Metadata
WORK ID: YFA 5762 (Master Record)
Title | Year | Date |
HILL TO DALE | 1967 | 1967-01-01 |
Details
Original Format: Standard 8 Colour: Colour Sound: Sound Duration: 5 mins 18 secs Credits: Doug and Norah Brear Wakefield Cine Club |
Summary This is one of a large collection films made between 1960 and 1985 by Doug and Norah Brear FACI, members of Wakefield Cine Club. The film follows the journey of the origins of a river from small mountain streams, accompanied by music and the reading of a poem, presumably written by either Doug or Norah. |
Description
This is one of a large collection films made between 1960 and 1985 by Doug and Norah Brear FACI, members of Wakefield Cine Club. The film follows the journey of the origins of a river from small mountain streams, accompanied by music and the reading of a poem, presumably written by either Doug or Norah.
Title – Hill to Dale
The poem follows closely the development of the stream into a river, with beautifully shot scenes of water rushing over rocks, narrated from the point of view of the...
This is one of a large collection films made between 1960 and 1985 by Doug and Norah Brear FACI, members of Wakefield Cine Club. The film follows the journey of the origins of a river from small mountain streams, accompanied by music and the reading of a poem, presumably written by either Doug or Norah.
Title – Hill to Dale
The poem follows closely the development of the stream into a river, with beautifully shot scenes of water rushing over rocks, narrated from the point of view of the river as it passes on its way, getting ever bigger and eventually becoming a wide river, with a man fishing in it.
Title – The End
Context
In the year the Beatles suggest to picture yourself in a boat on a river, this film imagines being and becoming a river, in images, words, music.
This is a fine example of a husband and wife team of amateur filmmakers, in the mid-1960s, demonstrating their creativity in blending together image, music and self-penned poetry: tracing the journey of small mountain streams passing over rocks and gradually evolving into a wide river. The beautifully filmed images are accompanied by a poem...
In the year the Beatles suggest to picture yourself in a boat on a river, this film imagines being and becoming a river, in images, words, music.
This is a fine example of a husband and wife team of amateur filmmakers, in the mid-1960s, demonstrating their creativity in blending together image, music and self-penned poetry: tracing the journey of small mountain streams passing over rocks and gradually evolving into a wide river. The beautifully filmed images are accompanied by a poem narrated from the point of view of the river, describing its ever changing self, which yet retains its identity throughout. Doug and Norah Brear FACI, members of Wakefield Cine Club, made over 60 films between 1960 and 1985, many shown at film shows across Yorkshire by his friend and fellow filmmaker Roger Spence. It isn’t known which river it is which appears in the film, or who composed the poem, presumably it was written by either Doug or Norah. Nor is it known what might have inspired this work, although its pastoral quality perhaps evokes William Wordsworth and the River Duddon. This film is available to be licensed for non-commercial creative reuse. For more information please contact yfa@yorksj.ac.uk |