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Posts by The Film in the Other Room

You can actually play Chuckie Egg on a vintage computer at the permanent Power Up exhibit of gaming history at Manchester Science & Industry Museum! Along with other classics.

19 hours ago 14 1 1 0

"One can look at seeing; one can't hear hearing". Marcel Duchamp, 1914.

1 week ago 1 0 0 0

from the audio-visual wonder that is the Sesame Street archives. There's a bit of me that would dearly like to research and map the audio and visual creativity of Sesame Street animations and shorts

1 week ago 2 0 0 0
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SESAME STREET: LIMBO (early 70s) Also known as 'Nobody', this Jim Henson creation consisted of two eyes and a mouth made of string, with a voice provided by New York DJ 'Rosko' Mercer. One of my earliest TV memories, Limbo scared the pants off me when I was 3 or 4.

1 week ago 75 14 6 4

also, the formatting is v basic - I couldn't carry over footnoting, italics, other little academicisms... will just see how it goes...

2 months ago 1 0 0 0
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The Invisible Filmstrip Every now and again, the French teacher at my school would click a Tricolore cassette tape into a chunky red tape recorder and inform the class that we were...

I'm experimenting with a longer form screen sound newsletter on Buttondown (I'm hearing dubious things about Substack). My first piece is available to read here, and if you like it you can subscribe. The formatting is basic - not sure if I'll be able to add audio, but learning as I go...

2 months ago 2 1 1 0

...and driving around drab bits of Yorkshire in a crap van. Please give some indications I won't be led to disappointment, I haven't seen it/had it on my radar (I have this kind of Batfink like shield of steel against promotion & popularity)

2 months ago 0 0 2 0

is it? I love the Beiderbecke shows, is it really up to that? Music wise? Because the best thing about Beiderbecke, beyond the wonderful, authentic Nick and Nora like banter between Bolam and Flynn, is the delightfully perfect mismatch between trad jazz (reinterpretations of the Bix B sound)...

2 months ago 0 0 1 0

and sometimes it's good to be forced to stop and commit to catching a film at a particular time. I had to literally re-manouevre the whole family in order to watch Tati's Trafic the other afternoon, as I'd wanted to see it for decades, and was so glad I did.

2 months ago 1 0 1 0

it's a baffling situation that rewards pointless speculation. And it's the only place I was ever able to track down Hey Rosalinda! I've an uncomfortable feeling about the live events though, I'm not sure I'd fit in...

2 months ago 2 0 1 0
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"In the same way as an effect is built out of the pieces of film by the act of montage, so will little portions of sound be built up into new and strange noise. The process of short-cutting in visual images will be paralleled in the mixing of sounds" (Paul Rotha, 'The Film Till Now', 1931)

2 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Berberian Sound Studio, by Broadcast 39 track album

A soundtrack to love? Peter Strickland's 2012 Berberian Sound Studio is a film sound nerd's dreamfilm. It's stunning soundtrack was done by Broadcast, one of the best, and most underrated, British bands of the 21st century. If you like the sound of Giallo, Morricone, and chiff chaffs, have a listen.

2 months ago 6 2 0 0

I saw this earlier this week. Wasn't getting my hopes up, but LOVED it. Has reinvigorated a slight obsession with him that makes me feel young again. Just the *slightest* disappointment there wasn't more on the overdubbing & music. But really not enough to spoil its utter joie de vie.

2 months ago 2 0 0 0
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Nouvelle Vague - DMovies Richard Linklater transports viewers back to the Paris and the Cannes of 1960, in his charming tribute to Jean-Luc Godard (mind: he occasionally betrays the spirit of the late French filmmaker) - in c...

Richard Linklater transports viewers back to the Paris and the Cannes of 1960, in his charming tribute to Jean-Luc Godard (mind: he occasionally betrays the spirit of the late French filmmaker)

In cinemas for the third weekend tomorrow:

dmovies.org/2025/05/17/n...

2 months ago 14 3 0 1

I suspect a rogue element is working for TPTV programming at the moment, getting in the kind of wonderful films that used to be shown on Ch 4 in its prime. Unfortunately these are never on their catch up channel. @talkingpicturestv.bsky.social

2 months ago 1 0 1 0

wonderful. Thank you for sharing. It's a curious thing about TPTV lately that when they have a bona fide film gem (this, Trafic, Breathless Nights of Cabiria) they don't do much to promote it, but are always posting about events with Melvin Hayes and Mike Read.

2 months ago 1 0 2 0

for anyone in the Bishop area, this will be a treat

2 months ago 1 1 0 0
Open Qobuz

Today's recommended soundtrack from the other room - The Third Man. Not just Anton Karas's famous zither, but huge chunks of film audio, still all mixed together. On Qobuz, because it's more ethical than Spotify, who I have abandoned. Coming soon: Film in the Other Room on Substack.

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Wonderful release out today on Buried Treasure. I had the pleasure of writing a short essay for the CD sleevenotes too.

4 months ago 8 4 2 0
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The soundtrack to one of my favourite films, The Shout. Finally released 47 years later on Buried Treasure. Includes fetching Alan Bates badge, which I shall sport for the winter season. Plus an essay in the sleeve notes, what I wrote myself. #theshout #soundtracks #filmsound #electronicmusic

4 months ago 7 0 0 0

Lulu vs Alan Bates. Who would outshout who?

4 months ago 4 0 0 0

yes, this is what I suggest in my sleevenotes to The Shout, ost, available to order from Friday on Buried Treasure. Nothing to do with Lulu.

4 months ago 2 0 1 0
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40 years on, is The Shout the scariest sound in film? An unquiet place... 40 years ago, blood curdled across the land as Jerzy Skolimowski unleashed the sonic terror of his visionary British horror oddity The Shout. Here’s why it’s still ringing in our e...

Rupert Hine's visceral sound design still makes you shudder
www.bfi.org.uk/features/40-...

4 months ago 8 2 0 0

It's coming... includes a short essay by yours truly in the sleevenotes. Be careful what you wish for.

4 months ago 1 0 0 0

Anyone in Cumbria area, Suzy Mangion will be at Full of Noises on Saturday night, screening/playing The Music of Uncertain Lives and having a talk with the audience too.

4 months ago 4 1 0 0
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MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETTE 9/9 #filmsound 📽️Watery laundry sounds become music to the ears, a waltz whirls with the washing, and for a moment or two everything shimmers in a twin-tub electric ballroom.

4 months ago 1 0 0 0

MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETTE 8/9 #filmsound 📽️It’s all idealised and precarious. The piped-music is part of an entrepreneurial fantasy, one that primps the winter-grey suburban streets, the grim realities of racism, of inequality, lost opportunity and unhappy families.

4 months ago 2 0 0 0
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MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETTE 7/9 📽️But it’s a fragile fantasy, built on mirrors and tricks. Jaffrey’s Thatcherite Pakistani businessman publicly dances with his fur-coated white mistress, unaware his nephew Omar is screwing ex-National Front Johnny (Day-Lewis) in the back room behind a one-way mirror.

4 months ago 0 0 0 0
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MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETTE 6/9 #filmsound 📽️At the grand opening, music drifts out from speakers into the now mirrored, muralled and neon-signed laundrette, transfigured into an improbable ballroom where Saeed Jaffrey and Shirley Anne Field dance to the synthified muzak of Waldteufel’s Skater’s Waltz.

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
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MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETTE 5/9 📽️ This transformation of washing machine music mirrors the film's dreams, and ironies. It focuses on Omar’s transformation of a rundown laundrette into ‘Powders’ - a palace of dreams, of neon fantasies, built on immigrant determination in Thatcher’s Britain.

4 months ago 1 1 0 0