Showing posts with label Reiniger; Lotte. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reiniger; Lotte. Show all posts

Thursday, 18 July 2013

The Tocher by Lotte Reiniger


The Tocher is a 1938 promotional film for the GPO made by Lotte Reiniger. More information can be found at Screenonline; the film can also be found on the BFI DVD release We Live in Two Worlds.

Reiniger's interest in fairy tales is apparent, although this film ends on a parodic note: the treasure bestowed upon the hero by the fair folk turns out to be a post office savings bank book.


































Thursday, 23 December 2010

Christmas through the ages

It's time to take a break from blogging for the festivities, but before I go here's a smattering of short films old and new celebrating Christmas.




First, here's an 1898 trickfilm titled simply Santa Claus.







Here's a GPO short made in 1951, titled Christmas is Coming. Its rather mundane subject - what date to post parcels by during Christmastime - is turned into something special by Lotte Reiniger's animation.






Time for something rather more offbeat: a Weebl and Bob celebration of Christmas 2008.






Christmas Round the World, from 1978, is one of Sheila Graber's earlier films.






Here's Graham Ralph's 2000 short So Many Santas, featuring unscripted interviews with a range of department store Father Christmases.






Next is a one-and-a-half minute Christmas greeting that was shown to cinema viewers in 1946, featuring a short bit of stop-motion.

And finally, parts one and two of a Creature Comforts Christmas special; unfortunately, the Aardman YouTube channel doesn't allow embedding.

And to all a good night...

Friday, 15 October 2010

Following up on Gifford: the 1950s

The sixth in a series of posts using Denis Gifford's book British Animated Films, 1895-1985: A Filmography to provide a decade-by-decade analysis of British animation's history.

Disclaimer: Although wide-ranging Gifford's book is not perfect. He missed out several films (such as the Lotte Reiniger piece I mentioned at the end of this post; I have since found that this short was not alone) and sometimes provided incorrect dates or crew information. I have done my best to correct any errors which I have found myself repeating in these posts.


The major animation studios of the forties remained active in the fifties. In 1950 the Musical Paintbox and Animaland series initiated by G-B Animation in the late forties concluded; Larkins made River of Steel, a propaganda film for the British Iron and Steel federation; and Halas & Batchelor made As Old as the Hills for the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, The British Army at Your Service for the War Office and the entertainment film Fowl Play. Halas & Batchelor actually took over the production of Fowl Play from Anson Dyer after he ran out of finance for the film; earlier that year Dyer had directed a Cherry Blossom Boot Polish commercial, Very Good Sergeant, for Stratford Abby Films. These appear to have been the last pieces of animation that Dyer, active in the industry since World War I, ever worked on. He died in 1962.

Dyer was not the only figure from the silent era to still be active that year: a feature-length live action biopic about the life of Hans Christian Andersen, Mr. H.C. Andersen, boasted animated sequences by Joe Noble. Gifford quotes a negative review published in Film Report which complains that "Instead of telling the story straight, many lengthy and irrelevant cartoon sequences are introduced. They contain a few amusing moments but on the whole are very crude."

New names of the year include Julius Pinschewer of Pinschewer films, who made Save Baby Save for the National Savings Committee and Bread for Harry Furguson tractors; and Sadfas, a company which released The Fox and the Crow and The Magic Chalks for Saturday morning children's clubs. Gifford does not identify the directors of these two films.

The Shoemaker and the Hatter: folktale-style propaganda from Halas & Batchelor.


The next few years were dominated by Halas & Batchelor. In 1951 the studio made the four-part Poet and Painter series for the BFI to be shown at the Festival of Britain; adapting the work of famous poets, the films contained animation by the likes of Ronald Searle and Mervyn Peake. In the same year Halas & Batchelor made Submarine Control for the Admiralty and The Flu-ing Squad for Aspro, while the next year saw the studio release The Shoemaker and the Hatter for the Economic Cooperation Administration and Service: Garage Handling for the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company.

Larkins' Balance 1950. More stills can be seen here.


Meanwhile, in 1951, a studio named Kinocrat made a puppet animation based on the folktale The Tinderbox in 1951; Larkins released two promotional films for ICI entitled Enterprise and Balance 1950; and Lotte Reiniger directed Mary's Birthday for the Crown Film Unit.


Mary's Birthday by Lotte Reiniger, which can be viewed online here.


In 1952 Peter and Joan Foldes entered the scene with Animated Genesis, a film containing a warning about nuclear war.


Joan and Peter Foldes' film Animated Genesis.


In 1953 Halas & Batchelor released two inventive entertainment films: a stop-motion short entitled The Figurehead and The Owl and the Pussycat, the first British animation to use stereoscopic 3D; the studio also made a short for the Petroleum Films Bureau and Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, The Moving Spirit.

Halas & Batchelor's The Owl and the Pussycat.


Sadfas released another film the same year - Bouncer Breaks Up, in which some live action children find a drawing of a dog which comes to life - while Larkins made Full Circle for the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (quite a benefactor to animation by this point) and something of a masterpiece, Without Fear, for the Mutual Security Agency.


Without Fear, directed by Peter Sachs for the Larkins studio. Go here for more stills.


And we come to 1954, the year which saw Halas & Batchelor release Animal Farm. The first British animated feature for mainstream audiences, much has been written about the film; it needs no introduction. Less well-known are the studio's short films from the year: Early Days of Communication, made for the Insulated Cable Company and the Automatic Telephone Company; Linear Accelerator, for Mullard; and The Power to Fly, for the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. Larkins, meanwhile, promoted the British Iron and Steel Federation with The House that Jack Built.


Halas & Batchelor's landmark Animal Farm.


Also released in 1954 was Watch the Birdie, made by Bob Godfrey, Keith Learner, Vera Linnecar and Richard Taylor under the banner of Biographic Films - an independent group which would rise in prominence in the following decade. Another non-professional outfit was the Grasshopper Group; amongst its number was John Daborn, who directed The Battle of Wangapore in 1955.

1954 saw the beginning of a cycle of fairy tale shorts from Primrose Productions and the BFI: The Little Chimney Sweep, Puss in Boots, Snow White and Rose Red and The Magic Horse. Directed by Vivian Milroy and animated by Lotte Reiniger and Carl Koch - with Reiniger's delicate silhouette animation the dominant element - the cycle lasted for fourteen films between 1954 and 1956, the later films being Hansel and Gretel, Sleeping Beauty, Three Wishes, Thumbelina, The Caliph Stork, The Frog Prince, The Gallant Little Tailor, The Grasshopper and the Ant, Jack and the Beanstalk and Star of Bethlehem. In 1958 Reiniger, Koch and Gerry Lee made two animated operas for Phantasia Productions: Helene la Belle and A Night in a Harem.


Halas & Batchelor's The History of the Cinema. More stills here.


Throughout the rest of the decade Halas & Batchelor focused mainly on instructional and promotional films, including The World that Nature Forgot for Monsato Chemicals, Basic Fleetwork for the Admiralty, Refinery at Work for Esso Petroleum; Down a Long Way, Speed the Plough and The Energy Picture for British Petroleum; To Your Health for the World Health Organisation; Think of the Future for the European Productivity Agency; Invisible Exchange, Follow That Car, Best Seller and Paying Bay for Shell Petroleum; Animal, Vegetable or Mineral for the Petroleum Film Board; The Candlemaker for the United Lutheran Church in the USA; All Lit Up for the Gas Council; The First 99 for Seagram; and Dam the Delta for the government of the Netherlands. During the latter half of the fifties the studio released only four films outside of this area: The Sea of Winslow Homer, a compilation of Homer's sea paintings; The History of the Cinema, which I posted about here; The Christmas Visitor, based on The Night Before Christmas; and The World of Little Ig, a short about a caveboy made for American audiences.


The Larkins studio's Put Una Money for There. More stills can be seen here.


Larkins carried on down a similar path, making Gas Fuel Turbine Systems for the Admiralty; Strictly Instrumental for Crompton Parkinson; Shippham's Guide to Opera for Shippham's Pastes; Cool Custom for B.E.D.A.; Mr. Finlay's Feelings for Metropolitan Life Insurance; Put Una Money for There for Nigerian branches of Barclay's Bank; and Earth is a Battlefield for the British Iron and Steel Federation.


The towering figure of Minos passes judgement in Peter King's 13 Cantos of Hell.


Funded by the BFI Experimental Committee, Peter King made 13 Cantos of Hell in 1955. The BFI also backed another film on nuclear war by Peter and Joan Foldes - A Short Vision.


Peter and Joan Foldes' harrowing depiction of nuclear holocaust, A Short Vision. The film can be viewed here.


Pearl & Dean produced a couple of films: David Hilberman directed Calling All Salesmen for Life Magazine in 1954 while in 1957 Digby Turpin directed Pan-Tele-Tron, a Phillips promotional film that won a British Film Academy Award.

Digby Turpin's Pan-tele-tron. More stills can be seen here.


Another studio from this period was Campbell Harper, which made Tam O'Shanter for the Scottish Joint Production Committee in 1956; the film was directed by W.J. Maclean and reportedly contains almost no animation, consisting largely of static pictures with added camera effects. In 1958 the studio made the similarly-limited Sir Patrick Spens for Educational Films of Scotland.

Gifford attributes a 1956 Ministry of Transport propaganda film called Peak Period and the 1958 Bowaters ad All Aboard to World Wide Films, and Ken Woodward's 1959 instructional film Your Skin to World Wide Animation. It is not clear from the book whether these two companies are the same, but according to the BFI database Woodward later made a film for World Wide Pictures.

In 1956 a documentary entitled Cartoons and Cartoonists was released. Covering the likes of W.A.S. Herbert, George Sprod, John Taylor, Brockbank, "Fougasse," Rowland Emmett and Michael Cummings, the otherwise live action film included animated sequences by George Moreno, producer of the Bubble and Squeek cartoons of the forties.

In 1958 a major new talent arrived on the scene: Richard Williams. His independent film The Little Island won a British Film Academy Award.

In 1959 the Halas & Batchelor animator Allan Crick made a promotional film for Shell Max, Sales Promotion: The Key to Efficiency, after going solo and starting up Allan Crick Productions. In the same year Ronald Searle provide designs for an instructional film for the Admiralty, Ship Husbandry Part Two: Painting. Ship Husbandry Part One was directed by John R.F. Stewart the same year and is not included in Gifford's book; presumably it is live action.

A couple of bits and pieces are left over: an outfit named simply Film Workshop made a puppet film for the Gas Council entitled New King Coke in 1956, and in 1957 R. Potter made a Unilever commercial named Quick Freeze at Ronald H. Riley's RHR Films.

And that wraps up the fifties. You could say that this is the decade in which British animation history - as is now generally known by the animation community - begun to take shape. While the animation that came out of the country in previous decades is widely treated as a footnote at best (with the honourable excptions of several GPO-funded films), the fifties produced a number of films that are today seen as classics: Animal Farm, A Short Vision, The Little Island, 13 Cantos of Hell, Reiniger's fairy tale films.

In the next post in this series I will be looking at the sixties, in which the animation landscape would be altered by the growth of television and more classics would be produced, alongside a large number of lesser-known works.

One final note: in 1951 Lotte Reiniger directed a film for the GPO titled Christmas is Coming; it can be seen on the BFI's YouTube channel here. The film was not included in Gifford's book; whether this is because it failed to meet some kind of qualifying criteria, or because he simply missed it, is not clear.


Other posts in this series:
1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9

Thursday, 12 August 2010

Following up on Gifford: the 1930s

The fourth in a series of posts using Denis Gifford's book British Animated Films, 1895-1985: A Filmography to provide a decade-by-decade analysis of British animation's history.

Disclaimer: Although wide-ranging Gifford's book is not perfect. He missed out several films and sometimes provided incorrect dates or crew information. I have done my best to correct any errors which I have found myself repeating in these posts.
 


Horace Shepherd's Bingo character.

The first few years of the decade were something of a dry period. In 1930 Joe Noble's final Sammy and Sausage cartoon, Call Me Speedy, was released; the same year saw the arrival of new director Horace Shepherd's four-part series starring Bingo (yet another dog character), John Maxwell's debut The Elstree 'Erbs and another short from Sid Griffiths, Tropical Breezes.


John the Bull, the frankly bizarre tale of a prize bull who heroically sacrifices himself for his country's beef industry.


Advertising and propaganda films are represented by two 1931 cartoons endorsing the Conservative Party, titled The Right Spirit and Red Tape Farm; and John the Bull, a 1930 short promoting the National Marked Beef Campaign showing a degree of Disney influence. Meanwhile, Anson Dyer completed another animated documentary in 1932: The Story of the Port of London.


Conservative propaganda film The Right Spirit.


1933 saw Adrian Klein make his directorial debut in Colonel Capers while Joe Noble, Sid Griffiths and a third director active in the previous decade, Brian White, teamed up with cartoonist H.M. Bateman to create On the Farm. The following year White directed Treasure Island - billed as the first part of the aborted Barnacle Bill Series - while two films about anthropomorphic billiard and golf balls, The Lost Ball and The Eternal Triangle, were released and have been uncertainly attributed by Gifford to director Dennis Connolly.


George Pal's The Sleeping Beauty, covered in detail at AWN's George Pal Site.


1934 also gave us a film by a better-known director: Hungarian-born puppet animator George Pal, at the time working in Holland and later to move to America. His film The Sleeping Beauty was an Anglo-Dutch co-production advertising Philips Radio, and tweaked the fairy tale by having the prince wake the sleeping princess using a radio.


Len Lye's Kaleidoscope.


An upsurge of animated adverts and propaganda seems to have occurred in 1935. Laurie Price and Christopher Millet animated commercials for Morris Motors (Morris May Day), Worthington beer (The Midshipman and, with Ian Matherson, The Gay Cavalier), OK Sauce (The Baronial Beanfeast) and a fourth client not identified by Gifford (Carnival Capers). See How They Won, an advert for Boots, was scripted and designed in Britain but animated in America; none other than Mickey Mouse co-creator Ub Iwerks served as director. Abstract animator Len Lye directed Kaleidoscope, a film advertising Churchman's Cigarettes.

Dirty Bertie was a propaganda film made for the Central Council for Health Education and told the story of Dirty Bertie receiving a lesson from Clean Eugene; Giro and his Enemies, meanwhile, was made for the Health and Cleanliness Council and showed Giro the Germ launching an attack on Healthiville. Gifford does not list directors for either film.

A few entertainment films were also released this year. Anson Dyer directed a short under the banner of the newly-formed Anglia Films, titled Sam and His Musket; this was based on a character created by radio entertainer Stanley Holloway and was the first in a series. Dennis Connoly directed a Robin Hood film of which little is known, while Cyril Jenkins and Margaret Hoyland made a puppet film using paper dolls, The Little Paper People; Kinematograph Weekly credits the film with "having an appeal for the better class as well as the popular patron." Woofy, released by Zenifilms, was not so well received by this publication: "A feeble cartoon, the drawings are unoriginal and the sound effects are poor. Crude drawings of a dog who rescues his sweetheart from a burning house. Poor drawings, animation and sound effects make it a doubtful attraction for minor halls."


Anson Dyer's interpretation of Stanley Holloway's Sam Small character.


This more or less sets the stage for the rest of the thirties. The redoubtable Anson Dyer continued to make films throughout the decade, completing seven more Sam Small films and another collaboration with Stan Holloway, The Lion and Albert, between 1936 and '37. He went on to make a string of adverts at Publicity Films promoting Bush Radio (All the Fun of the 'Air, The King with the Terrible Temper, The King with the Terrible Hiccups and This Button Business), the Samuel Hanson company (Red, White and Blue) and Rinso (The Queen Was in the Parlour) and even becoming the subject of a documentary, You're Telling Me, in 1939.

Character-based series, once so popular, seem to have fallen out of favour in the thirties. Bingo and Sam Small were joined in 1936 by the third and final proper series star of the decade, Steve the cart-horse, who originated in the comic strip Come On, Steve! and was brought to the screen by his creator Roland Davies with the aid of legendary cartoonist Carl Giles. Steve appeared in six shorts; the contemporary reviews quoted by Gifford are generally positive, although Giannalberto Bendazzi has described the cartoons as "a failure in every respect... the inventions and plots were linked to an old-fashioned concept of animated film."

Cyril Jenkins and Margaret Hoyland, who made The Little Paper People back in 1935, created a sequel in 1939 titled Paper People Land. Dennis Connoly's National News was intended to kick off a series that, apparently, never surfaced; a reviewer writing for the Daily Film Renter dismissed the pilot as "Quite the worst cartoon I've seen to date, a cartoon that might have found favour 15 years ago."

Of the one-off shorts produced around this time, one of the more notable specimens is 1936's The Fox Hunt. Directed by Anthony Gross, Hector Hoppin and Laszlo Meitner, the film was produced by none other than Alexander Korda after he had seen and been impressed by Gross and Hoppin's Joie de Vivre, which they made in France; Kinematograph Weekly questioned The Fox Hunt's mass appeal but praised its artistic merity. Korda, Gross, Hoppin and Meitner were also connected with what was to have been Britain's first animated feature film, Around the World in Eighty Days; World War II halted production and the completed footage was eventually released in 1955 as a short film.



John Halas' Music Man.


Also of note is the 1938 film Music Man, which is historically significant as the first project that John Halas and Joy Batchelor worked on together. The company behind the film, British Animated Films, produced the documentary short How a Motor Works the same year; this was an early work by Kathleen "Spud" Houston, then Kathleen Murphy. The following year Len Lye directed another abstract film, Swinging the Lamberth Walk.

Britain picked up another foreign talent in Lotte Reiniger, who is best remembered today for directing the pioneering animated feature The Adventures of Prince Achmed in her native Germany. Her first film made in the UK was The King's Breakfast, made in collaboration with Martin Battersby and based on the work of A.A. Milne and E.H. Shepherd.

That leaves us with a number of advertising, propaganda and educational films. You could be forgiven for assuming that these would show a lower degree of creativity than the entertainment cartoons; this is far from the truth, as the decade's most highly-regarded examples of British animation come from this field. Some, inevitably, are not well remembered today (you'd be hard-pressed to find much information on the Gibbs toothpaste ad The Magic Seaplane, or Brian Salt's British Social Hygiene Council film The Road of Health) but others are genuine classics made by people now regarded as masters of the art.



George Pal's South Sea Sweethearts. Read more at AWN's George Pal Site.


George Pal continued to direct Anglo-Dutch adverts, promoting Horlicks (On Parade, Sky Pirates, Love on the Range, What Ho! She Bumps and South Sea Sweethearts) and Philips Radio (Philips Broadcast of 1938 and Cavalcade of Music).

Len Lye's The Birth of the Robot.


Len Lye directed an Imperial Airways advert titled Colour Flight in his characteristic abstract style and also ventured into stop motion with his Shell commercial The Birth of the Robot. Educational films, meanwhile, benefited from the talents of Norman McLaren, a new animator who provided diagrams for the British Commercial Gas Association's film The Obedient Flame.


Len Lye's Colour Flight.


And finally, we come to the biggest benefactor of British animation in the thirties: the General Post Office. The GPO Film Unit fostered individuality and experimentation amongst its directors, which included Lye, Reiniger and McLaren.


Len Lye's Rainbow Dance.


Len Lye's animated films for the GPO were A Colour Box, an abstract piece with a few frames about parcel post tagged on to the end; Rainbow Dance, a more representational film that mixes live action dance footage into the animation, and ends with a bit of narration about the post office savings bank; and Trade Tattoo, an unusual combination of abstract animation and live action documentary stressing the important role played by the Post Office in British industry. A contemporary review of Rainbow Dance praises the film but criticises the advert at the end as "a bad anti-climax", underlining just how much these are art films rather than mere adverts.


Len Lye's Trade Tattoo.


Lotte Reiniger provided The Tocher, one of her many silhouette-animated fairy tales, in which the day is saved by a post office savings bank book; and The H.P.O., which uses silhouettes and line drawings to tell the story of a postal service run by cherubim. Meanwhile, Brian Pickersgill made a GPO film entitled Oh Whiskers! - unusually, this said nothing about postal services, but instead taught children about healthy living.


Lotte Reiniger's The H.P.O.


And finally there is Norman McLaren's Love on the Wing, in which an ever-changing line drawing conveys the tale of a love triangle between a hero, heroine and villain - all the while promoting airmail.


Love on the Wing by Norman McLaren.


The thirties were a strange decade for British animation. While the American industry was creating Donald Duck, Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and Goofy, the UK had almost abandoned the concept of series characters despite the various attempts to create the next Felix in the previous decade. Propaganda and adverts grew noticeably in proportion to entertainment films, and yet in a seeming paradox this led to a flourishing of experimental work from some of animation's most remarkable auteurs.

Propaganda would, of course, rise to new heights in the following decade. In the next post in this series I will look at how British animation was used in the wartime and post-war years.


Other posts in this series:
1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9