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  1. 15 de ago. de 2020 · The Open Road. Startling colour photography of 1920s Britain imbues Claude Friese-Greene’s 1920s road trip around Britain. Travelogue 2006 65 mins. Watch for free. Overview Overview. A modern compilation of the footage shot by Claude Friese-Greene on his trip around 1920s Britain, in the fabulous colour of his own experimental process.

  2. Há 2 dias · Nude Woman by Waterfall. A model poses in and out of her diaphanous shift in this risqué experiment from British cinema pioneer Claude Friese-Greene. 1920 11 mins Silent. Watch for free. Overview Overview. British cinema pioneer Claude Friese-Greene, known for his beautiful colour travelogue The Open Road (1926), liked to feature young ladies ...

  3. William Friese-Greene was a British photographer, chemist and maverick inventor spanning both the Victorian and Edwardian era and credited, by some, as the inventor of cinematography (the recording of photographic images for use in cinema or the use of a film camera to take pictures). He constructed a series of proto-type cameras and pioneered the motion picture camera (patent 10131 – June ...

  4. 18 de abr. de 2006 · The Lost World of Friese-Greene: Directed by Annabel Hobley. With Dan Cruickshank. During 1924 and for the next two years, Claude Friese-Greene, filmmaker and cinematographer, embarked on an epic journey, and calling it The Open Road, which would bring the people and the lands of Great Britain together.

  5. 6 de abr. de 2021 · Claude Friese-Greene – The Open Road (1926) In the summer of 1924 Claude Friese-Greene, a pioneer of colour cinematography, set out from Cornwall with the aim of recording life on the road between Land’s End and John O’Groats. Entitled The Open Road, his remarkable travelogue was conceived as a series of shorts, 26 episodes in all, to be ...

  6. www.bfi.org.uk › film › 8569e4cf-b65b-5623-b869The Open Road (1925) | BFI

    19 de out. de 2023 · The Open Road captures Claude Friese-Greene’s journey around 1920s Britain by car using his own experimental colour film process. Claude continued the work of his father, cinema pioneer William Friese-Greene, and marketed his “new all British Friese-Greene natural colour process” through a 26-part travelogue of Britain, reaching from Lands End to John O’Groats.

  7. During the 1920s, cinematographer Claude Friese-Greene travelled across the UK with his new colour film camera. His trip ended in London, with some of his most stunning images, and these were recently revived and restored by the BFI, and shared across social media and video websites. Since February I have attempted to capture every one of his ...

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    • Simon Smith