video record
Media not available in the Digital Archive
Description
This is the story of how film sold the car before the days of television advertising. Both the film and the car industries developed in the early 20th century.
Metadata describing this Open University video programme
Series: Nation on Film 2
First transmission date: 2006
Published: 2006
Rights Statement:
Restrictions on use:
Duration: 00:29:00
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Director: Ray Hough
Producer: Jacob Hickey
Presenter: David Jason
Publisher: BBC Open University
Link to related site: : http://www.open2.net/nationonfilm/selling_cars.html
Subject terms: Film archives--Conservation and preservation--Directories; Roads--Government policy--Great Britain; Ford Motor Company Photograph collections Catalogues;
Footage description: This programme shows rare footage of a Lanchester car going up a flight of steps at Crystal Palace, London. It was shot in 1904, just eight years after the Lumière brothers brought the first moving picture show to Britain. Later footage shows how film-makers associated cars with sex appeal, sophistication and liberation. Cars were sold as vehicles that could literally take people to places they had never seen before. Some films act almost as travelogues, showing cars in dramatic landscapes, travelling up hills, through streams and along spectacular coastal scenery. In the 1930s car manufacturers responded to public concerns about the number of deaths on the roads. Companies like Morris promoted the safety features in their cars. However, manufacturers were still keen to use speed as a key selling point.
Production number: JOUA439X
Videofinder number: 7398
Available to public: no