Category Archives: I’m Ready for my Closeup

I’m ready for my close-up: Restoring The Battle of The Somme

Happy Christmas (War is over): To (belatedly) coincide with the 90th anniversary of ‘The Battle of the Somme’ (both the event and the film), Alex Fitch is discussing the silent movie and its recent restoration with Dr. Toby Haggith (Imperial War Museum) and Andrew Robertshaw (National Army Museum). To make the film more accessible to modern viewers Toby has been involved with the rediscovery of the film’s original score and the commissioning of a new one, while Andrew has made a documentary re-editing the scenes of the movie into the order in which they were filmed to give the audience a unique insight into the making of the world’s first feature length documentary.

Links: Wikipedia page on the film
Andrew’s page about the battle and the film at the National Army Museum website
Imperial War Museum microsite about the battle

Originally broadcast 21st December 2006 (mp3 format, 26mb)

I’m ready for my close-up: The current state of Comics

Alex Fitch interviews Kev F Sutherland (comics writer and commentator) about such topics as: Hollywood and the media’s fascination with comic books which contrasts with diminishing sales in shops. From appreciation of writers like Alan Moore and Chris Ware in The Guardian to comics based on TV shows and by TV writers, there seems to be cultural awareness of comics, but the question is: how do we get more adults and (more importantly) children reading this great art form again?

Links: Wikipedia page on Kev F. Sutherland
Kev’s own website

Originally broadcast 12th October 2006 (mp3 format, 25mb)

I’m ready for my close-up: The current state of Children’s Television

Alex Fitch presents an overview of this year’s Children’s television at Christmas with a special report on Sky’s live action adaptation of ‘The Hogfather’. Alex’s guest in the studio* is Ed Petrie, Children’s TV presenter / stand-up comedian and the show also includes short interviews with David Jason, Nigel Planer and Terry Pratchett.
*actually Ed’s brother’s bedroom, but let’s not diminish the glamour here!

Links: Wikipedia page on Terry Pratchett
Sky’s Hogfather site
Ed’s website

Originally broadcast 14th December 2006 (mp3 format, 27mb)

I’m ready for my close-up: John Grierson and the Creative Treatment of Actuality

Martin Williams produced this programme focusing on the work of John Grierson. Grierson spearheaded the British Documentary Film Movement in the years before WWII. Featuring interviews with Ian Aitken, author of Film and Reform (Routledge 1990), Realist Film Theory and Cinema (Manchester University Press 2006) and editor of the Encyclopaedia of Documentary Film (Routledge 2005) and Brian Winston, author of Claiming the Real (BFI 1995) and Lies, Damned Lies and Documentary (BFI 2001).

Links: Wikipedia page on John Grierson
The John Grierson Trust

Originally broadcast 25th May 2006 (mp3 format, 27mb)

I’m ready for my close-up: The (horror) films of Stephen King

Alex Fitch talks to Emma Smart from the BFI about film adaptations of Stephen King’s novels and short stories. Featuring excerpts from his talk in Battersea earlier in the month and trailers from his earliest and most recent films…
(This show is dedicated to Grace, a King fan from Timsbury, near Bath, with thanks to The Times for getting me tickets to the Battersea event)

Links: The Times Online podcasts of Stephen King’s talk in Battersea 7th November 2006 Stephen King’s entry on Wikipedia

Originally broadcast 23rd November, 2006 (mp3 format, 26mb)

I’m ready for my close-up: History in Film

History and film have been inextricably linked since movie pioneers first shot footage of workers leaving factory gates and trains entering stations. In tonight’s show Alex Fitch explores the nature of history as a topic for film and the use of historical footage in films. The first half of the show is a discussion with James DeCarteret, Mark Stafford and Alison Goldie about recent films that depict and / or include historical events such as Hollywoodland and Nick Broomfield’s Ghosts and then Alex discusses the genre with Dr. Toby Haggith, the head of cinema programming at The Imperial War Museum in London.
[Sorry for the poor audio quality at the beginning and end – I was using unfamiliar equiptment in my lunch break at work!]

Links: The Third Australian History and Film Conference
www.historyonfilm.com
Imperial War Museum
Originally broadcast 30th Novemebr 2006 (mp3 format, 26mb)

I’m ready for my close-up: Whatever happened to Dan Dare, Pilot of the Future?

Alex Fitch talks to historian Duncan Nott and Kev F. Sutherland, a comics artist and writer about Dare’s continuing appeal and cultural legacy…

Links: The official Dan Dare website
Unofficial fan sites – dan-dare.net & dan-dare.org where you can hear the clips featured in the show in full…
Spaceship Away – the home of new Dan Dare adventures

Originally transmitted on September 14th 2006 (mp3 format, 27.3 mb)

I’m ready for my close-up: Audible pictures

Alex Fitch talks to Matt Hulse, curator of and contributor to ‘The Audible Picture Show’, a touring collection of short films without pictures, which features such film-makers as Andrew Kotting and the Brothers Quay. Alex and Matt talk about the art of foley work, the under-appreciation of sound in modern society, the joy of found footage and the use of sampled soundtracks to create evocative soundscapes.
There will be a retrospective of Matt’s work and a ‘showing’ of ‘The Audible Picture Show’ on Sunday 14th January 2007 as part of The Halloween Society’s 4th Short Film Festival at the ICA. Please visit the sites below for more info.

Links: www.audiblepictureshow.org.uk
The Halloween Society
Institute of Contemporary Arts  

Originally broadcast 19th October 2006 (mp3 format, 27mb)

I’m ready for my close-up: Structualist Cinema

Richard Thomas talks to Ed Pinsent about the history of structuralist cinema from its beginnings in America in the 1960s to its development in Britain a decade later and beyond. Ed is the editor of Sound Projector magazine and hosts a related show on Resonance (Fridays 5.30-7pm) on the subject of ecclectic music.

Links: Ed’s show – www.thesoundprojector.com/radioshow.html
Ways of seeing article on Structuralist cinema – www.waysofseeing.org/struct.html

Originally broadcast 16th March 2006 (mp3 format, 28mb)

I’m ready for my close-up: The London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival

In advance of their discussion of Stephen King movies this Thursday (16/11/06) on Resonance at 10.30pm; here’s a podcast of the interview Alex Fitch did with Emma Smart, a librarian at the British Film Institute about a lecture she gave at the LLGFF. They also discuss the lack of gay movies at the London Film Festival (thankfully this seemed to be remedied last month) and about the history of the LLGFF.
Links: http://www.llgff.org.uk
LLGFF reviews at backprojection.com
Originally broadcast 11th May 2006 (mp3 format, 25.9mb)