A real treat for the movie buff to have a TV double- bill during the weekend:
Sat, 22 Nov "The Red Shoes" (1948) BBC 2
Sun, 23 Nov "The Life & Death of Col Blimp (1943) ITV 4
Both titles is restored prints which favour the use of Technicolour, dazzling design by Alfred Junge and classy camerawork by Geoffrey Unsworth; musical scores by Brian Easdale, ("Red Shoes") or Allan Gray, "Col Blimp").
Anton Walbrook dominates both films with a rare sensivity and charm. I doubt whether British cinema can ever match such a creative partnership as Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger; they complemented each other so well and I strongly recommend Powell's two biographies. A Life in Movies (1986) and Million Dollar Movie a year or two later. I seem to recall a lively thread on the R3 boards some years ago about "I Know Where I'm Going" (1945).
In the early 70s, I did a lot of bread and butter telly roles and often had lunch at the BBC North Acton rehearsal block with John Laurie who was playing Pvt Fraser in "Dad's Army". He did lots of work for the team of P & P and told some hilarious anecdotes about 'Micky' in a crotchety mood but respected his commitment and passion for his work. I always felt that the partnership captured so well English romanticism banked down between emotional reticence.
Sat, 22 Nov "The Red Shoes" (1948) BBC 2
Sun, 23 Nov "The Life & Death of Col Blimp (1943) ITV 4
Both titles is restored prints which favour the use of Technicolour, dazzling design by Alfred Junge and classy camerawork by Geoffrey Unsworth; musical scores by Brian Easdale, ("Red Shoes") or Allan Gray, "Col Blimp").
Anton Walbrook dominates both films with a rare sensivity and charm. I doubt whether British cinema can ever match such a creative partnership as Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger; they complemented each other so well and I strongly recommend Powell's two biographies. A Life in Movies (1986) and Million Dollar Movie a year or two later. I seem to recall a lively thread on the R3 boards some years ago about "I Know Where I'm Going" (1945).
In the early 70s, I did a lot of bread and butter telly roles and often had lunch at the BBC North Acton rehearsal block with John Laurie who was playing Pvt Fraser in "Dad's Army". He did lots of work for the team of P & P and told some hilarious anecdotes about 'Micky' in a crotchety mood but respected his commitment and passion for his work. I always felt that the partnership captured so well English romanticism banked down between emotional reticence.
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