Wed
29/06
Cinema Lumiere - Sala Officinema/Mastroianni > 16:15
Great Small Gauge: KINEMATHEK BERN/Home Movies Bologna
David Landolf and Brigitte Paulowitz
Gabriel Thibaudeau
LICHTSPIEL / KINEMATHEK BERN PRESENTS
Imagine a collection of projectors and other technical devices from the world of cinematography. Like many other collectors of cinematographic material, Walter Ritschard, a Bernese cinema technician, was more focused on the technical equipment than on the films that could be produced and/or screened on them. However, a projector looks incomparably more attractive with a film on it. Therefore, the collection also contained some films, including trailers, newsreels, short documentaries and occasionally amateur films. The focus of the Lichtspiel collection has its origins in this inheritance. From our beginning in 2000 we wanted to take on tasks that were not the main focus of other archives, not limited to the content of the films or a specific format. On the content level, this inclusivity, combined with the fact that the films are also projected frequently, led the Lichtspiel to become the home of the UNICA Collection (Union Internationale du Cinéma), but also of the GSFA (Groupement Suisse du Film d’Animation) and other similar organisations. The film distribution services of Switzerland’s school film producers found a new home and filmmakers such as Clemens Klopfenstein handed over their works to our archive. Thus the collection grew rapidly to about 30,000 short films.
Formally, the wide range of the archive collection policy leads increasingly away from 35mm, today the largest part of the collection is 16mm material and in the last years we more deliberately set our focus on amateur film formats such as 9.5mm – the oldest successful film format for home use also set standards for all that followed. Pathé first used it to remarket its own productions, but also to successfully win over the middle classes by invading their intimate space at home. With our two programmes curated for Il Cinema Ritrovato we would like to present a selection of the 9.5mm films available not only in our archives but with a broader Swiss perspective: some films are from the Cinécollection Peter Fasnacht and two films come from the Cinémathèque suisse. The silent version of the film L’Hippocampe by Jean Painlevé has found its way into the programme to show that sound was no serious obstacle. There is undoubtedly much missing: Max Linder for example, or examples from the British Pathescope Library. The condition of the films was a serious criterion for exclusion; many are brittle and heavily warped due to years of storage in small metal containers.
The very important two-part aspect of the format: filming one’s own life and buying what others have filmed from the enormous Pathé Library is also not present in these two programmes, mainly for conservation reasons. At the Lichtspiel, the analogue format is at the centre, so preservation concerns were also important for the choices we made.
Brigitte Paulowitz
To follow the screening of VISAGE D’ENFANT, presentation of the book The 9.5mm Vintage Film Encyclopaedia by Patrick Moules. Introduced by Stéphanie Salmon (Fondation Jérôme SeydouxPathé)
Archivio Home Movies Bologna and its surroundings
The surgeon Giuseppe Vecchi, from Romagna, takes us on a car journey through the via Emilia in 1929. His subjective camera shows the walls of Bologna and enters the city through the Santo Stefano gate. A family wedding celebration takes place in the hills and both young and old alike have fun and play up to the camera. In the city in the late 1940s the war is over and culinary specialties worthy of being immortalized on film are being prepared. People cycle to San Lazzaro or catch the train to the countryside to hunt skylarks during their leisure time while Bologna sport fans opt for a visit to the football stadium or follow the shiny racing cars in the Thousand Mile Race. ‘Red’ Bologna is a city that demands to be seen in colour, from the hilltops of San Luca or, perhaps, from the Asinelli Tower in the city centre.
Mirco Santi
ProjectionInfo
Subtitle
Original version with subtitles
Admittance
LE TISSAGE DU COTON
French intertitles
GLADIATEUR COMBATTANT ÉTUDES DE GESTES ET D’ATTITUDES
French intertitles
TROUVILLE, REINE DE PLAGES
French intertitles
LUCERNE: GLISSADES ET TOBOGAN
French intertitles
VISAGES D’ENFANTS
German intertitles
La via Emilia, arrivo e attraversamento di Bologna in auto
Matrimonio, Sui colli di Bologna
Giochi in giardino
Specialità bolognesi, Pesca al fiume Savena, Caccia alle allodole
Udinese vs Bologna, La mostra dei fiori in Piazza Maggiore, Un po’ di Mille Miglia, Stefano e la neve
Piazza Re Enzo, Giardini Margherita, Facoltà di ingegneria
San Luca, Torre degli Asinelli e Piazza Maggiore
If you like this, we suggest:
14:30
Cinema Lumiere - Sala Officinema/Mastroianni
Great Small Gauge: Home Movies/INEDITS/Pippo Barzizza
Great Small Gauge: Home Movies/INEDITS/Pippo Barzizza
Mirco Santi (Home Movies)
Donald Sosin
18:00
Cinema Lumiere - Sala Officinema/Mastroianni
GEORGES BERR, COMÉDIE-FRANÇAISE/LES MISÉRABLES
GEORGES BERR, COMÉDIE-FRANÇAISE/LES MISÉRABLES
Manon Billaut (Fondation Jérôme Seydoux-Pathé introducing the films by George Berr) and Sophie Seydoux (Fondation Jérôme Seydoux-Pathé introducing Les Misérables)
Daniele Furlati (films by George Berr) e John Sweeney (Les Misérables)
16:00
Cinema Lumiere - Sala Officinema/Mastroianni
Pathé-Gazette/Le Corbeau et le renard/ANTOINETTE SABRIER
Pathé-Gazette/Le Corbeau et le renard/ANTOINETTE SABRIER
Anne Gourdet-Marès e Elvira Shahmiri (Fondation Jérôme Seydoux-Pathé)
Stephen Horne