Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
This led to further film work and to membership in an antitraditional movement called Free Cinema.
The programme was such a success that five more programmes appeared under the Free Cinema banner before the founders decided to end the series.
Reisz was a founder member of the Free Cinema documentary film movement.
So ran the initial pronouncement in the first Free Cinema manifesto.
This three-disk collection has brought together the films that represent the best of Free Cinema.
There is cable television, and there are plans to open a free cinema showing non-stop films.
He became a leading Free Cinema figure, and has maintained a successful career in theatre, film and television.
Free Cinema was a documentary film movement that emerged in England in the mid-1950s.
The first Free Cinema programme featured just three films:
The film was shelved until 1956 when Anderson included it as part of the first Free Cinema programme.
Tykes can experience the airport and all of its aeronautical glory at the free cinema, where jet-themed movies are regularly on show.
In Grigsby's own words, the Unit was "trying to take over where Free Cinema left off".
But the cinema Americans were interested in was the antithesis of the Free Cinema mode.
He creates cinematic collages that have often been linked to the British Free Cinema movement of the 1950s.
He was part of the British Realist Tradition that followed Free Cinema.
Free Cinema, which had Anderson as its spokesman, was always more certain of what it was against than what it stood for.
Early in "10 on Ten" he claims that the digital video camera "frees cinema from the clutches of the tools of production, capital and censorship."
Flemming founded the organization Free Cinema, which encourages feature filmmakers to create films under two rules:
It is considered to be one of the last major films of the British New Wave or "Free Cinema" movement.
It was first shown as part of the first Free cinema programme at the National Film Theatre in February 1956.
Free Cinema was inspired by the Free Software Movement, which is guided by similar principles of freedom.
At about the same time Lambert was deeply involved in Britain's Free Cinema movement which called for more social realism in contemporary movies.
Every year, the IFI rewards its audiences by hosting an Open Day, with free cinema screenings and tours.
February 5 - First showing of documentary films by the Free Cinema movement, at the National Film Theatre, London.
As of late, Ethnographic film has been influenced by ideas of observational cinema similar to the British Free Cinema movement.