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CINEPHILES: SHOOTING STARS (Anthony Asquith, 1928)

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Venue: Birkbeck 43 Gordon Square

No booking required

CINEPHILES: SHOOTING STARS (Anthony Asquith, 1928)

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One of BIMI's new regular strands, CINEPHILES will celebrate and explore the love of cinema in all its forms.

We are launching this strand with three screenings of fiction films whose stories takes place in the world of cinema.

The first of these will be Anthony Asquith's Shooting Stars(1928), described by Simon McCallum (Screenonline) as 'a spiky satire of the domestic film industry':

'In a virtuoso opening sequence, star couple Mae Feather and Julian Gordon enact a romantic scene for their latest 'epic', but as the camera pans back the artifice of moviemaking is exposed, as is the fragile state of the couple's marriage, establishing the film's key theme of 'real life' versus 'the movies'. As Mae flounces off set, the sequence grows in ambition, demonstrating Asquith's technically intrepid style, with a camera high in the rafters tracking her through the cavernous studio.

'Performance style is another distinctive feature: Mae's unhappiness and her love for comedy star Andy Wilks are conveyed through subtle body language, and Asquith's controlled direction of the three leads is further demonstrated in the scene in which Julian catches Mae and Andy kissing, the significance of the situation dawning on each of them in turn. Similar discipline is exhibited in the use of visual prompts in place of superfluous intertitles.

'The art direction and photography lend a melancholic air to the studio scenes, not least in the poignant epilogue, in which a humbled Mae is faced with the consequences of her selfishness. Shooting Stars begins as a witty and affectionate look at the smoke-and-mirrors world of filmmaking, with many a wink to its audience, but as the paranoia associated with adultery takes its toll, the mood becomes somewhat darker.

'Julian initially wishes that life were 'more like the movies', and takes refuge in the cinema to watch himself and Mae perform a fantasy of virtue and heroism (the innovatory 'film-within-a-film' motif is inescapable). Yet Asquith's vision is far from idealistic, and the tawdry pretence of Mae and Julian's action-romances and Andy's sub-Chaplin slapstick routines serve as a reminder that real life contains far greater drama and pathos than anything churned out in a film studio.'

Where possible, the films in the CINEPHILES strand will be shown in 35mm.

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Contact phone: 020 7631 6115