Newsreels showed what Einstein looked like, how he moved, the angle of his grin.
The newsreel shows a promotional tour the recreated ship took to various territories.
Not exact matches
According to interviews, this protest was apparently the first incident of international protest committed to film and
shown in theatres as part of
newsreels.
Composed of extraordinary source footage, most entirely unseen before, that combines
newsreels, U.S. and British television
shows, home movies and hundreds of rare photographs blended with the requisite talking - head interviews.
The first half of this post war - time drama is a straight propaganda piece, filmed in
newsreel style,
showing how the plucky ladies and chaps of the OSS were trained to sock it to the dreaded hun.
Then a short
newsreel clip
shows the real LaMotta in action.
Sunday's Oscars telecast on the one hand featured the glittery self - regard that is the hallmark of such an event: Host Jimmy Kimmel kicked off the proceedings with a
newsreel - ish treatment of the «Haaah - llywood staaahs» who, over the course of the
show, would be plucked from the firmament to delight the audience below.
As well, you can take a peek at composer Harold Arlen's home movies, outtakes and deleted scenes, special effects sequences, the 1938 MGM short From the Vault: Another Romance of Celluloid: Electrical Power, the 1939
newsreel Cavalcade of Academy Awards, the 1939 trailer Texas Contest Winners, audio vault, the radio promo Leo Is on the Air, the 1939 radio
show Good News, the December 25 1950 Lux Radio Theater broadcast, and stills galleries.
His first few minutes,
showing celebs on the red carpet and in the audience and narrating it as an old - style black and white
newsreel was inspired.
He was credited as consultant on numerous films, TV and radio
shows and even comic books, seen in
newsreels and portrayed as a figure of paternal authority whenever seen or referred to in classic movies.
The characters, good and bad, are all trying to uncover the identity of a resistance man who circulates subversive
newsreels that
show the US winning the war.
His first few minutes,
showing celebs on the red carpet and in the audience and narrating it as a 1940s black and white
newsreel was inspired.
His idea for a media kiosk had magazines shelves on the bottom, a tribunal where someone reads the news live, and at the top — a screen to
show newsreel film.
His compositions Amorpha, Chromatique chaude and Amorpha, Fugue à deux couleurs were
shown at the Salon d'Automne in Paris in October 1912, filmed for the
newsreels, and then broadcast across Europe and America.