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Arnolfini - est 1961

UPDATE:
We are sorry but we have had to cancel our Cinema Rediscovered events this weekend due to a team shortage in the theatre at Arnolfini. The Galleries, Bookshop and Harbourside Bar plan to remain open.

The Open Road will go ahead as scheduled over at the Watershed.

Who was William Friese-Greene? will now be taking place online as a free event. All bookers will be sent a link and offered a refund and rest assured that refunds will be issued next week once the festival is over.

Cinema Rediscovered hope to reschedule The Maltese Falcon later in the year, please keep an eye on their website for details.

Please visit www.watershed.co.uk/cinema-rediscovered for the rest of the programme available in and around Bristol.

If you had tickets for Cinema Rediscovered events, the Box Office will be in touch to offer you to arrange a refund next week.

For all enquiries relating to Cinema Rediscovered please email cinema.rediscovered@watershed.co.uk

 

In the summer of 1924 pioneer cinematographer Claude Friese-Greene (son of Bristol-born William Friese-Greene) set out from Cornwall with the aim of recording life on the road between Land’s End and John O’Groats with a unique colour film technique. Originally Friese-Greene’s The Open Road was intended to be shown weekly in cinemas. The 26 short episodes combine to form a unique social document of life in Britain between the wars.  

Friese-Greene takes us on a journey that encompasses Plymouth, a hunt on Exmoor, the docks of Cardiff, the pleasure beach at Blackpool and more. In Scotland, he records shipbuilding on the Clyde, the banks of Loch Lomond and the castles of Stirling and Edinburgh before concluding on the busy streets of London. 

The film has undergone a revolutionary restoration by the British Film Institute that was generously supported by the Eric Anker-Petersen Charity. 

With an introduction by BFI National Archive silent film curator Bryony Dixon and live music by Neil Brand, a silent film accompanist for over 30 years. Brand is also a well-known TV presenter with five hugely successful ‘Sound of …’ series on BBC4, and a regular presenter on Radio 4’s Film Programme and Soul Music. He is considered one of the finest improvising piano accompanists in the world.  

This screening is part of Bristol Ideas’ #BristolFilm2021 in collaboration with South West Silents as part of Cinema Rediscovered 2021. 

  

The Open Road is presented as part of Opening Up the Magic Box –  a heritage element of Film 2021 –  which marks the centenary of the death of Bristol-born film pioneer William Friese-Greene and the 125th anniversary of the first public cinema screening in Bristol, which took place at the Tivoli on 8 June 1896 as well as celebrating Bristol – a UNESCO City of Film since 2017. 

 

Neil Brand has been a silent film accompanist for over 30 years throughout the UK and at film festivals around the world. He now has a very fruitful relationship with the BBC Symphony Orchestra with his acclaimed orchestral scores for Hitchcock’s silent Blackmail, Asquith’s silent Underground, Chaplin’s Easy Street and Fairbanks’s Robin Hood, published by Faber Music. He followed these successes with two through-scored radio adaptations, The Wind in the Willows (Audio Drama Award Nominated) and A Christmas Carol, scores for Hitchcock’s The Lodger, and Jackie Coogan’s Oliver Twist. He is well-known as a TV presenter with five hugely successful ‘Sound of …’ series on BBC4, is a regular presenter on Radio 4’s Film Programme and Soul Music, a Fellow of Aberystwyth University and a Member and Visiting Professor of the Royal Academy of Music. He was awarded the BASCA Gold Badge in 2016 and is considered one of the finest improvising piano accompanists in the world.  

  

This event is supported by