16 October 2011

BFI & Screen Heritage UK Release New Featurettes

BFI & Screen Heritage have sent us “archive featurettes” to celebrate the launch of Screen Heritage UK (SHUK). Screen Heritage UK aims to ensure everyone in Britain to able to find out about their film heritage for free via a new cataloguing and online access drive - Search Your Film Archives.

These featurette are a fantastic trip down memory at life on days gone by and SHUK will ensure everyone in Britain will be able to find out about their film heritage for free via a new cataloguing and online access drive - Search Your Film Archives. The national and regional film archives have created this resource to give the public online access to information about film archives across the UK. Some films will be available to view online.

Through SHUK the BFI will ensure Britain’s film history is safe for future generations with the world’s most sophisticated new archive facility – the new Master Film Store. The new store at Gaydon, Warwickshire contains film prints and negatives from the extraordinary Edwardian works of Mitchell and Kenyon to Hitchcock’s masterpieces and, more recently, The King’s Speech.

Revitalising the Regions is a programme of projects, overseen by Screen Yorkshire, designed to support significant collections in the English Regions, leading to plans for their preservation and access. SHUK has also enabled the creation of a Memory Bank of films used by health professionals in treating patients with Alzheimer’s.

Heather Stewart, SHUK Programme Director and Creative Director BFI, said:“Through Screen Heritage UK the film archives of Britain have joined forces to truly take film archiving to the next level. Film is an integral part of British culture and SHUK will ensure that we not only safe-guard our film heritage for future generations but that everyone in the UK gets the opportunity to enjoy and benefit from it.”

BFI have sent us these fabelous Featurette for you to enjoy on your lazy Sunday afternoon. The first one is called “Holiday” and features unique footage of British holidays from the past, Featurette number 2 is “Customs”, which features rare clips from films such as Oss Oss Wee Oss, a film on the May Day event in Cornwall and Springtime in an English Village, which focuses on that most ancient of English traditions: the selection and crowning of the May Queen. Final featurette contains film clips from films such as Gurinder Chadha’s “I'm British But...” and “We are the Lambeth Boys” from director Karel Reisz (The French Lieutenant's Woman).



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Source: http://www.bfi.org.uk/news/125

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