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"A Breath of Spring"
by
Donald W. Volkman, ACL
sums
"High Card Goes"
by Louis Dishotsky
and Arthur Rosenthal
"Apartment C"
by 8mm. Division, Seattle
Amateur Movie Club, ACL
"Around Lot 34"
by
Henry J. Auger, ACL
'Grand Canyon Voyage"
by
Al Morton, FACL
"Hobby Show"
by Velma C. and
Leonard E. Graham, ACL
"In Trente Mille Pool"
by Eugene E. Wilscn, ACL
'Movie News Scoops'
by
George Merz, ACL
"Nature Campers"
by Herbert D. Shumway
"New Zealand Holiday'
by
Ernest H. Scott, ACL
'Northwoods Adventures'
by Frank E. Gunnell, FACL
'Prelude to Performance'
by
John W. Jones, ACL
"Sweeter by the Dozen"
by Herbert F. Sturdy, ACL
"The Fresh Milk Line"
by Roy M. Fulmer, jr., ACL
"Uranus"
by
Jack E. Gieck, ACL
"Xmas Time"
by
Grace Lindner, ACL
Although thematically quite different, In Fancy Free is a direct descendant of One Summer Day, with which (on 8mm. film) Mr. Turner won the Maxim Memorial Award in 1949. For in both fantasies the producer has, with sound dramatic instinct, related his world of pulsing wonder directly with the world of poignant reality. Thus it is that Mr. Turner's brilliant creative imageries take on a meaning above and beyond their mere technical virtuosity.
The story development, dance themes, abstract settings and, needless to say, the camera work of In Fancy Free are all original creations by the producer. Mr. Turner enjoyed, however, a wealth of heart-warming collabora
tion in bringing this picture to its full flowering. An assistant professor of art at Brigham Young University, he was able to enlist the enthusiasm of countless other creative spirits. Thus it was that an original and brilliant musical score was written directly into this film dream. Thus, too, that this music was performed for recording by the university orchestra and that the dance themes were developed, almost step by step with the picture's progress, by the college ballet group.
There will be those among the carping who are sure to complain that with this cooperation and those resources any amateur could produce a winner. To these few our unequivocal answer is "Non [Continued on page 4101