International Review of Educational Cinematography (Jan-Dec 1932)

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573 — (The Scottish Educational Journal, Glasgow, 27-V-1932). The Superior Council of the Academy of Fine Arts in London has conferred a gold medal on the Nero-Film Co. for its picture, " Kamaradschaft by G. W. Pabst, considered to be the best film produced in the world during 1931. (KlNEMATOGRAPH, Berlin, 28-V-1932). The Film Kurier (Berlin, 28-V-1932 publishes the replies of the cinema organizations of Czecko-Slovakia, Denmark, England, Yugoslavia, Holland, Sweden, Switzerland and Hungary to a questionnaire on the present state of the sound film in Europe. Sir Charles Grant Robertson has been nominated president of the National Cinema Inquiry Committee, the formation of which was decided upon at the Cinema Conference held last April at the Birmingham university. (The Daily Telegraph, London, 4-VI-1932). Le Film of Antwerp of June 5 describes a visit made to the cultural section of the U.F.A. studios at Neubabelsberg. A large number of animals used in the making of films are kept there and looked after, so as to be always ready for a film. A photographic and cinematographic exhibition will open shortly in Berlin illustrating the beginnings and development of photo-cinematography in Germany. More than 200 historical films will be shown, fragments of negatives, 200 film manuscripts, and so on. During the exhibition, conferences will be held, particularly by Dr. Gottheimer on the most recent films taken with Rontgen rays, and by Major von Linsingen on the film made to illustrate the central government archives. (Film Kurier, Berlin, 18-VI-1932). M. Lebrun, the new President of the French Republic, is a convinced partisan of teaching by the film. Nothwithstanding his new high office, he will remain president of the Officie regional du Cinema educateur of Nancy. (Le ClNEOPSE, Paris, June, 1932). Hollywood possesses a most interesting library where are preserved architectonic models of palaces, temples and entire cinema cities with copies in plaster of the columns, capitals, friezes, together with copies of the masterpieces and most characteristic works of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Chinese and Renaissance architecture. The volumes of this library often consist of enormous architectonic models 30 feet high and correspondingly broad. (Eco DEL ClNEMA, Florence, No. 103, June 1932).