2:25
Saturday Night And Sunday Morning (1960)
Saturday Night And Sunday Morning (Karel Reisz, UK, 1960) Movie trailer...
published: 29 Mar 2010
author: KmanCosmo
Saturday Night And Sunday Morning (1960)
Saturday Night And Sunday Morning (Karel Reisz, UK, 1960) Movie trailer
2:53
"Isadora" (1968) Karel Reisz.
Can you help me, please? I'm looking for the name of the composer and the name of the ...
published: 13 Feb 2007
author: dominustecum
"Isadora" (1968) Karel Reisz.
Can you help me, please? I'm looking for the name of the composer and the name of the piece for flute and harp from the greek scene(2 movements I guess). Thanks for your time.} "ISADORA", a biography of the dancer Isadora Duncan, the 1920s dancer who forever changed people's ideas of ballet. Her nude, semi-nude, and pro-Soviet dance projects as well as her attitudes on free love, debt, dress, and lifestyle shocked the public of her time. Vanessa Redgrave, James Fox, Jason Robards, Ivan Tchenko, John Fraser, Bessie Love, Cynthia Harris, Tony Voge.
3:56
We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) - extract
The complete film of 'We Are the Lambeth Boys' is available to buy on the BFI DVD ...
published: 07 Feb 2008
author: BFIfilms
We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) - extract
The complete film of 'We Are the Lambeth Boys' is available to buy on the BFI DVD 'Free Cinema' - filmstore.bfi.org.uk "A good evening for young people is much the same as it has always been", the voiceover informs us, attempting to get audiences to think back to their own youth before judging the teenager of the day. Karel Reisz's fantastic film was shot over six months at a "not typical" youth club (ie actually very good) in Lambeth. The biggest change from today would almost certainly be that nearly all of these teens work for a living, making evenings with friends the only time in which they can express themselves. Dressed in suits and ties, or best dresses, they seem somehow to be simultaneously older and younger than their years. Watch as the camera fixes on faces as they observe each other, ultimately making the voiceover unnecessary. (Jez Stewart) For more information about 'We Are the Lambeth Boys' and the Free Cinema movement see www.screenonline.org.uk You can watch 'We Are the Lambeth Boys' and over 1200 other complete films and TV programmes at the Mediatheque at BFI Southbank - www.bfi.org.uk
1:20
Isadora (Karel Reisz) Trailer 1968
Trailer for 'Isadora' by Karel Reisz 1968 starring Vanessa Redgrave as Isadora Dun...
published: 05 Jun 2012
author: dani77744
Isadora (Karel Reisz) Trailer 1968
Trailer for 'Isadora' by Karel Reisz 1968 starring Vanessa Redgrave as Isadora Duncan
10:53
\/\/E /-\RE T|-|E |_/-\/\/\BET|-| B0YS 1 1959
Karel Reisz's We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) has much in common with Lindsay Anderson&...
published: 14 Feb 2010
author: TheMarxist21
\/\/E /-\RE T|-|E |_/-\/\/\BET|-| B0YS 1 1959
Karel Reisz's We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) has much in common with Lindsay Anderson's Every Day Except Christmas (1957). It was produced by Leon Clore, sponsored by Ford for its Look at Britain series, filmed by the usual Free Cinema technical staff - in particular cinematographer Walter Lassally and editor John Fletcher - and delivered in the same 50-minute format. The film once again took a sympathetic approach to an aspect of working-class life largely neglected by commercial British cinema. After Every Day's dignified depiction of market workers in Covent Garden, Lambeth Boys attempted to deliver a positive portrait of the lives of ordinary teenagers, far from the usual violent 'Teddy Boy' stereotype. In a sense, the film also developed the theme initiated by Reisz and Tony Richardson in Momma Don't Allow three years earlier. Lambeth Boys was shot over six weeks in the summer of 1958 in and around the Alford House, a youth club in the Oval area of South London. It follows a group of teenagers at work, at home and in their leisure time, giving them space to express their frustrations and aspirations.. The film is never so good as when it lets the camera move around the group or capture their faces in close-up, rather than providing facts and figures or a sociological analysis. In a famous article on the film in Sight and Sound, sociologist Richard Hoggart talked of it as a 'film essay' rather than a documentary, because, as he claimed, "it sets out to show, not the <b>...</b>
5:31
WE ARE THE LAMBETH BOYS 5
Karel Reisz's We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) has much in common with Lindsay Anderson&...
published: 14 Feb 2010
author: TheMarxist21
WE ARE THE LAMBETH BOYS 5
Karel Reisz's We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) has much in common with Lindsay Anderson's Every Day Except Christmas (1957). It was produced by Leon Clore, sponsored by Ford for its Look at Britain series, filmed by the usual Free Cinema technical staff - in particular cinematographer Walter Lassally and editor John Fletcher - and delivered in the same 50-minute format. The film once again took a sympathetic approach to an aspect of working-class life largely neglected by commercial British cinema. After Every Day's dignified depiction of market workers in Covent Garden, Lambeth Boys attempted to deliver a positive portrait of the lives of ordinary teenagers, far from the usual violent 'Teddy Boy' stereotype. In a sense, the film also developed the theme initiated by Reisz and Tony Richardson in Momma Don't Allow three years earlier. Lambeth Boys was shot over six weeks in the summer of 1958 in and around the Alford House, a youth club in the Oval area of South London. It follows a group of teenagers at work, at home and in their leisure time, giving them space to express their frustrations and aspirations.. The film is never so good as when it lets the camera move around the group or capture their faces in close-up, rather than providing facts and figures or a sociological analysis. In a famous article on the film in Sight and Sound, sociologist Richard Hoggart talked of it as a 'film essay' rather than a documentary, because, as he claimed, "it sets out to show, not the <b>...</b>
3:39
Karel Reisz Quotes
What was your favorite Karel Reisz quote? 'Like' and leave a comment below, then j...
published: 23 Mar 2012
author: quotetank
Karel Reisz Quotes
What was your favorite Karel Reisz quote? 'Like' and leave a comment below, then jump over to quotetank.com and make a list of your favorites, so you'll never forget! We update our Twitter and Facebook with new quotes every few minutes, don't miss out! twitter.com | www.facebook.com If you enjoyed these quotes, please LIKE, SHARE and SUBSCRIBE! Who is Karel Reisz? A Czech-born British filmmaker whoactive in post--war Britain, and one of the pioneers of the new realist strain in 1950s and 1960s British cinema.
10:05
WE ARE THE LAMBETH BOYS 4
Karel Reisz's We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) has much in common with Lindsay Anderson&...
published: 14 Feb 2010
author: TheMarxist21
WE ARE THE LAMBETH BOYS 4
Karel Reisz's We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) has much in common with Lindsay Anderson's Every Day Except Christmas (1957). It was produced by Leon Clore, sponsored by Ford for its Look at Britain series, filmed by the usual Free Cinema technical staff - in particular cinematographer Walter Lassally and editor John Fletcher - and delivered in the same 50-minute format. The film once again took a sympathetic approach to an aspect of working-class life largely neglected by commercial British cinema. After Every Day's dignified depiction of market workers in Covent Garden, Lambeth Boys attempted to deliver a positive portrait of the lives of ordinary teenagers, far from the usual violent 'Teddy Boy' stereotype. In a sense, the film also developed the theme initiated by Reisz and Tony Richardson in Momma Don't Allow three years earlier. Lambeth Boys was shot over six weeks in the summer of 1958 in and around the Alford House, a youth club in the Oval area of South London. It follows a group of teenagers at work, at home and in their leisure time, giving them space to express their frustrations and aspirations.. The film is never so good as when it lets the camera move around the group or capture their faces in close-up, rather than providing facts and figures or a sociological analysis. In a famous article on the film in Sight and Sound, sociologist Richard Hoggart talked of it as a 'film essay' rather than a documentary, because, as he claimed, "it sets out to show, not the <b>...</b>
7:39
Who'll Stop The Rain, Semper fi, ...
Nick Nolte, Michael Moriarty, Tuesday Weld, Karel Reisz... Czech directors...
published: 14 Nov 2010
author: yaknbo
Who'll Stop The Rain, Semper fi, ...
Nick Nolte, Michael Moriarty, Tuesday Weld, Karel Reisz... Czech directors
10:00
Momma don't allow pt 1
Documental británico dirigido por Tony Richardson y Karel Reisz en 1955. Una noche ...
published: 25 Sep 2011
author: SixxBeer
Momma don't allow pt 1
Documental británico dirigido por Tony Richardson y Karel Reisz en 1955. Una noche en un club de jazz londinense.
4:37
Jiving to Chris Barber's Band in 1955
The Chris Barber Jazz Band: Chris Barber (trombone), Pat Halcox (trumpet), Monty Sunshine ...
published: 12 May 2011
author: takethetube9010
Jiving to Chris Barber's Band in 1955
The Chris Barber Jazz Band: Chris Barber (trombone), Pat Halcox (trumpet), Monty Sunshine (clarinet - not visible in the clip), Lonnie Donegan (banjo - not visible in the clip), Jim Bray (double bass) and Ron Bowden (drums) playing 'Lord, Lord, Lord You Sure Been Good To Me' at Fishmonger's Arms, Wood Green, London. This is a clip from 'Momma Don't Allow' a 21-minute documentary directed by Karel Reisz and Tony Richardson.
10:54
WE ARE THE LAMBETH BOYS 2
Karel Reisz's We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) has much in common with Lindsay Anderson&...
published: 14 Feb 2010
author: TheMarxist21
WE ARE THE LAMBETH BOYS 2
Karel Reisz's We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) has much in common with Lindsay Anderson's Every Day Except Christmas (1957). It was produced by Leon Clore, sponsored by Ford for its Look at Britain series, filmed by the usual Free Cinema technical staff - in particular cinematographer Walter Lassally and editor John Fletcher - and delivered in the same 50-minute format. The film once again took a sympathetic approach to an aspect of working-class life largely neglected by commercial British cinema. After Every Day's dignified depiction of market workers in Covent Garden, Lambeth Boys attempted to deliver a positive portrait of the lives of ordinary teenagers, far from the usual violent 'Teddy Boy' stereotype. In a sense, the film also developed the theme initiated by Reisz and Tony Richardson in Momma Don't Allow three years earlier. Lambeth Boys was shot over six weeks in the summer of 1958 in and around the Alford House, a youth club in the Oval area of South London. It follows a group of teenagers at work, at home and in their leisure time, giving them space to express their frustrations and aspirations.. The film is never so good as when it lets the camera move around the group or capture their faces in close-up, rather than providing facts and figures or a sociological analysis. In a famous article on the film in Sight and Sound, sociologist Richard Hoggart talked of it as a 'film essay' rather than a documentary, because, as he claimed, "it sets out to show, not the <b>...</b>
10:54
WE ARE THE LAMBETH BOYS 3
Karel Reisz's We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) has much in common with Lindsay Anderson&...
published: 14 Feb 2010
author: TheMarxist21
WE ARE THE LAMBETH BOYS 3
Karel Reisz's We Are the Lambeth Boys (1959) has much in common with Lindsay Anderson's Every Day Except Christmas (1957). It was produced by Leon Clore, sponsored by Ford for its Look at Britain series, filmed by the usual Free Cinema technical staff - in particular cinematographer Walter Lassally and editor John Fletcher - and delivered in the same 50-minute format. The film once again took a sympathetic approach to an aspect of working-class life largely neglected by commercial British cinema. After Every Day's dignified depiction of market workers in Covent Garden, Lambeth Boys attempted to deliver a positive portrait of the lives of ordinary teenagers, far from the usual violent 'Teddy Boy' stereotype. In a sense, the film also developed the theme initiated by Reisz and Tony Richardson in Momma Don't Allow three years earlier. Lambeth Boys was shot over six weeks in the summer of 1958 in and around the Alford House, a youth club in the Oval area of South London. It follows a group of teenagers at work, at home and in their leisure time, giving them space to express their frustrations and aspirations.. The film is never so good as when it lets the camera move around the group or capture their faces in close-up, rather than providing facts and figures or a sociological analysis. In a famous article on the film in Sight and Sound, sociologist Richard Hoggart talked of it as a 'film essay' rather than a documentary, because, as he claimed, "it sets out to show, not the <b>...</b>
2:01
Everybody Wins (1990) Trailer
Everybody Wins (1990) Directed by Karel Reisz Produced by Jeremy Thomas...
published: 24 Jan 2012
author: recordedpicture
Everybody Wins (1990) Trailer
Everybody Wins (1990) Directed by Karel Reisz Produced by Jeremy Thomas
Youtube results:
5:26
Unveiling the memorial to Karel Reisz during the opening of the Ostrava Camera Eye.
Unveiling the memorial to Karel Reisz during the opening of the Ostrava Camera Eye interna...
published: 09 Apr 2010
author: ostrava2015
Unveiling the memorial to Karel Reisz during the opening of the Ostrava Camera Eye.
Unveiling the memorial to Karel Reisz during the opening of the Ostrava Camera Eye international film festival.
3:22
Morgan matto da legare.mp4
Morgan matto da legare - Karel Reisz - 1966 con David Warner e Vanessa Redgrave....
published: 27 Dec 2010
author: vecchioleone1
Morgan matto da legare.mp4
Morgan matto da legare - Karel Reisz - 1966 con David Warner e Vanessa Redgrave.
3:27
We Are The Lambeth Boys (1958) - dance hall scene - Karel Riesz
The dance hall scene in Karel Reisz''s 50s film from the 'Free Cinema Movement...
published: 24 Mar 2012
author: jonkino
We Are The Lambeth Boys (1958) - dance hall scene - Karel Riesz
The dance hall scene in Karel Reisz''s 50s film from the 'Free Cinema Movement' called WE ARE THE LAMBETH BOYS. Ok you can here the projector in the background as this is filmed from me own 16mm print of the film, but it doesn't detract from the excellent scene. You'll want to play it over and over again for its catch tunes, rythem and sing along stirring vocals.
3:17
Look at Britain - We are the Lambeth Boys
We are the Lambeth Boys is a fascinating glimpse into the everyday lives of working class ...
published: 28 Jul 2009
author: DukeMediaGroup
Look at Britain - We are the Lambeth Boys
We are the Lambeth Boys is a fascinating glimpse into the everyday lives of working class young people in the Britain of the 1950s. This pioneering documentary part of the Free Cinema movement - was one of the first films to give this section of the community a voice, and remains an important and ground-breaking work. Made for the Ford Motor Companys Look at Britain series, We are the Lambeth Boys was directed by Karel Reisz, who would go on to direct critically-acclaimed feature films such as Saturday Night Sunday Morning and the award-winning The French Lieutenants Woman. His fly-on-the-wall style allowed his subjects to speak for themselves, revealing their hopes and fears, their loves and hates as a revolution in youth culture offered new opportunities, and new challenges. We are the Lambeth Boys was among the innovative films which paved the way for the modern observational style of documentary. Reiszs subjects are the boys and girls who attend the Alford House Youth Club in Londons Kennington. We see them at work, at school and, most importantly, at the youth club. It was here the young people could meet up to chat, to debate, to play cricket, to gossip and to dance. Five decades on, this archive film offers a snapshot of the period when Britains social values were on the verge of being transformed forever, and lets those who would lead the transformation speak for themselves. The soundtrack comes from jazz great Johnny Dankworth, while respected British television <b>...</b>