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24 September 2014
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Telly attics wanted


Category: West Midlands TV

Date: 25.05.2005
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Do you have an attic full of footage? Any old canisters of film to flick through? Then 大象传媒 Midlands Today wants to bring its cameras into your loft.

Passing Time with Carl Chinn is a new feature on the region's favourite news programme which delves into the dusty world of archive film (Thursdays from 2 June on Midlands Today, 6.30pm on 大象传媒 ONE).

Carl thinks it a tragedy that there is old film lying around gathering dust in attics all over the Midlands - what makes him despair is the thought that the film might end up in the bin.

"It's astonishing what you can find out from old films. How people lived, what they wore, what they ate. And I know that a lot of it is never seen and just gets thrown away," he says.

Passing Time with Carl Chinn concentrates on finding, viewing and restoring a treasure trove of Midlands' life captured through the lenses of professional and amateur cameramen from the past.

The viewer who sent in the footage showing on Thursday 2 June says he found it in a 'tat' shop in Wallheath some 15 or 20 years ago.

The film casts new light on one of the big issues of our time: our children's health and the obesity epidemic.

The film from the Thirties shows boys and girls from Oldbury in the Black Country going through physical exercises, gym work, football and a sports day.

When challenged, today's children found it hard to match the performance of their forebears - possibly their own great-grandparents.

The following week's film (Thursday 9 June) shows the life of a Birmingham family who ran a photographic studio and acquired a cine camera. The camera was used to record courtship, weddings and births - how one hard-working family lived before and after the Second World War.

Also found, in a trunk in a house in Worcester, is unique film that dates back even earlier: to just after the end of the First World War.

Like every other town and city in the Midlands, Worcester suffered terribly in terms of men killed in the trenches. Many more returned home shattered by war or with terrible injuries, even lost limbs.

But the film - taken less than four years after the end of the Great War - shows a city recovering with an air of confidence, looking forward to a brighter future.

"It's a privilege to safeguard these memories for future generations," says Carl. "And I hope people will tune in to see the type of world their families lived in - the world that shaped our lives today."

If you think you have any old film that might interest Carl, write to him at:

大象传媒 Midlands Today

The Mailbox

Birmingham

B1 1RF

Midlands Today: weekdays at 6.30pm on 大象传媒 ONE (West Midlands)


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Category: West Midlands TV

Date: 25.05.2005
Printable version

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