Building sights 1.

14th June 2016

Over the past week I have contributed in a small way to two events involving screenings of television documentaries about architecture. On Thursday I introduced at BFI Southbank two films written and presented by Kenneth Clark, Great Temples of the World: Chartres Cathedral (1965) and The Royal Palaces of Britain (1966). And on Saturday the Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image presented Broadcasting the Arts: Architecture on TV, which included further screenings and a talk by me about Clark and architecture. The BFI Southbank event is part of an Architecture on TV season at the BFI, and both are contributions to the extensive and month-long London Festival of Architecture. There is plenty more to explore at BFI Southbank and across London (as below), but today and in a couple of other posts I mostly want to highlight how with online resources you can organise your own little architecture-on-television festival. Starting today with the films of Ian Nairn. read more »

We need to talk about ‘capture’

13th June 2016

I want to begin outlining some thoughts and some questions about the idea of ‘performance capture’. And I want to do so partly in response to a ‘capture’ of Rambert’s dance work, Tomorrow, which is choreographed by Lucy Guerin as a response to Shakespeare’s Macbeth. (There is a very good Judith Mackrell feature for the Guardian here about Rambert 90 years on from its founding.)

The Tomorrow capture is on BBC iPlayer for another four months and was made possible by Shakespeare Lives 2016, a six-month online festival from the BBC and the British Council in partnership with Shakespeare’s Globe, the British Film Institute, the Royal Shakespeare Company, Hay Festivals and the Royal Opera HouseShakespeare Lives 2016 is publishing a wealth of fascinating stuff, more of which I hope to highlight and discuss in the coming weeks. Just as I intend to develop in more detail my argument below. But for the moment my interest is Tomorrow and the questions it brings into focus. read more »

Sunday links

12th June 2016

It’s been a week of Hamlet, the live cinema broadcast of which I produced for the RSC on Wednesday, and also of talking about Kenneth Clark’s television at a BFI Southbank screening on Thursday and a Broadcasting the Arts: Architecture on TV seminar at Birkbeck yesterday. Which, along with other work, the cricket and the football, has not left much time for the blog. As always, I aim to do better next week, but in the meantime here are links to articles and videos that I have found interesting over the past week.

Trump – the haunting question: Elizabeth Drew, New York Review of Books:

It’s by now clear that the presidential election of 2016 is something larger than and apart from just another quadrennial contest for the highest office; it’s a national crisis.

of the North / Tabu: in an interesting essay for Reverse Shot, Max Carpenter reflects on film, anthropology, documentary and truth as he responds to Dominic Gagnon’s found-footage documentary and Miguel Gomes’ remake of Murnau’s feature.

• Le amiche – Friends—Italian style: a new essay by Tony Pipolo for The Criterion Collection about Antonioni’s underrated 1955 feature film, available in this country in the Masters of Cinema DVD series.

• Acting under a spell – Jean Pierre Leaud in Rivette’s OUT 1: a strange and rather wonderful video essay for Fandor by Daniel Fairfax and Kevin B. Lee:

Acting Under a Spell: Jean Pierre Leaud in Rivette’s OUT 1 from Fandor Keyframe on Vimeo.

Out of it: … and for more on Rivette’s 1971 epic film, see Luke McKernan’s blog post here. read more »

Monday links

6th June 2016

Véra et Arlette, Cannes, May 1927 by Jacques Henri Lartigue

Links to interesting stuff that I have discovered over the past week. A day late, I fear, in part accounted for by the preparations for the RSC Live from Stratford-upon-Avon broadcast of Hamlet on Wednesday.

Hillary Clinton vs herself: an excellent profile by Rebecca Traister for New York magazine.

A visit to the nitrate picture show: Hillary Weston for The Criterion Collection reports from a ‘glorious weekend’ at the George Eastman Museum in Rochester, New York.

• Ingmar Bergman’s 1950s soap commercials wash away the existential despair: far from a new post at the excellent online resource Open Culture, but I had not previously come across the film ads that Bergman made in 1951 for a new anti-bacterial soap called Bris (“Breeze,” in English).

• Rohmer at the water: a lovely video essay by Tope Ogundare for Fandor, with more here: ‘Why water? Rohmer at the beach‘:

Rohmer at the Water from Fandor Keyframe on Vimeo. read more »

34 years on…

1st June 2016

So I logged on to Facebook today and this is what I found…

34th anniversary! How can that be? What I think must be the case is that we incorporated Illuminations Television Ltd 34 years ago. My then-colleague Geoff Dunlop and I bought for a few pounds a company off the shelf – which as I recall was a bankrupt double glazing provider – and changed the name and the articles of association. And suddenly we owned an independent production company. We didn’t have an office, we didn’t have any commissions, and we didn’t have much sense of what being independent producers entailed. But then nobody did back then. This was before Channel 4 had gone on air, and like lots of others we recognised an opportunity and took a punt. 34 years ago today! read more »

Sunday links

29th May 2016

Links from the past week for this holiday weekend.

Black Dog: this is terrific – frames (one of which is above) from comic book artist and filmmaker Dave McKean’s graphic-novel biography of painter Paul Nash, created as part of the first world war centenary art project 14-18 Now; courtesy of the Guardian.

• The high times and hard fall of Carl Laemmle Jr.: a Hollywood tragedy, beautifully told by Farran Smith Nehme for Film Comment, linked to this great-looking MoMA season; Laemmle was undone by the spiralling budget on the 1936 Show Boat from which this comes – Helen Morgan (Julie) with ‘Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man’… beautiful and bizarre (see Irene Dunne shimmy!), and with the racial stereotypes from the time.

read more »

Hangmen rehanged

28th May 2016

newspaper hand-out

Through yesterday I posted some thoughts from The Live Cinema Conference 2016 at King’s College London. At the end of the day we retired for the traditional post-discussion drinks (even if some were surprised that an event with a comparatively high ticket cost rolled out a cash bar). As we were standing around musing and moaning, we were interrupted by the appearance of a KCL alumnus who it transpired was a prominent barrister in the early 1960s. And so began a promenade drama that led us into an encore screening of NT Live’s recent broadcast of Hangmen. Additional accompaniments were to include both some further dramatic pieces and an introduction to ‘edible cinema’. I have to admit that, while I found elements of this engaging, it didn’t really deliver for me, and at the interval I mentally made my excuses and left. I was tired, in part after a slightly disappointing day that ultimately I decided was grounded in a category error. Of which more below. read more »

Live cinema – live!

27th May 2016

To King’s College London today for The Live Cinema Conference 2016. This intriguing event intends to explore the full range of live cinema today including ‘the production, delivery and attendance of outdoor screenings, drive-ins, sing-a-longs, sensory augmentations, fully immersive experiences and event-led distribution, spanning the independent to the mainstream.’ So not just the broadcasting of theatre in cinemas, which of course is my particular interest and which will be an element in the day’s focus. And then there’s a special presentation of the recent NT Live presentation of Hangmen (above) this evening for which we are promised:

a unique fusion of performance, film and food in a playful re-play of the play. For the first time, the forms and aesthetics of ‘event’ cinema, ‘live’ cinema and promenade theatre are united in a hybrid, multi-layered, immersive and sensory experience, which promises to delight, surprise and enthrall (sic) the audience.

The full programme of today’s event is here. In the spirit of the occasion – and assuming I can secure a reasonable wi-fi connection, I’m going to try live blogging with occasional posts through the day. So check back later and/or follow me on Twitter @illuminations with #LCCUK16.

read more »

Listening to Louis MacNeice

26th May 2016

Louis MacNeice at the BBC

Last Thursday I was at the British Library for a fascinating conference titled Radio Modernisms: Features, Cultures and the BBC (the conference programme is here, along with abstracts and biographies). Organised by my University of Westminster colleagues Amanda Wrigley and Aasiya Lodhi, a number of really strong papers explored aspects of the modernist encounters between radio and literature in the mid-20th century. An especial highlight was the keynote by Todd Avery from UMass Lowell, who developed the ground-breaking arguments of his book Radio Modernism by exploring the legacy in this context of Walter Pater and aestheticism. And at the end of the day we were treated to a ‘listening’ of Louis MacNeice’s radio feature Portrait of Athens, 1951. read more »