
This three-part BBC-BFI collaboration broadcast in 2006, features presenter Dan Cruickshank enthusiastically delving into a batch of largely unknown film footage.
Most of it comes from The Open Road (1924-26), an unfinished travelogue recording a car journey from Land's End to John O'Groats via Wales and the Lake District. It's absolutely riveting on screen, because Claude Friese-Greene shot it using an experimental but surprisingly effective colour process whose commercial failure and associated restoration problems condemned the film to decades in the vaults of the National Film and Television Archive.
Finally given a public airing, his painterly compositions bring to life a remote but nonetheless highly recognisable Britain, the passage of time underscored by dissolves to their present-day equivalent. This usually involves landscapes or buildings, but Cruickshank and his researchers have also identified many of the people, some of whom are still alive. Their stories bring the films to vivid life: a Clyde shipyard riveter framed like a Soviet poster would have been a stranger to health and safety regulations, and a Devon farmer swigs cider while the intertitles poke fun at America's Prohibition (a risky tactic given Friese-Greene's target audience and intended backers). Cruickshank simply repeats the journey in a similar vintage vehicle, constantly feigning surprise at yet another seemingly casual encounter with someone who just happens to be a descendant of one of the film's subjects. It's another delightful blend of film, social and technological history.
Extras include: More stories - Cinematographer Jack Cardiff remembers Friese-Green; extended interviews with those featured in the series, including landscape artist Lamorna Birch and the son of legendary Cardiff footballer Hughie Ferguson.
The Lost World of Friese-Greene is supplied by MovieMail ltd. To order over the phone call 0330 333 6844 or for supplier details and information regarding delivery please click here
Bought this product?
Larger Image

