okay thank you so much Roger and I was hi this is great it was really great to see them together so much it's time to take a as he wasn't fit him take a while and had just done this to me are improvised performance so many many thanks him again next as a recording amid the next day so the background is a bit quieter it was recorded at king's college London and it was a great pleasure to speak with Bryony Dixon from the BFI audio visual culture is the data that is explore signed an image cultures and the broadest way possible and collect all things relating in any way it's worth out K. bay and trying to be quite borderless and they've supported them boxing if things I'm also trying to press aides thanks at our understudies not really given enough attention because I'm very interested more things converge and where there's messiness in right things aren't able to define very clearly what sort of things %HESITATION converging it grossly priced on four months of things are you looking for processing so for my school with content for all of those things yeah my PhD research was up by some innovation culture and it's an island what I was trying to look for certain in post conflict society find more useful stuff more indicative sap and art galleries an experimental work that was happen and rather than conventional filmmaking so I started to broaden what he can think of is found and then you know with digital coming in I suppose that for me I'd actually I mean that's the principal reason right now and my film okay included in the lease studies in the nineties this is very hard to see yeah to really quite recently certainly in the course of my career fair fights changed absolutely amazing to see stock C. come sit in my bed fine look at failed all comments in real life %HESITATION cost money which meant the room that completely out of we want people to speak I'm scared of it yes the royal tunnel at least seventy men they access you have to start losing stuff had already been chief okay season by Dale card on which there was a view of the site that tops the collection off site and you know the stuff you know Johnson said so there's a couple of good examples one hundred and seventy pounds yeah please the if I'd gone to a sketch Monty sees see allow me the resources to get guys call eight hundred online and physical seventy percent money for these things to be three point six I was still alive yeah conference call details spot we get this big girl recently today ten thousand from the server right it's still on the line thanks a politicized curiosities yeah because I knew I could play a little with the press he's the pharmacy council should bring some TV now yes absolutely and if you think it's always been great stories T. V. now the work of the whatever it is nine just south of France streets of London yeah what the pictures so it's really fantastic fantasy you just sat there the amount of damage coming straight he would never be able to sing bass sounds and then also to the general public because %HESITATION online for free you can see the sign I realize well it's not all about the here and now I am actually here and all right is a hundred years ago as well it makes it very content free for us you can see very clearly that will have to stop yeah people J. sizzle to cycle I guess from now on people will be able to see clearance possible minority constantly copying things will be a desire for real genuine novelty that could lock bringing novel yes interesting there are still problems that come from the city spends can extend the current situation controls thousands of tiny thing like none yeah the problem solved you can use for flights in the U. K. the right to resume site or still populations zero and this is a real problem in dogs the expansion of access to film in particular is communications where I think they're slightly clearer for the written words the total fifty problems with this one the copyright laws of very strange sightings failed on the phone and so we've had to go and play for the phone so the iPhone five cannibals my CV to match the needs to show up at the time sometimes the government exemption but not facts we all pull yes that's good to hear that actually because the general public a lot of the sweet complaining why doesn't such and such organizations as the day that you know one of the speakers these restrictions okay and we're just if you haven't found yourself browsing long time the decisions and we're recently active of vehicles for you to close we would put him on the cheek %HESITATION tools which might provide about soccer right thing about film the subjects of study a service of our international business which has been for probably most senators invented the nine AM in the side of that he said was a language barrier yeah seven of these films just try to talk to the Iranians so it was very so we would like to study surely we can all these specific copyright you know as long as you like yeah that's the case to the court to deal with by the time thank it's funny how films mentions please %HESITATION I was watching %HESITATION civilizations the thing which is an update since the classic TV series alongside and you know that sort of thing all the time about all state to provide twenty three a month and you mention mention so the thing off the tech share the scope on the it's still the cousins and many ways to say than in academia fully stocked up yeah having to justify your existence all the time yeah you just want some salt I saw you today there was somebody on the licenses it's just entertainment that's just what some may face some hard life for a sign you know all of those things will come back today after I called system works thank you notes to fund which is our fridge commercial and the equipment to the point of stuff today however I am more interested they get a lot of conflicting things looking at London's nineteen twenties interesting my phone first thing than it was in nineteen twenty four this is not the greatest film the world is now provided genuine inference to look what this is and how people see the value of buildings for example thanks Karen Dalton negligence not style supporters of trying to surround the town well no additional sentencing one of the nice things is still lacking factor it's not clear if you went around a lot of things that I can't leave a message with the old stuff even the one long it is becoming which is the thing everyone should keep everything yeah not just the things that we think are important in your eye this is a very long time line and so many people yes the stuff that we would give our I. T. to say yeah so it's really important that the FAA has faced collections we need to take it to the one Salem is that old days to do this and make sure we we still at the stage where we are not you know that the jury is nine minutes for us that we can T. five cheese arrives for certain things for which room is still we still want to do some film exhibition on film a group gets on the stand in schools so with building up collections of prints now will be exhibited on the field so that people can see what that looks like a champ in terms of preservation of certain jobs for which room is indispensable so you see why it seems time points often nice get damaged you know films of my missing one frame because it's been sent from a foreign country thanks for softball title by just sending one Friday September twenty six twenty eighteen full time as a loss so we need to make time for Christmas is the one thing called the H. two eight nine and I'm sure some grueling runs away if you made her frightened fourteen rocket and then the pizza it doesn't make much sense so your time along with the film seventy six percent since may twenty freezes and it's a horrible show so what we do is to make a call to fight sexual using it a little different for alphabet which remains with the individual Lexus put it all together how we think you should hello %HESITATION just fights across the frame and then we filled it so you film a piece of digital some on the other line it's not enough for the pool for a look which is a bit of water on the ground that Sunday night and a little bit search yeah exactly Textron go without because if you do talk to each other you've seen finally yeah that's going to change the flight for instructions what we did on the nineteen sixties sure thanks for restoration rather than conservation reservations but it's so nice it's just one of those things that he wants to and to tell you the longtime preservation of Salem family still by you can stick it in the votes gates in which is great news the three most of those things the big free you can stick in that hundreds of years and it will be fine whereas the digital palette tech and software using today sixty promotes it looks as though shelf life of about eighteen months keeps moving so fast and it's also a portable time is proprietary inside hi company near Houston on the line highs that company goes surprised it's taken over by another company these things happen and we'll have the Microsoft five years ten years fifteen years to something maybe that's part of why a restroom five you know we may decline in them but actually it's really important serve hot stuff because the final film at a light in it I have to be tested that work better than others DVDs yeah I love the seventh rooms for ever know but there's still something about the tactile nature of polluting the objects and %HESITATION Syron chancellor for linear nature yeah you know what you're doing with the music beginning at nine in the middle of the road about what you see on the TV to throw some extra percent happens where a number of big brown facial laughs at the site send someone to check back for my email I don't okay the clean clothes on videotape that successfully gotten a lot of people do anything higher into early films seven weeks of gains some sensations with Hollywood in one hand yeah but there's nothing like Salem saying at thirty five millimeter projection is %HESITATION yeah there's a special tells me S. Korean air friendly minds talking a bit about your involvement with a silent film festival the symposium in Chile sign the story okay means initially %HESITATION twenty LGAs again and myself during school time Signia brands and for a few of the people who will be here today were sitting and talking without having a bit of a complaint because there have been a series of restrictions on the lease more salary cap room or something anyway we will chain something we'd seen it before so we decided to get a shot at the same time the nexus twenty lots of American academics getting up and saying oh we might as well carry specifically %HESITATION yeah Steve is anyway so we were having a bit of a grumble about actually why is it that purchase silent film has terrible terrible reputation I'm because I was working at the all kinds of time said well you know the thing is I know because I work for the state people and say hearing in the first set thanks I know that almost no one is saying these things nine personally people who have these films one night we put together a new bands and watch them so we have to arrange the medicine on time and once again made working in the film off target with a fine meal to complain I'm still we got a gang so you can put the show room right here so that's what we did the first song from first who was born in Iran and North Sea and it's right down there and then to look around a bit and I would do is we can find something happens but essentially we have almost done the job process have still choose to view the whole of professionals in my law school system line since then with all my summer job he sets out to date but now with tons of expanding out so we do the research research related to put some verses from the hearts of events and I'm getting some of the films from other places around there so the couples planning on the completion saw it's much more interesting than anything it's true that there is not a great movements like German expressionism or anything like that where you can sort of look at body of work and that's kind of thing yes it's absolutely true that the position that invested in the mall seven eight has the lower production values and make structural German film America subsequently train always treated there are some exceptions did you throw up some great acts has a seating now but if you go to school with the wrong song and it has an awful lot of interesting stuff that people don't know about his having done the basic job twenty eight six time so you don now she writes a brief to someone from my friends three pressing project sign things wonderful number three since the day we did on the plan we were just a little of a song H. Cox St screens similar is going to be in the right well we've been able to get in Raleigh thanks for sharing only days which is really useful because we were able to send them to jail the British Council it's a big thing yeah the two sides have some have somebody shopping and get up early okay my shop from reaching further this is the US which is you know I don't think it's going to take all the words for German expressionism French films at the side of the area we didn't make enough money in it it's true however this is something to do with the British not investing in the film industry we still don't yes Sir and the roles of supervisory agencies to one of our land which we should do one of these days and we can sort of cloths issue around the film thing might be the secret so why I think Wilson the bridge nine money saving needs to invest in risky ventures like the American states and I didn't need to find people together three films in the light of the Americans yeah I think in many ways families what was depicting bet people binding together anyway I am thinking of freestanding centers for documentaries and then the texting the brakes and Sanderson which is a Cisco Systems lance is just reminds me yeah the front the the small pain nine yeah exactly do not so well sometimes it's very interesting that it's very difficult for us to talk after the meeting minutes eighteen K. Jennings small scene yeah and it was only when the front some in right because I know it's real and if any NCAA broke part of my master's dissertation on pretending systems and I think it's a real tribute to him when it came time for the ceremony of the Olympics Chinese to certain people right Jennings and national discussion insurance or something the book that was based on the mining in Canada okay published at nine one nine six things on so you can get it quite easily now unless the collection of things to do with the industrial revolution Hey don Jennings cross nineteen read grappled with four people in the beginning Danny Boyle Mike side right quite twenty total file the diaries and feeds the mistake but and the films of connection between fans when I survived the juxtaposition home values rights documents of records with film documents to back order for Hey Mister Boyle thrills twenty seven months many thanks again to you Tony Jerry Stephen and Brian eight for being so informative and generous with their time the symposium is annual usually in April and the festival is bi annual usually in September and the old Sears next week will be more about the symposium I'm pleased to address and a server really fantastic papers taking I have strays that have much to tell us by the way speak operate today if you can support the podcast on Petri on dot com forward slash PP a planner that would be hugely appreciated as any money pledged goes toward sustaining and improving it a huge thank you to Andre shield for taking me to his world thanks so much for listening please join us for more of this next week