Moviewatch [21/03/93]
The travelling film show heads to Bradford to bring together a panel of local youngsters to review the latest cinema releases
Host Johnny Vaughan presents this episode of Moviewatch from the National Museum of Photography, Film and Television (now known as the National Science and Media Museum), before handing over to a panel of local film fans to review new releases including Indochine, starring Catherine Deneuve, the Mel Gibson star vehicle Forever Young, the sports drama Wind and Eddie Murphy comedy The Distinguished Gentleman.
Later in the programme, actor-director Danny DeVito looks back at his career and talks about his new film, the political drama Hoffa, and Philip Edgar-Jones profiles two young studio executives making their first waves in Hollywood, Inga Vainshtein and Michael de Luca. In 1993, de Luca had recently started his role as head of production at New Line Cinema, but he would oversee some of the decade's most important Hollywood films, such as Seven, Friday, Boogie Nights and Austin Powers, before garnering Academy Award nominations as a producer for The Social Network, Moneyball and Captain Phillips.
From the National Museum of Photography, Film and TV in Bradford with reviews
of INDOCHINE, FOREVER YOUNG, WIND and DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN.
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Silver Screens: A Century of Cinemagoing
The cinema has always been so much more than just a place to watch films. At the heights of its powers, the silver screen stood for spectacle, sophistication, electricity and elegance as well as entertainment, and the very venues themselves were star attractions. These architectural marvels stood proud in cities and towns up and down the country, enthralling audiences in their thousands in the days when "going to the pictures" was a national pastime.
For over a century, cinema has endured, and cinemas have changed with the times. The rise of television, video and home cinemas may have splintered the cultural dominance of the movies while bringing films to smaller and more convenient screens, but the thrill of the communal experience remains - as do many of the monumental structures themselves, whether they have been converted into bingo halls, renovated into plush modern picture houses, or left to loom over the high street.
This collection celebrates the cinema as both a cultural icon and a haven for generations of starry-eyed dreamers, and documents the changing face of filmgoing from the bygone bioscopes and the lavish picture palaces of yesteryear to the sticky-floored multiplexes of today. So dim the lights, grab your popcorn, and lose yourself in the magic of the silver screen.
30 videos in this collection
Moviewatch [17/01/93]
Dawson's Electric Cinema
Plymouth's Gaumont Cinema Closure
Tudor Style
The Dream of Arthur Sleap
Movies on TV (Look Here)
Enter the Dream-House: Memories of Cinema in its Heyday
Margate's Plaza Cinema
The Rise and Fall of the Dream Palace
Ramsgate's Odeon and the demolition of a Herne Bay cinema
Cinemas in Faversham and Sittingbourne
It Happened at the Club!
Armchair Odeons
Running a Cinema
Video Piracy
Family Viewing Video Rental Shop
The Electric Paradise
Q visits the QFT
Regional Film Theatre - Foundation Stone Ceremony
Opening of Whitehaven Film Theatre
An Art Deco cinema in Sheerness
Tdk Video Tape: Pink Panther
Moviewatch [21/03/93]
London cinemas and an Open Day at Ealing Studios
Various Cinemas in the Medway towns
Loftus Cinema: The Golden Years
Herne Bay after the cinemas have gone
Unveiling Eros and West End cinemas