How I Filmed the War / A Record of the Extraordinary Experiences of the Man Who Filmed the Great Somme Battles, etc.

When I was in France I made arrangements with my friend Mr. Low Warren, at that time Editor of the Kinematograph Weekly , to arrange the manuscript I sent him for publication in book form.
The manuscript has in no way been altered in any material respect, and is in the form in which I originally wrote it.
GEOFFREY H. MALINS.
HERBERT JENKINS LIMITED YORK STREET, ST. JAMES'S LONDON, S.W. 1 MCMXX



Fate has not been unkind to me. I have had my chances, particularly during the last two or three years, and—well, I have done my best to make the most of what has come my way. That and nothing more.
How I came to be entrusted with the important commission of acting as Official War Office Kinematographer is an interesting story, and the first few chapters of this book recount the sequence of events that led up to my being given the appointment.
Let me begin by saying that I am not a writer, I am just a movie man, as they called me out there. My mind is stored full to overflowing with the impressions of all I have seen and heard; recollections of adventures crowd upon me thick and fast. Thoughts flash through my mind, and almost tumble over one another as I strive to record them. Yet at times, when I take pen in hand to write them down, they seem to elude me for the moment, and make the task more difficult than I had anticipated.
In the following chapters I have merely aimed at setting down, in simple language, a record of my impressions, so far as I can recall them, of what I have seen of many and varied phases of the Great Drama which has now been played to a finish on the other side of the English Channel. Most of those recollections were penned at odd moments, soon after the events chronicled, when they were still fresh in mind, often within range of the guns.
It was my good fortune for two years to be one of the Official War Office Kinematographers. I was privileged to move about on the Western Front with considerable freedom. My actions were largely untrammelled; I had my instructions to carry out; my superiors to satisfy; my work to do; and I endeavoured to do all that has been required of me to the best of my ability, never thinking of the cost, or consequences, to myself of an adventure so long as I secured a pictorial record of the deeds of our heroic Army in France. I have striven to make my pictures worthy of being preserved as a permanent memorial of the greatest Drama in history.

Geoffrey H. Malins
Содержание

Transcriber's Note


HOW I FILMED THE WAR


LIEUT. GEOFFREY H. MALINS, O.B.E.


CONTENTS


ILLUSTRATIONS


PART I


HOW I FILMED THE WAR


CHAPTER I


a few words of introduction


CHAPTER II


with the belgians at ramscapelle


CHAPTER III


with the goumiers at lombartzyde


CHAPTER IV


the battle of the sand-dunes


CHAPTER V


under heavy shell-fire


CHAPTER VI


among the snows of the vosges


PART II


CHAPTER I


how i came to make official war pictures


CHAPTER II


christmas day at the front


CHAPTER III


i get into a warm corner


CHAPTER IV


the battlefield of neuve chapelle


CHAPTER V


filming the prince of wales


CHAPTER VI


my first visit to ypres and arras


CHAPTER VII


the battle of st. eloi


CHAPTER VIII


a night attack—and a narrow escape


CHAPTER IX


fourteen thousand feet above the german lines


CHAPTER X


filming the earth from the clouds


CHAPTER XI


preparing for the "big push"


CHAPTER XII


filming under fire


CHAPTER XIII


the dawn of july first


CHAPTER XIV


the day and the hour


CHAPTER XV


roll-call after the fight


CHAPTER XVI


editing a battle film


CHAPTER XVII


the horrors of trones wood


CHAPTER XVIII


filming at pozières and contalmaison


CHAPTER XIX


along the western front with the king


CHAPTER XX


king and president meet


CHAPTER XXI


the hush! hush!—a weird and fearful creature


CHAPTER XXII


the juggernaut car of battle


CHAPTER XXIII


where the village of guillemont was


CHAPTER XXIV


fighting in a sea of mud


CHAPTER XXV


the eve of great events


CHAPTER XXVI


an uncanny adventure


CHAPTER XXVII


the germans in retreat


CHAPTER XXVIII


the story of an "armoured car" about which i could a tale unfold


CHAPTER XXIX


before st. quentin


INDEX


Transcriber's Notes

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2009-10-19

Темы

World War, 1914-1918 -- Personal narratives, British; Motion pictures; Malins, Geoffrey H.

Reload 🗙