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The Film We Can't See

BBC Radio 4 Extra
The Film We Can't See

Adam Zmith has found some lost sound recordings from 1930. As he listens to this archive of intriguing noises, he imagines a film that could have changed the world.

Episodes

  1. 16/08/2022

    6: We Imagine With Our Bodies

    The sound archive from 1930 is about to be auctioned to mysterious bidders. The sounds are linked to extraordinary film pioneers and an unrealised film that would have changed the world — but today they may be lost again. The Rio Cinema will be forced to give up the archive. Can Adam pitch this to the BBC for a podcast series? Adam assembles So Mayer, Anton Blake Horowitz and members of the Fringe! Queer Film & Arts Fest collective to build a community of support for the Rio. But not everything is what it seems. As documentary transforms into imagination, queer artists take over and reveal that truth is more powerful than fact. With daring soundscapes and surprise audio experimentation — challenging everything that a podcast about an unseeable film can be — the series reaches its shocking climax. Credits Written, produced and edited by Adam Zmith With story by So Mayer and Adam Zmith Starring Anton Blake Horowitz Music by Courtney Pine Solo fiddle by Eduardo Lees Assistant Producers – Tash Walker and Shivani Dave Researcher — So Mayer Audio consultant – David Pye Artwork by Danny Crossley Production Mentors – Caroline Steel and Andy King Executive Producers – Khaliq Meer and Leanne Alie Commissioned for BBC Sounds Audio Lab by Khaliq Meer Thanks to Aleks Kolkowski Andrew Woodyatt and everyone at the Rio Cinema Peninsula Press The BFI and the BFI National Archive Axel Kacoutié Nikki Meadows Joseph Herscher Josefeen Foxter Orrow Bell Jose Castejoon Burley Fisher Books The Fringe! Queer Film & Arts Fest collective This episode contains audio from: Sound effects from Freesound and BBC Clip from Monitor interview with Paul Robeson courtesy of BBC

    31 min
  2. 02/08/2022

    4. Gossip, Revolution and a Censored Kiss

    Adam’s investigation into the lost sound archive prompts him to watch Mädchen in Uniform, a lesbian high school dramedy from 1931. He learns all about how the film was nearly lost forever, and its significance today is explained to him by Camilla Baier and Rachel Pronger from Invisible Women, a feminist film collective. Adam also listens to the fourth sound disc - a weird multi-voice dadaist poem - and tries to imagine where that might fit into the story of the film that was never made. Perhaps it’s one of the many unrealised projects of Paul Robeson, the actor and singer who fought racism and fascism while performing for audiences around the world. Paul’s own stories of censorship and racism inspire So Mayer, the writer and researcher, to take Adam on a visit to a historical location, the Savoy Hotel. Here they meet actors Ashleigh Wilder and Emeric Bernard-Jones. Over cocktails they pick up Paul’s story, linking past and present in a story of how our genders and sexualities influence how people perceive us all. This episode contains audio from: Clip from Monitor interview with Paul Robeson courtesy of BBC Clip from newsreel about Paul Robeson concert courtesy of BBC Sound effects from Freesound and BBC And quotes from: ‘What Shall You Do In the War?’ by Bryher, in Close Up magazine, June 1933 Letter from Paul Robeson to James Marley, reprinted on The Guardian website, 2019 Paul Robeson, quoted by Martin Bauml Duberman in Paul Robeson, Ballantine Books, 1989 Credits: Written, produced and edited by Adam Zmith With story by So Mayer and Adam Zmith Starring Anton Blake Horowitz Ashleigh Wilder as Paul Robeson and themself, thanks to Queer House Emeric Bernard-Jones as Paul Robeson and himself, thanks to Trans+ on Screen, an organisation representing trans, non-binary and gender non-conforming professionals in film and TV on a business model which challenges industry norms Music by Courtney Pine Assistant Producers - Tash Walker and Shivani Dave Researcher - So Mayer Audio consultant - David Pye Artwork by Danny Crossley Production Mentors - Caroline Steel and Andy King Executive Producers - Khaliq Meer and Leanne Alie Commissioned for BBC Sounds Audio Lab by Khaliq Meer Thanks to: Aleks Kolkowski Camilla Baier and Rachel Pronger from Invisible Women Andrew Woodyatt and everyone at the Rio Cinema Peninsula Press The BFI and the BFI National Archive Axel Kacoutié Nikki Meadows Char Boden at Queer House Alice Blanc at Trans+ on Screen Polly Pritchard and Virginia Webb at the Savoy Hotel A. De La Fe, Lori lo Bianco, Holly Murtha, Shivani Dave

    50 min
  3. 26/07/2022

    3. Sexual Hate And Other Mysteries

    Adam travels back in time to Weimar era Berlin, when the American actor Louise Brooks danced through the experimental cinema scene with her sexual chaos in films like Pandora’s Box. Film writer Pamela Hutchinson explains why Brooks was so unique, and why her power endures even though her films were censored and lost. As Louise blew through Berlin, Magnus Hirschfeld was giving controversial lectures about sex and sexuality. With the help of historian Jana Funke and sound expert Aleks Kolkowski, Adam learns more about what this setting might mean for the film conjured up by the rediscovered sound recordings. How are our decisions driven by the sex we want? Could a film in 1930 have been ready to explore that? Credits Written, produced and edited by Adam Zmith With story by So Mayer and Adam Zmith Starring Anton Blake Horowitz Featuring voice work by Michael Golab Music by Courtney Pine Assistant Producers - Tash Walker and Shivani Dave Researcher - So Mayer Audio consultant - David Pye Artwork by Danny Crossley Production Mentors - Caroline Steel and Andy King Executive Producers - Khaliq Meer and Leanne Alie Commissioned for BBC Sounds Audio Lab by Khaliq Meer This episode contains audio from: Clip from Pandora’s Box courtesy of Praesens Film Sound effects from BBC And quotes from Lulu in Hollywood by Louise Brooks, University of Minnesota Press, 1982 Thanks to Aleks Kolkowski Pamela Hutchinson Andrew Woodyatt and everyone at the Rio Cinema Peninsula Press The BFI and the BFI National Archive Axel Kacoutié Nikki Meadows Freya Anderton

    51 min
  4. 19/07/2022

    2. Three Bent Bodies in a Bar One Night

    Adam goes deeper into the Rio Cinema archives with researcher So Mayer. They find more work by the pioneering filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein, the sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld and the extraordinary actor Louise Brooks. Perhaps they were trying to make a radical film together, in 1930? With help from the historian Jana Funke, Adam learns more about Hirschfeld’s exciting ideas on sex, sexuality and gender. Visiting Aleks Kolkowski in his music room again, he begins to try to date the sound discs. And actor Anton Blake Horowitz helps to reanimate Eisenstein and even his own performing spirit. As Adam immerses himself more and more into the world of cinema in 1930, he begins to fear that the imagined film never got made due to the rise in fascism. Many films showing queer bodies and expansive ways of living were made in the 1920s and 30s but so many of them were burnt and lost... Credits Written, produced and edited by Adam Zmith With story by So Mayer and Adam Zmith Starring Anton Blake Horowitz Music by Courtney Pine Solo fiddle by Eduardo Lees Assistant Producers - Tash Walker and Shivani Dave Researcher - So Mayer Audio consultant - David Pye Artwork by Danny Crossley Production Mentors - Caroline Steel and Andy King Executive Producers - Khaliq Meer and Leanne Alie Commissioned for BBC Sounds Audio Lab by Khaliq Meer Thanks to Aleks Kolkowski Jana Funke at the University of Exeter Andrew Woodyatt and everyone at the Rio Cinema Peninsula Press The BFI and the BFI National Archive Axel Kacoutié Nikki Meadows This episode contains the following audio: Clip of Nazis burning books in 1933 courtesy of British Pathé And quotes from: A Statement by S. M. Eisenstein, V. I. Pudomn, and G. V. Alexandrov, Close Up magazine, 1928 Sergei Eisenstein’s letter to Magnus Hirschfeld, reprinted in The Flying Carpet: Studies on Eisenstein and Russian Cinema in Honor of Naum Kleiman, edited by Joan Neuberger and Antonio Somaini, Éditions Mimésis, 2017

    50 min
  5. 13/07/2022

    1. Sixteen Names and a Box of Sounds

    When a meandering phone call from a forgotten actor called Anton Blake Horowitz leads Adam Zmith into an old cinema, he rediscovers a box of old sound recordings. They’re labelled Eisenstein Project, possibly after Sergei Eisenstein, pioneer of cinema in the Soviet Union in the 1920s. It’s perfect for Adam, a writer and podcast producer who is looking for a story to work on and pitching to the BBC for a new series. Adam meets sound expert Aleks Kolkowski who helps to retrieve the sounds from the old records. He teams up with So Mayer, a writer and researcher who explains more about Eisenstein. He even meets the veteran film director Sally Potter, who visited Eisenstein’s apartment and has been inspired by his work in making her films such as Orlando from 1992. Perhaps these lost records are the sound tests for a film that Eisenstein was preparing to make in 1930? Adam returns to Anton, the actor who set him off on this journey and Anton hears something in the old sounds that Adam didn’t... Credits Written, produced and edited by Adam Zmith With story by So Mayer and Adam Zmith Starring Anton Blake Horowitz Music by Courtney Pine Assistant Producers - Tash Walker and Shivani Dave Researcher - So Mayer Audio consultant - David Pye Artwork by Danny Crossley Production Mentors - Caroline Steel and Andy King Executive Producers - Khaliq Meer and Leanne Alie Commissioned for BBC Sounds Audio Lab by Khaliq Meer Thanks to Aleks Kolkowski Sally Potter Andrew Woodyatt and everyone at the Rio Cinema Peninsula Press The BFI and the BFI National Archive Axel Kacoutié Nikki Meadows Rebecka Öberg Joseph Herscher Permissions Clip from Memories of Berlin courtesy of Gary Conklin Clips from Great Directors: Eisenstein: Part 2 courtesy of BBC Quote from Sergei Eisenstein, held at Eisenstein Archives at TsGALI (State Archives of Literature and Arts), Moscow, quoted in Sergei Eisenstein: A Life In Conflict by Ronald Bergan, Arcade Publishing, 1997

    50 min

About

Adam Zmith has found some lost sound recordings from 1930. As he listens to this archive of intriguing noises, he imagines a film that could have changed the world.

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