3D UK? 3D History and the Absent British Pioneers

The recent television ‘rediscovery’ of a small cohort of 1950s British 3D films (and the producers who made them) has offered a new route into considering how the historical stories told about 3D film have focused almost exclusively on the American experience, eliding other national contexts. This a...

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Main Author: Keith Mark Johnston
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2015-09-01
Series:Open Library of Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4401/
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spelling doaj-7e3e1a2d95084d91b45558843c11f93b2021-08-18T10:59:44ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesOpen Library of Humanities2056-67002015-09-011110.16995/olh.193D UK? 3D History and the Absent British PioneersKeith Mark Johnston0 The recent television ‘rediscovery’ of a small cohort of 1950s British 3D films (and the producers who made them) has offered a new route into considering how the historical stories told about 3D film have focused almost exclusively on the American experience, eliding other national contexts. This article challenges both the partiality of existing academic histories of 3D and the specific popular media narratives that have been constructed around the British 3D pioneers. Offering a rebuttal of those narratives and an expansion of them based around primary archival research, the article considers how the British 3D company Stereo Techniques created a different business and production model based around non-fiction short 3D films that stand in contrast to the accepted view of 3D as an American feature film novelty. Through an exploration of the depiction (and absence) of these 3D pioneers from existing media histories, the article argues for a revision to both 3D studies and British cinema history.https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4401/stereoscopic 3DBritish cinema1950sChannel 4Spottiswoode
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Keith Mark Johnston
spellingShingle Keith Mark Johnston
3D UK? 3D History and the Absent British Pioneers
Open Library of Humanities
stereoscopic 3D
British cinema
1950s
Channel 4
Spottiswoode
author_facet Keith Mark Johnston
author_sort Keith Mark Johnston
title 3D UK? 3D History and the Absent British Pioneers
title_short 3D UK? 3D History and the Absent British Pioneers
title_full 3D UK? 3D History and the Absent British Pioneers
title_fullStr 3D UK? 3D History and the Absent British Pioneers
title_full_unstemmed 3D UK? 3D History and the Absent British Pioneers
title_sort 3d uk? 3d history and the absent british pioneers
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Open Library of Humanities
issn 2056-6700
publishDate 2015-09-01
description The recent television ‘rediscovery’ of a small cohort of 1950s British 3D films (and the producers who made them) has offered a new route into considering how the historical stories told about 3D film have focused almost exclusively on the American experience, eliding other national contexts. This article challenges both the partiality of existing academic histories of 3D and the specific popular media narratives that have been constructed around the British 3D pioneers. Offering a rebuttal of those narratives and an expansion of them based around primary archival research, the article considers how the British 3D company Stereo Techniques created a different business and production model based around non-fiction short 3D films that stand in contrast to the accepted view of 3D as an American feature film novelty. Through an exploration of the depiction (and absence) of these 3D pioneers from existing media histories, the article argues for a revision to both 3D studies and British cinema history.
topic stereoscopic 3D
British cinema
1950s
Channel 4
Spottiswoode
url https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4401/
work_keys_str_mv AT keithmarkjohnston 3duk3dhistoryandtheabsentbritishpioneers
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