Films at CH Horsham

Anything that doesn't fit anywhere else, but that's still CH related.

Moderator: Moderators

Misterbee
3rd Former
Posts: 39
Joined: Mon Sep 24, 2007 8:43 pm
Real Name: Richard Briggs
Location: Tonbridge Kent

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by Misterbee »

Two films at Horsham I remember being shown were ones that were barred from general release "Culloden" 1964 and the TV documentary "War Game" 1965.
They were only shown at CH because it came under the same category a "Private Club".
War Game was deemed too shocking for general consumption. In other words the authorities felt it played into the hands of CND and that would never do!
Culloden was regarded as too gory. I expect the SNP might revive it in order to stimulate the pro independence vote north of the border.
Mr Bee
Peele A 1960 - 1967
User avatar
Adrian
LE (Little Erasmus)
Posts: 54
Joined: Mon Mar 31, 2014 1:48 pm
Real Name: Adrian Brammer

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by Adrian »

Misterbee wrote:Two films at Horsham I remember being shown were ones that were barred from general release "Culloden" 1964 and the TV documentary "War Game" 1965.
They were only shown at CH because it came under the same category a "Private Club".
War Game was deemed too shocking for general consumption. In other words the authorities felt it played into the hands of CND and that would never do!
Culloden was regarded as too gory. I expect the SNP might revive it in order to stimulate the pro independence vote north of the border.
I have a vague memory of The Life Of Brian being shown in the theatre whilst it was banned in the wonderfully open-minded metropolis of Horsham.
Maine A; Peele A 75-82
User avatar
LongGone
Deputy Grecian
Posts: 383
Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2008 4:17 pm
Real Name: Mike Adams
Location: New England

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by LongGone »

Not really quite on topic, but not worth a separate thread. I remember going to the Dome in Brighton to see Vivian Fuchs talk about the transAntarctic expedition, and am also sure there was a trip to hear Dr. Evans talk about the Everest climb (though a bit dated by then).
If a stone falls on an egg: alas for the egg
If an egg falls on a stone: alas for the egg
michael scuffil
Button Grecian
Posts: 1612
Joined: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:53 pm
Real Name: michael scuffil
Location: germany

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by michael scuffil »

Re the Everest climb:

There was a teacher called Tyson who was ThB junior housemaster for a while. He'd been on the Everest exhibition, and gave an in-house slide show about it.

I remember two other things about him. One was that he went to school on skis one day after about a centimetre of snow had fallen, which everyone thought rather ludicrous, and the other was that after the fall of the Iraqi monarchy (that is putting it rather antiseptically) and the concomitant burning down of the British embassy in Baghdad, he noticed that we were huddled round the dayroom radio at a time when it shouldn't have been on, listened himself for a minute or two, then switched it off and gave us a briefing on the history of Iraq and Britain's involvement there. He had a manner which in the slang of the time might be described as 'keen'.
Th.B. 27 1955-63
Foureyes
Grecian
Posts: 926
Joined: Mon Dec 25, 2006 11:26 am
Real Name: David
Location: England

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by Foureyes »

I am rather shocked that the "War Game" should have been shown to such a young audience, whether, or not, they were "deemed to be members of a private club." In one of my employments in the late 1970s I saw it several times and found it a traumatic experience every time, as did virtually all other members of the audiences. One scene which many talked about afterwards was the police firing squad executing looters, but there was much else that was equally distressing. Was it shown to the school as a whole, or to a restricted audience, such as seniors, or the CCF, or something like that?
David :shock:
User avatar
Adrian
LE (Little Erasmus)
Posts: 54
Joined: Mon Mar 31, 2014 1:48 pm
Real Name: Adrian Brammer

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by Adrian »

I'm pretty sure that I watched The War Game as a school film during my time at CH.

If it wasn't that, then it was Threads, but since that's set in my home city I would have remembered that.

Edit: Just checked and Threads was made two years after I left, so I definitely watched The War Game at CH. Now, whether it was a school film in the theatre, or on a VHS player in a classroom I cannot be certain, but my memory of it is on a big screen. (The school acquired a solitary VHS player during my time, no doubt very expensive, and my recollections of Biology lessons was watching David Attenborough's Life On Earth.)
Maine A; Peele A 75-82
User avatar
jhopgood
Button Grecian
Posts: 1884
Joined: Mon Jun 07, 2004 6:26 pm
Real Name: John Hopgood
Location: Benimeli, Alicante

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by jhopgood »

Given its' release date, I doubt that I would have seen it, since it was released during my last Michaelmas term at CH.

That is, unless it was a special showing in the Science Lecture room, where we received the Dr Matthews lectures.

I do remember seeing a CCF promoted film there, which demonstrated the way the army controlled riot mobs in India/Pakistan.
Basically, identify the mob leader and eliminate him.
I remember nothing else of the film, in B & W, but just this person being identified and taken out by a sniper.
I hope they were actors, but it seemed pretty realistic at the time.
Barnes B 25 (59 - 66)
User avatar
postwarblue
Deputy Grecian
Posts: 409
Joined: Mon May 21, 2007 12:12 pm
Real Name: Robert Griffiths
Location: Havant

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by postwarblue »

Mention of the Science Lecture Room (with its epidiascope, anybody?) has unaccountably recalled to me the Franco-British Society which showed films there. I couldn't have cared less about the French, but membership was just one way of avoiding having to be out in the cold on HOOB (House Out Of Bounds) afternoons. Another was Vol Art, which worked quite well until Nell Tod saw me drawing a tree, asked if I had ever seen one and sent me out to the Quarter Mile to sketch the real thing. I learned form this and switched to abstract compositions after that - and have always thereafter been very scathing about abstract painters who do it because they can't draw. Hypocrite, moi?

The odd thing about this is that I can't recall ever thinking about the FBS since I left CH in 1954! What else is there in the lumber room of my brain I wonder.
'Oh blest retirement, friend to life's decline'
michael scuffil
Button Grecian
Posts: 1612
Joined: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:53 pm
Real Name: michael scuffil
Location: germany

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by michael scuffil »

I remember seeing Le salaire de la peur at the Franco-British society, but I can't recall anything else.
Th.B. 27 1955-63
eucsgmrc
GE (Great Erasmus)
Posts: 184
Joined: Thu Mar 10, 2011 12:38 pm
Real Name: John Wexler
Location: Edinburgh

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by eucsgmrc »

I think I saw that film too. Or rather, I know I saw the film - it sticks in my mind to this day - and I think it was at school, probably at the FBS.
John Wexler
Col A 1954-62
User avatar
LongGone
Deputy Grecian
Posts: 383
Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2008 4:17 pm
Real Name: Mike Adams
Location: New England

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by LongGone »

michael scuffil wrote:I remember seeing Le salaire de la peur at the Franco-British society, but I can't recall anything else.
Oh yes! One of the greatest films I have ever seen, though it turns out nitroglycerine isn't really * that* sensitive.
If a stone falls on an egg: alas for the egg
If an egg falls on a stone: alas for the egg
Richard
LE (Little Erasmus)
Posts: 51
Joined: Fri Oct 25, 2013 2:31 pm
Real Name: Richard Slingfield

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by Richard »

The Franco-British Society's filmshows attracted some people who never studied French and knew nothing of the language. They attended because they liked films. This was probably a good thing to disseminate the values of French culture (although the two films I mention now were not very good cultural examples).

Two films that I much enjoyed, shown by the FBS, were, "Les vacances de M. Hulot" (Monsieur Hulot's Holidays, with Jacques Tati) and "Fanfan la Tulipe" with Gerard Phillipe (no translation possible, it's a name).
User avatar
J.R.
Forum Moderator
Posts: 15835
Joined: Wed Mar 09, 2005 4:53 pm
Real Name: John Rutley
Location: Dorking, Surrey

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by J.R. »

I adore Jacques Tati films.

In a way, a fore-runner of Mr. Bean, (Rowan Atkinson).
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
User avatar
jhopgood
Button Grecian
Posts: 1884
Joined: Mon Jun 07, 2004 6:26 pm
Real Name: John Hopgood
Location: Benimeli, Alicante

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by jhopgood »

I am convinced that we saw at least one, and maybe two, Jaques Tati films, in Big School.
Barnes B 25 (59 - 66)
michael scuffil
Button Grecian
Posts: 1612
Joined: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:53 pm
Real Name: michael scuffil
Location: germany

Re: Films at CH Horsham

Post by michael scuffil »

Certainly we saw Mon Oncle in Big School. But I don't remember seeing M. Hulot there.
Th.B. 27 1955-63
Post Reply