
2013
In 1908, amateur naturalist and pioneering filmmaker Percy Smith stunned early cinema goers with his footage of the juggling fly. Hailed as the father of Natural History film, Smith was a hugely influential visual pioneer, inventing many techniques that are still used today. Being both a genius and an eccentric, we follow his life from his earliest films, to the collapse of his house from his mould experiment to his ultimate suicide. We also meet Natural History icon Sir David Attenborough, who was so amazed by Smith’s films in the 1930s that they inspired him to get into natural history.

Charlie Hamilton James
Self - Presenter

David Attenborough
Self

Dr Tim Boon
Self - Science Museum, London

David Cleveland
Self - Film Archivist

Tim Cockerill
Self - Entomologist

Bryony Dixon
Self - Curator, Silent Film, BFI

Jenny Hammerton
Self - Film Archivist

Michael Harvey
Self - National Media Museum

Percy Smith
Self - archive footage

John Winder
Self - Scientist & Collector

Around the River

Gena Rowlands: A Life on Film

Akira Kurosawa: My Life in Cinema

Antonioni: Documents and Testimonials

Au Hasard Bresson

David Lean: A Self Portrait

Cecil B. DeMille: American Epic

Monsieur Truffaut Meets Mr. Hitchcock

Vivement Truffaut

Paparazzi

Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse

Building a Better Bond

The Return of Bond: The Start of Production Press Event

Blood & Flesh: The Reel Life & Ghastly Death of Al Adamson

It Conquered Hollywood! The Story of American International Pictures

A Look at the World of 'Soylent Green'

The Hellstrom Chronicle

Jack L. Warner: The Last Mogul

In the Shadow of Hollywood: Race Movies and the Birth of Black Cinema

Ver a Hilda Vera