A short and sweet Topical Budget newsreel from 1923 that reveals that despite the Weimar Republic’s financial troubles, they were still keen on bringing German football up to scratch.
Monthly Archives: August 2010
YouTube: Piccadilly (1929)
This was one of the first clips published on the BFI’s YouTube channel, but the encoding left a lot to be desired – so here’s a replacement that does justice to the luminous cinematography of one of Britain’s last great silent films.
YouTube: Railways For Ever! (1970)
This week’s YouTube treat marks the 30th anniversary of this John Betjeman-presented British Transport Film, lamenting the passing of steam travel.
YouTube: The Sea in Their Blood (1983)
When I started exploring the BFI’s new Blu-ray release of Peter Greenaway’s A Zed and Two Noughts, I found this wonderfully bonkers surprise nestling in the extras (it wasn’t included on the DVD), and had to publish some of it on YouTube. It’s nominally a serious COI-funded documentary about various aspects of Britain’s coastline, but you’d guess its director and composer (Michael Nyman) in seconds.
YouTube: The X-Rays (1897)
A snappy little comedy from 1897 by George Albert Smith, one of the first important British (and world) film pioneers. The special effects could hardly be cruder – Georges Méliès had only discovered the transformative power of the jump cut the previous year – but they work beautifully in context. I wrote it up in more detail for Screenonline here.