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Christophe Dupin-Small is Beautiful (2006)

Posted By : FNB47 | Date : 20 Oct 2007 08:25:00 | Comments : 4 |
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Christophe Dupin-Small is Beautiful (2006)
The Story of the Free Cinema films told by their makers.

479.2 MB | 0:43:09 | English with English s/t | XviD, 1310 Kb/s | 608x464

Highly influential in cinema history, the Free Cinema movement not only reinvented documentary in the 1950s but also spearheaded the British New Wave of social-realist feature films. A 43-minute documentary with a special collection of rarely seen films made in the spirit of Free Cinema, as well as interviews, clips, and previously unpublished stills.




Free Cinema not only re-invented British documentary making, but this highly influential period in the country's cinema history was the precursor for the better known British New Wave of social-realist films in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Diabolik




The term Free Cinema was coined by critic and film-maker Lindsay Anderson, when he, Karel Reisz, Tony Richardson and Lorenza Mazzetti screened a programme of their short films at the National Film Theatre on 5 February 1956. Diabolik




"Every beard and duffle coat in London, every urchin-cut and pair of jeans seemed to converge on the National Film Theatre on South Bank last night. Queues of cinema enthusiasts, even longer than during the Festival of Britain, stood in the drizzle for hours in the hope of seeing three short films [that] in four days have become the talk of the town" reported the Evening News. Diabolik




The screening was so successful that five more programmes followed until 1959, featuring films by both young British and foreign filmmakers. The films were 'free' in the sense that they were made outside the framework of the film industry, and that their statements were entirely personal . They had in common not only the conditions of their production (shoestring budget, unpaid crew) and the equipment they employed (usually hand-held 16mm Bolex cameras), but also a style and attitude and an experimental approach to sound. Diabolik




Mostly funded by the British Film Institute's Experimental Film Fund, they featured ordinary, mostly working-class people at work and play, displaying a rare sympathy and respect, and a self-consciously poetic style. Diabolik



Rapidshare.com (4 * 100 MB + 79.2 MB)

http://rapidshare.com/files/61455376/SmallBeautiful-FreeCinema.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/61460740/SmallBeautiful-FreeCinema.part2.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/61465893/SmallBeautiful-FreeCinema.part3.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/61503640/SmallBeautiful-FreeCinema.part4.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/61449479/SmallBeautiful-FreeCinema.part5.rar

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Posted By: kharmok Date: 20 Oct 2007 21:12:21

Dear FNB47,

Thanks a lot for this valuable season of British Free Cinema!

Posted By: FNB47 Date: 20 Oct 2007 22:51:30

Hello kharmok, it has been a long time since I've seen these documentaries. Recently, BFI released this 3-DVD-set of Free Cinema examples, so I had the chance to have them and share them with you. L. Anderson, K. Reisz, T. Richardson, C. Goretta, A. Tanner are all milestones in my personal-history :)) and these early-shorts of them have some special meaning for me.
This one was the last of the British Free Cinema series. Tomorrow I will continue "as usual".

Posted By: harrygee Date: 23 Oct 2007 02:56:16
Actually these marvelous documentaries also have a very special meaning for me as I was staying in London and Bristol with relatives as a guest for many months in the fifties (I am not English), at the tender age of 12 and 13, so these wonderfully made films that catch quite well the atmosphere of the era really take me back... Thank you for bringing them here. If you have not posted them all I do hope you will, eventually. Your variety of global film-making is absolutely fantastic.
Posted By: ya0037 Date: 23 Oct 2007 07:21:36
Thank you so much FNB47
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