A History of British Film
Pioneers
The First US Invasion
Alexander Korda
The Second US Invasion
The Institutions
World War II
The Golden Age of The Studios
Television
Into the 80s
A History of British Film
Early British Comedy
Early Hitchcock
Introduction to Humphrey Jennings
Humphrey Jennings and Third Cinema
The Stars Look Down / The Proud Valley – Conflict and Unity
The Renaissance of the 1980s
Film On Four
The Institutions
The British Board Of Film Censors was founded in 1912 primarily to keep the foreign imports ‘genteel’, or rather, to be able to control their numbers on the pretext of unsuitability. Home grown productions had an easier time passing the censors. It was now that the certificates U, for universal and A, for Adult were introduced.
During the 1930’s two other valuable assets came along; the British Film Institute and the National Film Archives. They maintained, and still do, a film library not just of British films, but International ones too. They restore damaged prints and transfer nitrate stock onto safety film, as well as funding projects. Without them, many classics would be lost today.