Glad to see that you have two of my efforts, Forrest. And not, there was only one "Christmas issue" per se.
@djduffy
Retired audio-visual archivist (ca. 2017). I write about BC & Canadian film history (& maybe Japanese cinema) and hope to find an outlet for my ramblings. Meanwhile my blog, Seriously Moving Images, is at https://movingimagesweb.wordpress.com
Glad to see that you have two of my efforts, Forrest. And not, there was only one "Christmas issue" per se.
RIP Robert Duvall ... remembering him in his first film role. www.youtube.com/watch?v=iRmI...
In mid-1940s Vancouver, a suite in an old mansion near Stanley Park was a social hub for creative people in the film society. Dorothy Burritt's film "Suite Two: A Memo to Oscar" (1947) records her home and the circle of friends that came to parties & film nights there. #bcfilm tinyurl.com/2z9baupm
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In August 1940 Ortus Films shot Vancouver scenes for the British feature "49th Parallel" (1941). An 8mm fragment depicts the shoot. Filmed across Canada, the picture was directed by Michael Powell & written by Emeric Pressburgerβlater famous as βThe Archers.β #Cdnfilm #BCfilm tinyurl.com/3jsvz54u
"Bats Out of Hell," Oscar Burritt's first film, shows start of midget car racing @ Vancouver's Hastings Park. He shot it in 1937, hand-processed the footage, & never finished it. 88 years later, it's been organized, edited, cleaned up, & given an original musical score. #BCfilm tinyurl.com/yrvyayjc
A film trove: video of 1937 footage that Oscar Burritt shot & hand-processed (but never edited/finished), labelled "Bats Out of Hell." It shows midget-car-racing (6-ft-long cars) at Hastings Park, Vancouver. The source film had many processing & exposure issues, & MANY TAKES! #bcfilm #silentfilm
I'm reposting this 1940 Stanley Theatre/Vancouver Film Society story from my blog. I've cleaned up some edits, bumped up the light levels, and (most importantly) added new musical tracks by David Mattison. (Some right pretty tunes, sir!) #silentfilm #BCfilm #Cdnfilm tinyurl.com/323wm6th
#BCfilm #CDNfilm PS: PLAY IT LOUD!
Here's another mash-up of "Pro-Rec" (Provincial Recreation) footage from Vancouver. The footage comes from annual public displays at Stanley Park and Maple Grove Park in 1945 & 1951. For this incarnation, it's been made jiggier with original music by my friend DAVID MATTISON. tinyurl.com/4m473sm6
Revisiting my 2009 video mash-up JUMPING JILLS, which reworks unusual 1950 amateur footage of "Pro-Rec" (Provincial Recreation, a BC gov't program) instructors in training at a Vancouver summer school. TRIGGER WARNING: includes footage of folk dancing and human pyramids! #BCfilm tinyurl.com/2tcuw2sv
From 85 years ago: a fascinating amateur film made by three Vancouver cinephiles. "Three There: Galiano Island 1940," an "experimental travelogue/memoir," was shot by the trio during a long weekend on one of BC's Gulf Islands.
#Silentfilm #BCfilm #Cdnfilm
STORY/VIDEO LINK: tinyurl.com/3vrzksud
A. D. Kean was in Kamloops that Dominion Day, and was quoted commenting about that specific stagecoach. I wonder if this photo could be one of his?
Speaking of Vancouver films ca. 1940: here's a 1939 documentary about Vancouver citizens enjoying Stanley Park, captured in the brilliance of pre-war Kodachrome stock. It was made by a group of five amateur filmmakers under the name "Coast Films." #silentfilm #cdnfilm #BCfilm tinyurl.com/bdcsjhca
Thanks, Kelly. Still making it my project to try and find an audience for forgotten BC films. I suspect the BC history sites and Facebook pages wouldn't be very interested in something so esoteric.
Thanks, Christine! I'd had the tape for years and I thought it was time to get it out there, copyright or not. I also shared it on the Orphan Film Symposium Facebook page, but they don't seem to get a lot of traffic. Now trying to think of other sites where there would be interest.
Here you can view a Canadian experimental film from Vancouver [ca. 1940] that hasn't been seen publicly for decades. It's "and--", by Dorothy Fowler & Margaret Roberts of Vancouver. #silentfilm #cdnfilm #bcfilm tinyurl.com/yw2n357b
The 1949 documentary film "In the Daytime" is an impressionistic portrait of life in Vancouver on a summer day. Made by two talented amateurs, Stanley Fox and Peter Varley, it holds an important place in the history of British Columbia filmmaking. tinyurl.com/4p55w5r6
This reminds me of the Mexican-revolution-related films that appear in some of the NFPF's "Treasures from...Archives" sets.
Thanks a bunch. Now Hermione Gingold and Mary Wickes will haunt my frickin' dreams. AGAIN.
"Pick a little talk a little PICK PICK PICK PICK PICK."
What's the greatest line in cinema?
Yes--but Reagan isn't still USING it.
1. Where Are My Children? (Lois Weber, 1916)
2. The Grifters (Stephen Frears, 1990)
3. Bloody Mama (Roger Corman, 1970)
4. Mommie Dearest (Frank Perry, 1981)
5.Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945) [because not every daughter deserves a kind mother....]
βThis colorful view of a crowded reading room may show the 135th Street Library---now the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture---where the country's first significant collection of African American literature, history, and prints opened in 1925. Everybody appears absorbed in their books, and the standing figure in the front looking at African art may represent the artist as a young man, delving deeper into his heritage.β Smithsonian American Art Museum
βThe Libraryβ
1960, Jacob Lawrence
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is all of us. His look is incredulous while Trump is speaking.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is all of us.
Uh... what about Italy and Japan, Doug? They were behind an awful lot of deaths, too.
You're not taking credit for the victory over Japan in August 1945? Gosh, you guys built and dropped those monstrous bombs--and you ALWAYS take credit for THEM! Read a book, you ignorant fuck!
The rest of the world was fighting fascism for more than two years before you got in because your own interests were threatened. Don't feet too fucking pleased with yourself, you a historical orange buffoon.