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Among The Hardwoods

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NFSA Films

In continuation of the FAC 100 year celebrations we present this early film from the Cinema and Photographic Branch filmed by the intrepid cinematographer Bert Ive on yet another location where he had to haul over 200 lbs of camera equipment. Ive and freelance cameraman Lacey Percival had filmed an earlier and silent film of the same name in 1927 as part of the Know Your Own Country series. But in mid1936 Ive and a sound recordist revisited the Pemberton region of southwest Western Australia to make a film that focussed more on the atmosphere of the forest as it was irrevocably changed by the axe and saw of the loggers. While this new film was half the length of the silent, Ive's director Lyn Maplestone drew added impact by lingering on the sights and sounds of fewer phases of logging trees in the Jarrah and Karri forest in the Pemberton, transporting them to the nearby Pemberton sawmill, and milling the logs. In place of the original's many intertitles, the sound version makes sparing but more effective use of intertitles supered over images. Scenes shot for the silent version (but not always used) can be seen being processed and screened in Telling the World (1929), published recently on YouTube.

posted by diegorlicitraf2