The Masters  
The Powell & Pressburger Pages

Dedicated to the work of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger and all the other people, both actors and technicians who helped them make those wonderful films.

A lot of the documents have been sent to me or have come from other web sites. The name of the web site is given where known. If I have unintentionally included an image or document that is copyrighted or that I shouldn't have done then please email me and I'll remove it.

I make no money from this site, it's purely for the love of the films.

[Any comments are by me (Steve Crook) and other members of the email list]

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Famous fans of Powell and Pressburger


Here are a few people who have said they have been influenced by or admire the works of Powell & Pressburger (either together or singley).

The list doesn't include people who worked with them in the films that P&P wrote/produced/directed because we know everyone who worked with them then was influenced by and admired them :)

There is no significance to any ordering on this page, apart from maybe Mr Scorsese as the name at the top. As their primary champion he deserves the top place. But after him, there is no significance to the order of the names. I include the names here to thank them and to show how widespread the influence of P&P is.

Martin Scorsese
Director
Probably their greatest fan. Worked and socialised with Micky quite extensively. Has acknowledged the influence of P&P films on his own work.

At the dedication of the Powell Building at Canterbury Christ Church College in October 1999, Thelma Schoonmaker-Powell gave a talk on the various influences of P&P on Scorsese's films.

Thelma made the point that Scorsese never COPIED any P&P scene but that a LOT of them had major influences on him. Marty would watch the P&P films, inwardly digest and consider the scenes and then produce his own scenes in his own way - but he gladly acknowledges the influence that P&P in general and certain P&P scenes in particular had on him & his films.

Raging Bull (1980)
Thelma said how Scorsese & De Niro both watched Blimp quite a bit just before making Raging Bull. De Niro asked Powell how it was done, especially the scene in the Turkish bath. Powell told him "Skilful & judicious use of a body double, some very clever body make up & padding - and ACTING"

Powell was horrified when De Niro decided to put on the weight himself. That "method" has a lot to answer for.

Thelma described how they filmed Bobby as the young Jake. Then he went away and put on a few pounds and they shot him for the middle aged Jake. Then "Bobby ate his way through France" and then they filmed him as old and fat Jake.

The other major influence in Raging Bull is from TRS when Lermontov realises he's lost Vicky - the way he talks to himself influenced the way they did the scene where Jake is preparing to go on stage & is psyching himself up. It's De Niro as Jake as Marlon Brando as Terry Malloy in On the Waterfront. (It's not an obvious influence but Thelma said that Marty said he had it in mind as they shot it)

Also the way that the fight scenes weren't shown in all their gory detail was influenced by the way we withdraw from the duel in Blimp. The details of the combat aren't really all that important. It's the effect that's important.

From Scorsese's interview on the MGM Blu-Ray edition:
For years, many have debated why Scorsese shot Raging Bull in black and white. As he explains in the bonus content, when first screening the 8-mm test footage of De Niro sparring in a ring, the director did not like the image. At first, he was unable to figure out why. Michael Powell, an older director who had become a mentor and good friend to Scorsese in the 1970s, suggested that the color of the gloves was throwing off the picture, drawing attention away from the fighters' faces and creating imbalance. The rest is history.

Goodfellas (1990)
The concentration in Robert Helpmann's eyes in the duel scene in act two of ToH was an influence on the way that De Niro looks around the bar to the sound of Sunshine of your Love.

Taxi Driver (1976)
Helpmann's eyes in the ToH duel also influenced the closeups of the eyes of Travis Bickle in the taxi's rear view mirror.

The Age of Innocence (1993)
The wash of yellow filling the screen when Michelle Pfeffier receives her yellow roses is inspired by Kathleen Byron's "seeing red" when she's angry before she faints in BN.

Final scene sitting on the bench
c.f. scene near end of Blimp where the 3 lead characters are sitting on the bench in the square.

The Color of Money (1986)
The superimposition as Paul Newman sits watching Tom Cruise play.
c.f. The superimposition as Ruth considers her fate in EotW.

Casino (1995)
The "Everybody is watching everybody else" sequence
c.f. The swish pans as Vicky is dancing at The Mercury Theatre in TRS

The Last Temptation of Christ (1988)
As Jesus ends his dream of what a normal life might have been like.
c.f. Peter getting his halo on the train in ACT.

Kundun (1997)
Various "composed" sequences acted to playback
c.f. The "composed" part towards the end when Ruth is stalking Clodagh in BN.
c.f. The completely "composed" film, Tales of Hoffmann (1951)

After Hours (1985)
The keys thrown down from an apartment window
c.f. The pens falling from Mark's pocket in PT.
c.f. The ties that Julian throws out when Vicky says she's coming with him in TRS

Thelma assured us that they were just a few examples. She asked Marty what she should show before she came and he said he couldn't decide because P&P influences were all over his films.

Thelma Schoonmaker-Powell
Editor
Martin Scorsese's editor. Thelma won the Oscar for editing Raging Bull, The Aviator & The Departed and was nominated for editing Woodstock, Goodfellas & Gangs of New York.

She liked Micky so much she married him :)

Francis Ford Coppola
Director
Invited Micky to be his "Director in residence" at Zoetrope studios.
Was often heard to be singing the "I Want To Be A Sailor" song from The Thief of Bagdad.
Watched Black Narcissus with the masses when it was shown at the 2002 Donostia - San Sebastián film festival when he was there for a tribute.

George A. Romero
Director
Favourite films include Tales of Hoffmann and Powell is one of his favourite directors.
See also George A. Romero presents "Tales of Hoffman" (sic)
and George on ToH (at TIFF '99)

Steven Spielberg
Director
Mentioned his liking of P&P to Kathleen Byron when he cast her as Mrs Ryan in Saving Private Ryan (1998).

From an interview with Steven Spielberg in the August edition of Empire magazine:

Q: You broke into Hollywood along with other young, bearded Turks. Has the notion of movie brats been over mythologised?

SS: I don't like that name so much. I don't think we were brats at all. We were a consolidated iteration of the generation that spawned Bogdanovich, Coppola and Friedkin. We were simply the next wave. We never thought of ourselves as brats. We thought ourselves as nerds. I wish they'd called us the 'Movie Nerds' 'cos that's what we really were. Brats has a connotation of arrogance, and spoilt, and being entitled. We were gobbling up images as fast as as they would come. We were speaking this dialogue from the great movies of the '30's and '40's out loud, led by Scorsese who knew more than anyone else put together.

He inspired us to look at movies we'd never heard of before. He'd get these 16mm Michael Powell films that we'd all sit around looking at. It was a great time, a great generation.

     Neal

Derek Jarman
Director
Often quoted P&P as a major influence.

His version of The Tempest (1979) is thought to be the version that Michael Powell might well have made (Powell had a script prepared but couldn't raise the funding).

Derek Jarman & Jack Cardiff taked about Micky in an obituary programme on BBC2 (The Late Show) the night Micky died.

See also extract from Derek Jarman's diary.

Ridley Scott
Director
Quoted as an admirer of P&P (and others of that era) ...
What I loved about that school was the all-encompassing detail they would bring to the screen - not just with story and character - but everything in the screen from left to right and right to left was considered. And that appealed to my sensibility.

Also noted is the recurrence of red in a few of his films and some similarities to Colonel Blimp in Scott's The Duellists.

Then there's the "two women battling society" in Thelma and Louise as in Black Narcissus - Ok this is getting a bit tenuous :)

Ridley's son Jake has directed a TV ad for British Telecom (BT) which has quite a few similarities to a well known celestial court

Prof. Ian Christie
Academic
The main academic champion of Powell & Pressburger. Ian has written many notable books about them and has done many good DVD commentaries and documentaries about them and their work.

Bertrand Tavernier
Director
Michael Powell and Bertrand Tavernier knew each other very well. Tavernier when he was a critric interviewed Powell

See Filmmakers on film: Tavernier on A Matter of Life and Death and Interview de Michael Powell par Tavernier en 1968

Tavernier wrote some reviews as well
See Blimp, Powell, Pressburger et la poèsie déguisée par Bertrand Tavernier

Bertrand Tavernier's film Daddie Nostalgie (1990) was dedicated to Powell (mentioned at the beginning and end)

Akira Kurosawa
Writer, Director
Steve Roberts reports:
Here's the excerpt from Stuart Galbraith's "The Emperor and The Wolf" when two great ships, Kurosawa and Powell, passed in the night:

-- American soldiers frequented the set of Men Who Tread on the Tiger's Tail, including director-turned-Navy lieutenant commander John Ford, though Kurosawa was not aware of his presence until he formally met Ford in London a dozen years later. Another visitor was British filmmaker Michael Powell. "I don't remember exactly when," Kurosawa recalled, "but it was during postproduction, and I remember that he came to the wardrobe office. I guess Sen-chan [Senkichi Taniguchi] or somebody else brought him and introduced me to him. I showed him the film, and he was impressed by it, and kept saying, 'It's wonderful.' --

Immediately preceding this quote the book recalls Kurosawa's account of an entire nation listening to Emperor Hirohito's first radio speech, and wondering if that entire nation was about to be asked to commit suicide - it was already being talked about as "The Honourable Death Of The Hundred Million". But things turned out a lot better!

Kurosawa also recounts the entire film crew starving and everyone being hauled in to boost a choir scene as the actors were too weak to sing well. Now that's method acting!

The book says the film was completed in September 1945, so I guess it's August or September when Michael was there.

The American authorities occupying Japan promptly banned the film anyway for being "too pro-feudal". Apparently making anything with samurai in it was considered too risky until the Americans left in 1952 - hence the mad rash of such films in Japan in the 1950s.

There are also photos of Michael Powell with Akira Kurosawa and Senkichi Taniguchi at Toho Film Studios in 1952. Although not a lot is known about these trips to Japan.

Wim Wenders
Director
Michael Eyers reports:
I went to see Wings of Desire, at the Duke of York's cinema in Brighton yesterday, and having seen it again for the first time in over 10 years the influence of AMOLAD is even more apparent than I had remembered. The Angels in the film exist in a beautifully shot monochrome Berlin until one becomes mortal then it changes to colour. Also an early scene, set in a library, opens with a view of it's ceiling that looks just like the waiting room scene where Bob Coote & Kathleen Byron are seen from below looking down on the records office. I think you can add director Wim Wenders to the famous fans list for this - I don't know if he is on record as a fan but it seems likely. I can't remember much of his other films to say if there is any other direct influences.

Ray Harryhausen
Special effects guru
Cites The Thief of Bagdad (1940) as an inspiration, especially Mary Morris as the multi-armed automaton as the inspiration for the multi-armed goddess in The Golden Voyage of Sinbad. In fact he tried to cast Mary Morris in a witch role, but was overruled by the front-office as he was casting 'Too many Brits'.

Ray is interviewed along with other special effects experts on the Criterion DVD of The Thief of Bagdad

Brian De Palma
Director
His film Raising Cain (1992) has references to Powell's Peeping Tom (1960).

Lars von Trier
Director
His film Breaking the Waves (1996) has too many similarities with IKWIG & EotW for it to be a mere coincidence :)

And the last scene is very reminiscent of A Canterbury Tale (1944).

Danny Boyle
Director
In A Life Less Ordinary (1997), apart from the obvious use of Angels, there are other similarities to AMOLAD.

PaPAS member Steve Debank points out:
As you said there is the celestial factor with angel(s) trying to deceive the protagonist into allowing the completion of their task, but also bear in mind the similarity of bleached white cinematography of the heavenly scenes contrasting with colour whilst on earth. In both films McGregor and Niven are being pursued (one by bounty-hunters, the other for a heavenly recall), and ultimately its their love for the female co-star that saves them - both Niven and McGregor do 'die' figuratively but survive. Whereas in the earlier film it's Livesey and Goring acting as a pivot for and against the romance, in the latter its Lindo/Hunter and Ian Holm. Niven and McGregor both end up under the surgeons knife - though as he's on the run - McGregor has to go to a dentist! Unless I'm mistaken (doubtless) the male leads also both recite poetry to their co-star. There is also a transatlantic element to both films.

The obvious difference is that Life Less is a road movie and was moved from its original Scottish or French setting because they required a more expansive backdrop, whereas AMOLAD goes no further than Livesey's motorbike ride. By Macdonald's own admission the film was heavily influenced by 30s and 40s romantic comedies. I'd be surprised if the films of PnP, Wilder and Capra hadn't some influence on the finished piece.

There's also an RTA [Road Traffic Accident] in both? Did you say something about `clutching' and `straws' :-)

Sadly PNP never had Oasis to call on for a tune either :-)

[Of course the fact of the Producer of A Life Less Ordinary being Emeric's grandson, Andrew Macdonald, might have some influence on this]

Gene Kelly
Director, dancer
Kelly couldn't convince any of the MGM studio bigwigs to make a movie with a long dance sequence. It was only after arranging 25 screenings of The Red Shoes for various other studio executives that Kelly got a green light. Kelly told Powell that An American in Paris is full of quotes from The Red Shoes.

Bert Stern
Director
Director of Jazz on a Summer's Day (1960), the film of the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival.

Bert quotes The Red Shoes as a major influence and inspiration.

Peter Hewitt
Director, actor
In Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey (1991) there are statues of David Niven and Michael Powell in Heaven (a reference to A Matter of Life and Death).

It is reported (thanks James) that Peter Hewitt said AMOLAD was one of his favourite films in an interview in Empire Magazine.

John Hannah
Actor
John was the star of Peter Howitt's Sliding Doors (1998) and is also a self confessed P&P admirer.

There's an interview with John talking about Blimp.

Roman Polanski
Director
Roman once cited Peeping Tom as his all time favourite film.

Sally Potter
Director
There is a dedication to Michael Powell at the end of her film Orlando (1992).

In an article she said she knew Powell and mentioned how much he had encouraged her to become a film maker.

Tilda Swinton
Actress
In a 2001 edition of Entertainment Weekly, Tilda Swinton cites her major influences: "Michael Powell (director of TRS) "When we were making Orlando, which took about 5 years, Michael became a kind of godfather to Sally Potter & myself. He told us a half century earlier he'd been wanting to make a film of Orlando himself, so he was kind of passing the baton." She goes on to name Billy Wilder or Stanley Donen as her dream collaborators.

In the Telegraph of Feb 14th 2005, Tilda records her favourite films as Un Chant d'Amour, A Matter of Life and Death, School of Rock.

Screened IKWIG at her 2008 film festival in Nairn and then she took it to China, getting it fitted with subtitles in Mandarin.

Tilda attended the screening of the restored version of The Red Shoes at Cannes 2009. I had a lovely chat with her and she was most interested in some of the things we've done, not just for IKWIG but for other Powell & Pressburger films as well.

Mark Cousins
Director
Mark directed the documentary I Know Where I'm Going! Revisited on the Criterion DVD of IKWIG

Mark attended the screening of the restored version of The Red Shoes at Cannes 2009.

Sam Mendes
Director
In the DVD commentary of Road to Perdition (2002), Sam says he's paying a homage to Michael Powell & Peeping Tom in the scene where Jude Law as McGuire is developing his photos of the man he's just asphyxiated.

Stacey Kent
Jazz singer
American jazz singer & broadcaster Stacey Kent says she chose to live in the UK because of the P&P films. She talked about her love of the films (especially IKWIG) to Humphrey Carpenter with assistance from Ian Christie in the series Great Lives on BBC Radio 4.

Bruce Weber
American photographer & filmmaker
The July 2002 NFT programme reveals another celebrity Archers fan: A short season "Bruce Weber's Choice" features I Know Where I'm Going!
No other British director had Powell's gift for evoking the atmosphere of a setting, and the rugged Western Isles are a vital force in this lyrical love story.

David Mamet
American writer/director/producer/playwright
In an article in The Guardian of Friday March 21, 2003 titled "Seeing and believing", David Mamet confesses to his admiration of Roger Livesey in Blimp (Last paragraph: "The film, by Pressburger and Powell, is my favourite.").

In an interview in austin360.com of Sunday, February 17, 2008, David Mamet was asked which filmmakers he admires. He said:
"I don't want to talk too much about filmmakers today, because I don't want to make invidious comparisons. I will say I'm a big fan of Powell and Pressburger. Love their movies. And I love Michael Curtiz. I just adore Yankee Doodle Dandy."

Mrs Mamet (Rebecca Pidgeon)
Actress: Winslow Boy, State and Main etc.
In an article in The Guardian of Friday September 5th 2003, David Mamet reveals that his wife's favourite film is IKWIG. It must be fun in the Mamet house with them debating which was Roger Livesey's best role :)

Kate Bush
Musician
Wrote an album called The Red Shoes inspired by and based (loosely) on the 1948 film. She later made The Line, the Cross and the Curve (1993) which expands her ideas about it further.

Bush contacted Powell shortly before he died, "to see whether he'd be interested in working with me. He was the most charming man, so charming. He wanted to hear my music, so I sent him some cassettes and we exchanged letters occasionally, and I got a chance to meet him not so long before he died. He left a really strong impression on me, as much as a person as for his work. He was just one of those very special spirits, almost magical in a way. Left me with a big influence." (Time Out Nov. 1993)

Q: Who is the Douglas Fairbanks character in 'Moments Of Pleasure'?

A: "Ah... In a lot of ways that song, er.. well it's going back to that thing of paying homage to people who aren't with us any more. I was very lucky to get to meet Michael (Powell, the film-maker who directed the original The Red Shoes) in New York before he died, and he and his wife were extremely kind. I'd had few conversations with him and I'd been dying to meet him. As we came out of the lift, he was standing outside with his walking stick and he was pretending to be someone like Douglas Fairbanks. He was completely adorable and just the most beautiful spirit, and it was a very profound experience for me. It had quite an inspirational effect on a couple of the songs." (VOX Magazine Nov. 1993)

Jarvis Cocker and Pulp
Musician
Made a "Help the Aged" video with Cocker ascending the "Stairway to Heaven" in a stairlift.

Confirmed when he gave an interview to the Evening Standard (12 July 2007) where he said:

...
And Jarvis is even dusting off some of his own art-college films for viewing - "the stuff that isn't too bad, only short little-things.
My work would never measure up to my cinematic influences like [Michael] Powell and [Emeric] Pressburger".

Stephen Fry
English actor/wit/novellist/playwright
Has "come out" as a fan of AMOLAD (at least). He said it "... has a quality of unrepentant Englishness, which is as far as you get from twee middle-classness"

Stephen is also in the documentary on the Carlton DVD of Blimp.
Film-makers on film: Stephen Fry
Stephen Fry talks to Sarah Donaldson about Powell and Pressburger's The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp

Sir Paul Getty
Philanthropist
The billionaire and philanthropist was an American Anglophile. Such was his love of British films that he made many donations to the BFI. The British Film Institute received £20m which helped finance the transfer of old British films from perishable nitrate stock to a modern medium at the BFI's Conservation Centre in Berkhamsted. He also helped in the purchase of the institute's headquarters at Stephen Street in London and, in recent years, assisted in the creation of the London Imax Cinema and the Museum of the Moving Image.

It is not known for certain (yet) but it is suspected it was his donations that enabled the preservation and restoration of many P&P titles.

See also obituary pages.

Alan Bennett
Playwright
In an extract from his diaries Alan talks about AMOLAD and shows a knowledge of other P&P films.

In an interview in the Daily Telegraph he sasy "But back then, films were just entertainment," Bennett insists. "The first time we thought of them as anything cultural or special was at the end of the war with A Canterbury Tale (1944) and A Matter of Life and Death, which was the first Royal Film Performance. (Both films were from the Powell-Pressburger team.) Olivier's Henry V (1950), I did think that was magical as a child."

Eiko Ishioka
Artist
One of the premiere visual artists of the 20th century. Best known as the Academy Award winner for costume design for Bram Stoker's Dracula, Eiko's provocative and shockingly beautiful vision can be seen in The Cell, starring Jennifer Lopez.

In an interview, Eiko was asked:

Is there any project that you wish to do or particular person you wish to work with?

and she answered

If I had the opportunity to direct and design films like The Red Shoes and Kwaidan, I'd be very interested.

Joe Ahearne
Producer/director/wrriter
Producer/director of This Life (1996) and writer/director of Ultraviolet (1998) claims P&P as an influence. "Particularly Black Narcissus - the sexiest of their movies".

Professor Victor Burgin (Goldsmith College, London)
Artist
The Millard Professor of Fine Art at Goldsmiths College, University of London, Victor produced an installation that made good use of sequences from ACT.

Chris Weitz
Director of American Pie (1999) and About a Boy (2002)
In an interview with Jason Solomons in The Observer on Sunday August 11, 2002, "Earlier this year, I talked to American director Chris Weitz. He earnestly said his influences were [Kenji] Mizugochi, Kurosawa, Powell and Pressburger. And what has he made? About a Boy."

Courtney Love
Musician
Tipu reports:
I would never have guessed that Kurt ('Nirvana') Cobain's widow, Courtney Love, was a PnP fan, but a recent interview of hers in Entertainment Weekly (March 29 2002) proves otherwise. It says
"Its the day after the (Vanilla) Sky premier. Love is sitting in her private screening room, her knees pulled back under her slip dress, watching the 1948 classic The Red Shoes, one of her favorite films. 'Its a metaphor for fame & addiction,' Love says. 'She puts on the red shoes & she can't stop dancing. She dances until she dies.'"
Elsewhere in the interview, Ms. Love says she was desperate for the role of Satime in Moulin Rouge & had extended discussions with Baz Luhrmann about it. Maybe that's how she got hold of the movie.

BTW, she also claims to be a grand-niece of Douglas Fairbanks Sr., so (thru the original ToB) that may be another (totally trivial) PnP connection:-)

Alan Head responded:

Robert Smith
of The Cure
Definitely a Courtney Love movie - its a goth classic, where do you think Robert Smith of The Cure got the idea for his fright-wig hairstyle? Pure Shoemaker. Mix in the lurid subject matter and the fact that at the end of the ballet Moira has turned into a grunge ballerina and you can see why she loves it. Seem to remember her wearing a tatty ballerina dress at a Hole gig I saw in the pre Kurt days - and distressed lace was always a favourite with the punks...

I know when I was a goth/punk in my younger days I remember girls wearing Sister Ruth-esque eye makeup so perhaps PnP have always had an influence on the alternative scene...

alan
ex punk-goth, now just a hairy old hippy :-)

Manolo Blahnik
Shoemaker
Colin Higgins reports:
Sunday evening [19th Jan 2003] C4 news had a section on Manolo Blahnik, shoe guru. He picked his favourites from a huge collection one of which had a target on the front. He claimed it was a tribute to Emeric Pressburger and Michael Powell (his arrangement) and their marvellous Archers logo. Manolo trained as a theatre designer.
Colin

Manolo Blahnik was also asked to name and describe his favourite film in Harper's Bazaar (June 2006) and he chose Deborah Kerr in Black Narciussus.

Aki Kaurismäki
Finnish writer/producer/director
Dedicated his film I Hired a Contract Killer (1990) "to the memory of Michael Powell". Reported in an interview in The Independent as having developed his love of British cinema by "watching old Alec Guinness comedies or Powell and Pressburger movies on TV."

Julien Temple
Director
Declared his admiration of P&P when I met him.
His film Pandaemonium (2000) contains much Powellian imagery.

Wash Westmoreland
Director of The Fluffer (2001) and others
Reported in The Independent 25 Jan 2002:
Best scene of all time:
Black Narcissus
(Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, 1947)
This film is about nuns living in the Himalayas. It can seem like a very Sunday school tale about nuns trying to deal with the natives, but ultimately it's concerned with the consequences of choosing lifestyles that thwart natural feelings and desire. So, even though it's rated U, it contains one of the most sensual and erotic scenes ever. Sister Ruth (Kathleen Byron, above), is going insane because of desiring a man. The scene shows her taking out a lipstick and going to the mirror to put it on, and making her lips burning red. It's this incredibly charged act of defiance of everything she's expected to be. It seems like the lipstick is the most radical object that she could possess, and putting it on is a transcendent throwing off of her chains. Oscar Wilde said that disobedience is man's original virtue. It may seem that Sister Ruth is punished for her flagrant sexuality (she goes mad and dies, frightened over a cliff edge by a "pure nun", represented by Deborah Kerr). But it's her moment of triumph that you remember.

Bob Holness
TV Quizmaster
In an article in the Daily Mirror of 1 Jul 1997
Favourite film: The 1946 British stunner A Matter of Life and Death by the Archers (Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger).

Tom Gray
of Gomez
In an article in The Times of 6 Mar 2004
What's not to like
Tom Gray, of Gomez, on the films of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger
The first Powell and Pressburger film I saw was A Matter of Life and Death. I was in my teens and I remember sitting at home on a Sunday afternoon, watching this blazing aeroplane hurtling into oblivion, while its doomed British pilot, Peter Carter (David Niven), talks to an American servicewoman on his radio. He jumps, and wakes up in the surf, unhurt. There.s been a mistake in Heaven. He should have died. When he is found by a heavenly messenger, he is put on trial to determine whether or not he deserves a second chance on earth.

Sarah Polley
Canadian actress and director
Chelsea Spear reports:
in the latest issue of Jane magazine, Dawn of the Dead star Sarah Polley mentions that her favourite horror movie is Peeping Tom. (For those not in the know, Sarah Polley is an amazing Canadian actress who has given some great performances in low-budget Canadian movies and is on her way to becoming the best thing about a lot of bad American movies...like Dawn of the Dead, in fact.)

Bridget Fonda
Actress
Jenny Lerew reports:
Several years ago the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (which runs film programmes) had a P&P; festival. At a screening of Gone To Earth (UK version!!!!), we were loitering in the small lobby, looking at the several vintage one-sheets on display, and I realized I was next to Bridget Fonda and her then-partner, Eric Stoltz. Cool.

Lorna Cook
Director
Jenny Lerew reports:
Although not "famous", a director I work with, Lorna Cook (her husband just won his 3rd Oscar for The Lord of the Rings, btw, in effects) - she directed the animated film Spirit, Stallion of the Cimarron for this company, Dreamworks - saw my 1-sheet on the AMOLAD re-release in my office and just about fainted-she had to have one, as it's her favorite movie, too. You never know where you'll run into them. :)

Wayne Shorter
Musician
Malcolm Pratt reports:

There seems to be another celebrity to add to the list of famous P&P; enthusiasts, saxophonist Wayne Shorter, who was part of the jazz group Weather Report. According to a reviewer of TRS on the IMDb, Shorter mentioned in the liner notes to the Weather Report album Tail Spinnin' that he had seen TRS many times.

Another website (translated somewhat loosely from French to English) makes mention (if I haven't lost it in translation) of Shorter's having watched TRS 70 times:

I'm not familiar w/Weather Report or Wayne Shorter. If anyone on the list knows of them, or by chance has the album Tail Spinnin', perhaps they could confirm this.

Wes Anderson
Director
Chelsea Spear reports:

Wes Anderson -- the director of Rushmore and The Royal Tenenbaums -- is also a fan of Powell and Pressburger. In the commentary for The Royal Tenenbaums he talks about how the title card was inspired by The Red Shoes.

Steve: And the film does open saying "Royal Tenenbaum bought the house on Archer Avenue in the winter of his 35th year".

Simon Bates
Disk Jockey
Andrew Smaje reports:

You'll be delighted/horrifed to know that Simon Bates (yes, the DJ who inflicted - sorry, invented - Our Tune) has just been recommending PnP to Classic FM listeners. He does a Classic FM at the Movies show every Saturday on which the occasional item of interest appears amidst the Titanic and Matrix medleys. He's been doing a D-Day special which somehow managed to include part of the AMOLAD score. He ran through a list of essential PnP, including A Canterbury Tale, which doesn't always appear on lists by people who aren't pretty serious in their admiration.

He also thoroughly recommended 'the brand new release' of Small Back Room - so he really is up-to-date.

Lex Shrapnel
Actor
Mark Fuller reports:

In The Times' tv and film mag. today (24th July 2004) the splendidly-named Lex Shrapnel (John Tracy in the new Thunderbirds film) selects Col. Blimp as one of his favourite films... one of the reasons given is that it stars his Granny, Deborah Kerr.

Note: Lex Shrapnel is the son of actor John Shrapnel and Deborah Kerr's daughter Francesca.

Su Friedrich
Director
Chelsea Spear reports:

Whilst reading the book "Film Fatales", I came across a bio of filmmaker Su Friedrich and a description of her film Damned if You Don't (1987), which the author describes as "The story of a novice nun who falls in love with a lesbian... The film offers a starling deconstruction of Michael Powell's 1946 classic Black Narcissus. Rather than pay the exorbitant costs of leasing footage from the Powell film, Friedrich chose to use distorted footage of the film playing on a television set" (Redding and Brownworth, 46).

There's a script here: http://www.sufriedrich.com/DDbest.html

I'm very curious to see this now, based on both the Powell connection and on the strength of Friedrich's other work -- Sink or Swim is one of the most compelling experimental documentaries I've seen. Has anyone seen this?

Alice Hoffman
American author
I was listening to BBC World Service and their excellent programme "The Word" was on. Amongst the people interviewed was Alice Hoffman, author of "Practical Magic" and various other fine works. Alice was talking about how she seemed to be writing through series of works based on different colours. She had her "blue period" and now, since seeing The Red Shoes, she seems to be working through a red phase. Her latest novel is called Blackbird House but has a pair of red shoes (or lace up boots) on the cover. She said how the film reminded her of "every woman's struggle between home & family or an artistic life" and then she added how every woman has a pair of red shoes somewhere in her closet and has to decide if she dares put them on. I think she was speaking metaphorically :)

John Waters
Director
Lisle Foote reports:
I saw John Waters' new film, A Dirty Shame (2004) today, and I was surprised by the film that Selma Blair watches in it. It's The Red Shoes. She plays an exotic dancer with Russ Meyer star proportions. I'm guessing that Blair is trying to learn and bring more artistry to her oeuvre, but later in the film I couldn't detect any ballet influence in her dancing. So Waters is probably just another PnP fan.

Lisle

Eddie Berg
Creator of Liverpool's visual arts centre
Artistic Director of the proposed National Centre for Moving Image
Malcolm Pratt reports:
There's an online article in the Liverpool Daily Post for today about a gentleman named Eddie Berg which includes his 5 favorite films. The rather lengthy link is here.

In the article Eddie lists his 5 favourite films. Number 2 is:
A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH
"For me, the best British film ever made. An extraordinary timeless fantasy directed by Michael Powell and Hungarian emigre Emeric Pressburger."

Martin Freeman
Actor
Louise Lamont reports:
Martin Freeman reveals in a questionnaire at the back of the Love Actually companion book (I was waiting for someone, in a bookshop, I did not buy the book) that his most romantic film of all time is none other than AMOLAD. (Freeman played the naked stand-in in Love Actually; also in The Office).

Tony Booth
Actor
Lady Ivry Freyberg reports:
From the Evening Standard magazine 14th January, 2005

The Prime Minister's father-in-law, Tony Booth, 73, now lives in County Cavan in Ireland with his fourth wife, Stephanie. Born in Liverpool, he has been a political activist and an actor best known for playing Alf Garnett's daughter's warring boyfriend in the Sixties TV comedy Till Death Us Do Part. "My wife's an excellent cook and I only cook if I have to," he says. "It'll be a big pan of something like a stew. If we eat in front of the telly we'll have picnic food."

Who's on the sofa? My wife Steph and our cats: Cassie, Oscar, Finbar and Mikey.
What's on the menu? We'll have a nice bread with a selection of cheese, smoked salmon, pâté, olives, and other dips. I love home-made hummus and guacomole. My favourite cheese is Roquefort.
Pudding? Steph's home-made fruit cake with Cornish ice-cream.
And to drink? Mineral water.
What's on the box? World Cinema. It's a channel on Sky which shows the best films ever made such as La Reine Margot and The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp. You should watch it sometime, it's absolutely brilliant.

Tony Booth has just made a short film for TV called A Dog's Life, to be shown later this year, and has a guest role in Doctors on BBC1.

For our friends across the pond, Till Death Us Do Part was the series that All in the Family was based on.

Tony Booth is the father of Cherie Booth, the wife of the current Prime Minister, Tony Blair.

Timothy Spall
Actor
Spoke for AMOLAD on the "100 Greatest Tearjerkers" on Channel 4 on Feb 13th, 2005. Shamefully they only put AMOLAD at No. 86.

Kenneth Branagh
Actor, Director etc. etc.
In the Telegraph of Feb 14th 2005, Kenneth records his favourite films as Black Narcissus, Les Enfants du paradis, Manhattan.

Rufus Sewell
Actor
In the Telegraph of Feb 14th 2005, Rufus records his favourite films as A Matter of Life and Death, Being There, Bedknobs and Broomsticks.
John Lowrie Morrison
Scottish contemporary artist
Terry Hanstock reports:
Aberdeen Evening Express
February 19, 2005
Scottish contemporary artist John Lowrie Morrison is well on the way to becoming one of Britain's best known and loved artists. His paintings of the west coast are full of colour and life - and highly collectable.
...
MY FIRST MOVIE I Know Where I'm Going. A film by Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger. This film made a huge impression on me at age seven. It is still my favourite film and made such an impression I became a film buff. Also the work of the film's cinematographer Erwin Hillier has influenced my painting in the last 10 years, particularly his use of 'dark and light'. I have transformed this into 'dark and colour'.

John Maybury
Director
Terry Hanstock reports:
"The Jacket" Director John Maybury Speaks His Mind
Speaking in front of a group of reporters in support of the release of The Jacket, Maybury didn't hold anything back. Prepare for spoilers...
INTERVIEW WITH DIRECTOR JOHN MAYBURY:
Q: What are your favorite time travel stories?
JM: I don't have any. No. This isn't a time travel movie.
Q: It has time travel in it.
JM: No, you must have misunderstood it. He dies in Iraq and his life flashes before his eyes.
Q: But if the media quotes you on that, it will give your whole movie away.
JM: I don't give a s**t. I don't want anyone to make any money out of this. No, my favorite time travel movie I suppose is A Matter of Life and Death" by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger. But it's not really time travel. It's about someone dying - David Niven dies in a plane crash and then someone from the 18th century from heaven comes back and rescues him.
Q: That's also titled Stairway to Heaven, right?
JM: Yeah, exactly. It's A Matter of Life and Death in England.

Margaret Atwood
Canadian novelist
Doc M reports:
Lady Oracle (Virago, ISBN 0-86068-303-6) is a 1976 novel about the adventures and misadventures of Joan, an obese, red-haired Canadian who slims down and becomes an author of costume gothics/bodicerippers, but then fakes her own death and goes to Italy...

One of Joan's few pleasures in girlhood is going to the cinema with her kind Aunt Lou, although her mother says movies are "vulgar". One has to bear in mind, as Joan identifies with Vicki, her large size at this time, and the fact that when younger, she had been humiliated by her dance teacher who made her dress and dance as a mothball in the class's butterfly ballet...
pp. 81-82:
"I suffered along with sweet, patient June Allyson as she lived through the death of Glenn Miller; I ate three boxes of popcorn while Judy Garland tried to cope with an alcoholic husband, and five Mars Bars while Eleanor Parker, playing a crippled opera singer, groped her mournful way through 'Interrupted Melody'. But the one I liked best was The Red Shoes, with Moira Shearer as a ballet dancer torn between her career and her husband. I adored her: not only did she have red hair and an entrancing pair of red satin slippers to match, she also had beautiful costumes, and she suffered more than anyone. I munched faster and faster as she became more and more entangled in her dilemma - I wanted those things too, I wanted to dance and be married to a handsome orchestra conductor, both at once - and when she finally threw herself in front of a train I let out a bellowing snort that made people three rows ahead turn around indignantly. Aunt Lou took me to see it four times."

There are a couple of other references too:
p. 216 - as Joan is reflecting on her marriage to Arthur, a Marxist activist she met in the '60s, who does not know about her writing:
"And yet, as time went by, I began to feel something was missing. Perhaps, I thought, I had no soul; I just drifted around, singing vaguely, like the Little Mermaid in the Andersen fairy tale. In order to get a soul you had to suffer, you had to give something up; or was that to get legs and feet? I couldn't remember. She'd become a dancer, though, with no tongue. Then there was Moira Shearer, in The Red Shoes. Neither of them had been able to please the handsome prince; both of them had died. I was doing fairly well by comparison. Their mistake had been to go public, whereas I did my dancing behind closed doors. It was safer, but..."

p. 335 - Joan, hiding out in Italy after faking her own death, realises she has cut her feet on some broken glass (overtones of the mermaid again, too):
"The real red shoes, the feet punished for dancing. You could dance, or you could have the love of a good man. But you were afraid to dance, because you had this unnatural fear that if you danced they'd cut your feet off so you wouldn't be able to dance. The good man went away too, because you wanted to dance.
But I chose the love, I wanted the good man; why wasn't that the right choice? I was never a dancing girl anyway. A bear in an arena only appears to dance, really it's on its hind legs trying to avoid the arrows."

Doc M also found that there's a biography covering Margaret Atwood's early years -- The Red Shoes: Margaret Atwood Starting Out, by Rosemary Sullivan: "In the 1940s film The Red Shoes, a beautiful ballerina commits suicide when she fails to satisfy one man, who wants her to devote her entire life to her art, and another, who loves her but subjugates her to become his muse and inspiration. Margaret Atwood remembers being devastated by this movie as a young girl, but unlike many of her contemporaries, she came to reject its underlying message that a woman must choose between art and love."

Colin Vaines
Executive Vice-President of Miramax
Don Henson reports:
I've just been reading 'British film magazine' (June 2005). There's an article by Colin Vaines, Executive Vice-President of Miramax (page 47).

"My own taste was for fantasy films - never was drawn to social realism. When I was ten, I saw A Matter of Life and Death, and was gobsmacked by it. That was the film which made me want to make movies."
Later on, taking about his DVD collection -
"But all my top favourite movies are there - The Wild Bunch, Once upon a Time in the West, every Powell and Pressburger that're available ..."
Don

Paul Cornell
Scriptwriter
Richard Layne reports:
Doctor Who fans will be interested to learn that Paul Cornell, who wrote the last but one episode "Father's Day", lists A Matter of Life and Death as one of his favourite films.

So the fact that the episode involved a man who cheats death and gets to spend a few extra hours with the women he loves may not be a coincidence. Obviously if the monsters had been very camp Frenchmen it would have been better.

Nicky smith adds:
In both AMOLAD and "Father's Day", a Doctor has to die before things are sorted out.

Paul McGann
Actor
I am told that Paul McGann is also a P&P fan and that in a forthcoming feature ("A Voice From Afar") he and director/producer Barry Bliss want to pay homage to P&P.

David Mitchell
Writer
Pete McGill reports:
Saturday Telegraph, 9th July, Arts & Books Section Page 18:

"Cultural Baggage" interviews writer David Mitchell, who claims 'The Red Shoes' as his favourite film: "...because of its scale, bravery and bravura. It's based on a story about ballet by Hans Christian Andersen. I saw the film years ago and scenes from it still hold me."

Gary Kemp
Musician/actor
Andrew Smaje reports:
Yes, children of the 80's, it's Gary Kemp.

In today's (22nd July 2005) Independent (the Arts & Book Reviews section), the Cultural Life section asks a well-known person about their book, music, film and theatre habits. Gary Kemp pins his colours to the mast (well, one colour anyway) in his comments about film:

"I'm not as big a film fan as I am a theatre fan. I watch film because I love stories, but I prefer theatre because of the way you are emotionally involved as an audience [...] But one of my favourite films ever is Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's The Red Shoes, made in the late 1940s [sic]. It's the story of a ballet comapny, and the acting has a sort of heightened stylisation about it, which I guess I like because I like theatre."

For the record, Gary is currently reading Pepys's diaries, listening to Gavin DeGraw, and seeing David Threlfall in Someone Who'll Watch Over Me.

Andrew

Ken Russell
Director
In a programme on BBC Radio 4 in Michael Powell's centenary year, Ken said how he played hookey from his dance school to be one of the first to see The Red Shoes. Since then he has loved and been influenced by many of the P&P films.

Ken was also very complimentary about P&P and said how much he liked their work in his book of anecdotes and essays on British films, "Fire over England".

Anand Tucker
Director
Richard Layne reports:
Went to see Shopgirl at the London Film Festival last night.
Director Anand Tucker revealed afterwards that, to get over to the cast and crew the feel he wanted for the film, he made them all watch his favourite film, A Matter of Life and Death, along with "every Douglas Sirk film".

Tipu adds:
Tucker of Shopgirl fame was quoted on his admiration for MP before on this list. I saw this recently on an article by him in the Landmark FLM magazine's Fall 2005 issue (I am catching up on my reading :-)): "I have two all-time director heroes: Michael Powell and Jacques Tourneur." The full article is at www.movienet.com/shopgirl.html.

Pete McGill adds:
Just returned from a viewing of And When Did You Last See Your Father?, and was struck by the opening sequence which panned across a swirling universe with the voice of Jim Broadbent saying, "Big, isn't it?" or something similar - no rewind in the cinema - and so obviously homage to AMOLAD.

D.A. Pennebaker
Director
Mark Fuller reports:
His list of "favourite films" in a Criterion Newsletter includes 3 P&P titles:
The Red Shoes (1948)
I Know Where I'm Going! (1945)
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943)

Guy Maddin
Writer/Director
Samuel Bréan tells us:
I'd like to add an entry: Canadian filmmaker Guy Maddin, who made Dracula, Pages from a Virgin's Diary (2002). This is a silent film adapted from ballet inspired by Bram Stoker's book, and it's terrific, in my opinion; one of the author's best, on a par with his short Heart of the World (2000) and his installation-derived 10-part Cowards Bend the Knee (2003). Anyway, one of the less peculiar things about the project is that Maddin had never read the novel before and doesn't like dance films. Although in a couple of interviews, he said:

"I can't even watch dance films. And oh, I've tried. The one I like the most is Michael Powell's Tales of Hoffman (1953), though I still can't watch more than 20 or 30 minutes of it at the time." (Cinema Scope #10, March 2002)

"One of the reasons I kept refusing the job to direct Dracula, was that I didn't enjoy many dance films, only Michael Powell's films. I enjoyed Tales of Hoffman and The Red Shoes but The Red Shoes isn't really a dance film, it just has some dance in it." (Interview on the Dracula French DVD)

Phill Jupitus
Writer/Poet/DJ/Comedian
Michael Lofthouse tells us:
Browsing the magazines in Borders the other night I read in Uncut DVD that Phill Jupitus is another PnP fan. Asked to list his favourite DVDs he includes AMOLAD adding that if Sue Lawley ever asks him to be on Desert Island Discs then his luxury item will be a tv, DVD player and a copy of AMOLAD.

Interviewed in the BBC series "British Film Forever", Phill mentioned the frisson of pleasure he gets on seeing the Archers logo at the beginning of a film.

Franz Ferdinand
Garage / Indie Band; 2005 Brit Awards winners
Michael Eyers tells us:
I was googling and happened upon this article (in the Telegraph) about the band Franz Ferdinand:

'Ever keen to widen their pool of references, the video for their new single, Matinee, is inspired by Powell and Pressburger's film A Matter of Life and Death. With their talk of Stravinsky and Bulgakov and Fibonacci and Hitchcock and the Smiths, they'll move your feet and, if you want, your brain'

'Just because these things influence you, doesn't mean that your work - the music - has to be pretentious or inaccessible in any sort of way,' Kapranos declares with characteristic vigour. 'In fact, quite the opposite. Cinema, which is influenced by every single part of life, is direct and reaches you immediately. And writing - the best writing is complex ideas communicated concisely.'

Also, their video for "Walk Away" has many PT moments. e.g. a close up of an opening eye, a bedroom containing period film projectors and open reel tape recorders and a film studio with spotlights being switched on.

Neil LaBute
Film-maker
Declared in his list of Top Ten Criterion DVDs
...
9. Black Narcissus. The most purely beautiful film I can think of and done up in a pristine transfer here; the fact that the film was shot at Shepperton Studios, in England, actually blows the mind. The acting is impeccable, and the fevered colors and close-ups are as close to a cinematic wet dream as I ever need to have. Pressburger & Powell in the throes of a most singular cinematic vision.

Mike Patton
Musician
Named his band and their album after Michael Powell's film Peeping Tom

David Parker
Quiz contestant
Contestant on Mastermind (UK, BBC) in 2006 who scored, as the question master put it, "a stonking 29 points" with his specialist round on Powell and Pressburger.
Details about the competition and the questions he was asked.

Ken Jennings
Quiz contestant
Contestant on Jeopardy (US TV) who had a winning streak of 74 games in 2004.
In his blog he lists AMOLAD as the best ever film never released on DVD in the States.
1. A Matter of Life and Death (1946). This is the Powell-Pressburger afterlife fantasy that was retitled Stairway to Heaven for American audiences. I can't even start to tell you all the things I love about this movie. Roger Livesey's camera oscura, the goat boy, the frozen ping-pong ball, the matte paintings of black-and- white "heaven". But I can guarantee you'll be hooked from the start, since it has probably the best first scene in cinema history.

Amanda Vickery
Academic
Reader in Modern British Women's History at Royal Holloway College, University of London. Amanda was the guest on BBC Radio 4 on Saturday Review on 16th September 2006 where she spoke about her favourite film, I Know Where I'm Going!

J.G. Ballard
British novelist
Wrote an article for The Guardian (July 23, 2006) about how he used to skip classes to watch P&P films and how they taught him all he needed to know about the art of storytelling.

Mark Kermode
Critic
Wrote an article in The Observer (Sept 24, 2006) where, after a complaint about the quality of what is offered as "film" nowadays, he said: "I became a film critic because I love films - films such as Powell and Pressburger 's A Matter of Life and Death, Kaneto Shindo 's Onibaba, Disney's Mary Poppins and Ken Russell's The Devils."

Guy Maddin
Director/Writer
In the Oct '06 Criterion Newsletter, Guy lists his top ten films (on Criterion) which includes:
8. Black Narcissus (Michael Powell)
A bunch of nuns move into a wind-addled old pleasure dome in the Himalayas and have trouble remembering their vows. The air is set aquivering by the most innocuous male approach to their world.even Sabu seems to shake their virginal resolve. And even I have trouble keeping my priest's collar straight as the unspoken pressures build up to boiler-breaking levels. Technicolor at its most eye-popping!"

Michael Sheen
Actor
From the My London section of the Evening Standard magazine of Friday 17th November, 2006:
LIFE'S LUXURIES - What are your extravagances?
I've got a huge DVD collection. I'm a big fan of the films of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, such as A Matter of Life and Death. I've also got a lot of Scorsese and Kurosawa films.

Kim Newman
Critic & Author
In an article in Film Extremes No.1 [1992], Kim reveals his choice of the greatest of extreme film-makers to be Michael Powell.

Bill Forsyth
Film-maker
Bill said, of his film Local Hero:
"I saw it along the lines of a Scottish Beverly Hillbillies -- what would happen to a small community when it suddenly became immensely rich -- that was the germ of the idea and the story built itself from there. It seemed to contain a similar theme to Brigadoon (1954), which also involved some Americans coming over to Scotland, becoming part of a small community, being changed by the experience and affecting the place in their own way. I feel close in spirit to the Powell and Pressburger feeling, the idea of trying to present a cosmic viewpoint to people, but through the most ordinary things. And because both this film and I Know Where I'm Going! (1945) are set in Scotland, I've felt from the beginning that we're walking the same... treading the same water."
-- from Local Hero: The Making of the Film, Alan Hunter and Mark Astaire (1983)

James Robertson
Writer
Asked to name his favourite film, after various Hitchcock films he named I Know Where I'm Going!, saying:
"But another perennial favourite is the 1945 classic I Know Where I'm Going! Set in the Hebrides, it has the charm and humour of Whisky Galore! but it also has that extra Powell and Pressburger magic. A young Englishwoman played by Wendy Hiller who apparently knows exactly what she wants from life sets out to marry a rich businessman who has rented the isle of Kiloran for the season. But bad weather prevents her getting there, and while waiting impatiently for it to improve she falls under the spell of the local laird, who is himself emotionally handicapped by an ancient curse on his family. The film challenges materialism and selfishness in its depiction of a poor but fundamentally contented rural community. The climax is a fantastic storm scene at the Corryvreckan whirlpool but there are many great moments throughout its 90 minutes.
-- from Scotland on Sunday Jan 14, 2007

Stephen Sondheim
Writer, Composer
His childhood favourite films include Stairway to Heaven (A Matter of Life and Death). As mentioned in an interview in the New York Times.

Peter Kay
Comic
Michael Eyers reports:
My Mother is currently reading 'The Sound Of Laughter', by comedian Peter Kay, and called my attention to a passage about his time as an altar boy.

"I like to think that by serving the altar I've more than done my bit towards securing my place in heaven. And what a vision heaven is too. Millions of people queuing in single file up an endless white marble staircase, there's plenty of mist and tireless angels fly to and fro on administration duties. If you've ever seen the film A Matter Of Life And Death with David Niven then you'll know what I'm on about. And if you've never seen that film then you've certainly missed a treat. Take a tip from me and keep a look out for it. They usually show it in the afternoon before Channel 4 racing".

Susan Cooper
Children's writer
Matthew Barker reports:
I am currently reading a short biography by Nina Mikkelsen of the children's writer Susan Cooper who wrote the Dark is Rising sequence (or should that be pentalology?). In writing about Susan's grandfather (the model for Merriman in the novels), the following is mentioned:

"He [Susan's grandfather] introduced Susan to his favourite novelists and took her to see a World War II film he particularly liked, A Matter of Life and Death, made by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, in 1946 (called Stairway to Heaven in the United States), which she has said became the strongest influence on her writing of anything she ever saw or read".

Selina Blow
Fashion designer
Richard Layne reports:
Fashion designer Selina Blow professes her love for Black Narcissus in an interview in The Daily Telegraph

Joe Wright
Director
Simon Turner reports:
Joe Wright, the director of Pride and Prejudice with Keira Knightley. About half an hour through the director's commentary he states his admiration for the shot in Black Narcissus where Kathleen Byron's red dress bursts into frame. Wright has a red uniform rise into shot.

Steve Rinaldi
Singer / songwriter
A Matter Of Life And Death is a song written by Steve Rinaldi and released by Rinaldi Sings on the 2005 album What's It All About? (Tangerine Records). The song was inspired by the film A Matter of Life and Death, a 1946 film starring David Niven and Kim Hunter (released as Stairway to Heaven in the US). The song features a sample of actress Kim Hunter's voice, taken from the film and used shortly before the end of the song.

Hannah McGill
Artistic Director of the Edinburgh International Film Festival
Interviewed in The Scotsman, Hannah was asked "What is your favourite film and why?"

"Can I have a couple? (Since I see more films than any normal human, that seems fair.) I reshuffle the list on a regular basis, but Michael Powell's The Red Shoes always endures as an utterly perfect meld of spectacle, storytelling and raw emotion. It's camp and histrionic, but absolutely sincere and stirring at the same time."

In the list of The Best British Films Ever in The Independent, Hannah lists:

  • Best war film: A Matter of Life and Death
    About redemption and hope rather than battlefield glory.

Michael Sheen
Actor: Tony Blair in The Queen and Frost in the play and forthcoming film of Frost/Nixon
He gave an interview/profile to Variety where he included "Three films that mean a lot to me" and top of the list was AMOLAD.

Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's A Matter Of Life And Death -- Every frame is perfect. It works for me emotionally, intellectually and aesthetically. And it has that elusive quality of strangeness that all great works of art have.

Mike Hodges
Director
In "Get Carter and Beyond: The Cinema of Mike Hodges" by Steven Paul Davies (Batsford), Mike Hodges is described as being an admirer of "the writer-director team of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger" and describes The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp as being "panoramic and witty" and Gone to Earth as "striking and strange". The Red Shoes is also mentioned later on.

Malcolm McLaren
Manager of the Sex Pistols and many other things
Malcolm was featured in the Independent Newspaper (UK) on 7 July 2007 and quoted his "Movie Heaven" as The Red Shoes.

Barry Norman
Film critic
In the list of The Best British Films Ever in The Independent, Barry lists:
  • Best romance: I Know Where I'm Going!
    A lovely Powell and Pressburger romance.

Dan Jolin
Features editor, Empire magazine
In the list of The Best British Films Ever in The Independent, Dan lists:
  • Best romance: A Matter of Life and Death
    You can't get more romantic.

Nick James
Editor, Sight and Sound magazine
In the list of The Best British Films Ever in The Independent, Nick lists:
  • Best romance: I Know Where I'm Going!
    Quirky tale of a dreamy bride-to-be in the Western Isles.
  • Best war film: The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
    Stirs the right kind of anti-war patriotism in me.

David McComb
Singer/songwriter
Michael Eyers tells us:
I've recently bought a rare CD on eBay 'Love Of Will' by the late Australian singer/songwriter David McComb. He was the former front man of seminal 1980s Perth band The Triffids.

The insert of the CD contains a number of stills from Black Narcissus, notably the shot of Sister Ruth applying her lipstick.

James Bidgood
Director/screenwriter/producer
Tipu tells us:
Last year the Bright Lights Film Journal carried an interview (conducted in Nov. 2005) with New York City-based underground filmmaker & photographer James Bidgood. He had made a movie called Pink Narcissus about a young gay prostitute that got released in 1971. I had come across the name of the movie & curious about the possible PnP connection read the interview. Disappointingly the title had nothing to do with our BN, but the in the following question, Bidgood sites TRS as one of his inspirations. The interview, with pictures that are not safe to view at work, are at http://www.brightlightsfilm.com/52/bidgoodiv.htm. The bits relevant to us are:

Did you choose the title Pink Narcissus?
Yes.
Why?
Pink Narcissus came about because he was a narcissist ... who was very ... pink.
What were some specific influences on the film?
Well, it's always about MGM musicals and all that kind of stuff. And a movie like The Red Shoes, which was at the time such a phenomenon. God, that picture! They tried to make it into a musical, but it bombed, Jule Styne wrote the music, and they tried it, because it's really such a terribly corny story ... and it is so fabulous.... It's about a girl that's in a ballet that they do called "The Red Shoes" [with Russian accent], the Russian guy, the director of the ballet "The Red Shoes," and it's about a girl who puts on these magic red shoes and then dances to death ... cause she can't take them off. And that's pretty much ... what the movie is about.... She ends up dying in the end, but they still give the ballet but [whispers] with just the shoes!... [gasps] So then he comes out and cries, oh, it's so fabulous.... But the color! There had never been a movie with color like that. They did such wonderful things, it was like gelatin floating down, like gelatin, oh, like floating down! It was incredible! I don't know that there is even a decent [print]. I'm sure they let it go to hell, you know, nobody cared about anything like that, nobody thought it was art until it was too late.

Hugh Munro Neely
Director/screenwriter/producer
Andi Hicks
Producer
Randolph "Randy" Man tells us:
You can add writer-producer-director Hugh Munro Neely of Timeline Films and his current producer partner Andi Hicks (who is also the Director of the Mary Pickford Institute, the Foundation's educational wing) to the list of professionals who are PnP fans. I had a marathon meeting with them recently and PnP came up. Hugh is mad about 49thP, and Andi, a petite former TV dancer, is equally mad about TRS.

Ashley Pharoah
Screenwriter/producer
Richard Layne tells us:
From a feature in today's (7 Jan 2008) Media Guardian, about Life on Mars creators Matthew Graham and Ashley Pharoah:
ASHLEY PHAROAH: Social realism has been the dominant narrative form in television for decades now. As writers it's incredibly exciting to break out of that straitjacket, to explore that "other" wing of British storytelling, the tradition of Blake and Wells and Pressburger and Powell and Terry Nation.

Alison Goldfrapp
Musician
Neil Murray tells us:
In the March (2008) issue of Record Collector, there's an interview with Alison Goldfrapp, the singer from Goldfrapp (believe it or not).

"Film has provided a rich source of inspiration for you, so what would you consider your all- time favourites?"

"Probably pretty much any Powell & Pressburger film - two directors, they did The Red Shoes, Black Narcissus, I Know Where I'm Going, Gone To Earth - also Badlands, Bladerunner, and I really liked American Beauty"

Prof. Pam Cook
Academic and writer
Pam Cook wrote the BFI monograph about I Know Where I'm Going!. An interesting, personal view on a great film. Currently Professor Emeritus in Film at the University of Southampton.

A.L. Kennedy
Writer and academic
Alison Kennedy wrote the BFI monograph about The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp. An interesting, personal view on a great film.

Matthew Graham and Ashley Pharoah
Scriptwriters
Nicky Smith writes:
I'm sure other list members have been enjoying the very watchable new drama about archaeologists - Bonekickers. Have the screenwriters - Matthew Graham and Ashley Pharoah been noted as celebrity fans? (I seem to remember a discussion about parallels between the Life of Mars finale and AMOLAD)

From an interview in Metro:
"Though their names are always mentioned in the same breath, Graham and Pharoah don't write together, instead taking on separate episodes. Pharoah's interest in Bristol and the slave trade led to episode two, a more ruminative story than Graham's opener, which is populated by sword-wielding Christian fundamentalists.

'We're distinct as writers and it's important to us that our writing is still personal,' says Pharoah. How are they different? 'Matthew has a lot of ideas. I tend to worry at a single idea. Our partnership works because we like and admire each other.'

Is this relationship comparable to any others? 'I suppose the closest we're to, although it sounds immodest, is Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, the great British film-makers. You never knew with them who wrote, directed or produced what. It was just a sort of stamp of quality.'"

Margaret Hodge MP
Politician
Margaret Hodge is presently (2008) the Minister of State in the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. She has also served as the First Minister for Children when the post was created in 2003. She nominated AMOLAD as the film that should be preserved for future generations in the BFI Vote saying "I absolutely love it because although technically its a masterpiece, it's also romantic, daring and visually stunning. A Matter of Life and Death is an example of British cinema at its very best."

Michael Sheen
Actor
Interviewed in Variety he was asked "Three films that mean a lot to me". The first he cited was:

Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's A Matter Of Life And Death -- Every frame is perfect. It works for me emotionally, intellectually and aesthetically. And it has that elusive quality of strangeness that all great works of art have.

Rosanna Arquette
Actor
Rosanna attended the screening of the restored version of The Red Shoes at Cannes 2009

James Gray
Director
James attended the screening of the restored version of The Red Shoes at Cannes 2009

Natacha adds: After the screening, I saw James Gray for the second time (the first time was before, which touched me because he is one of the members of the jury at Cannes festival this year, for the main competition, which means he has seen a lot of films already) and asked him if he had enjoyed the film. He said yes, of course: he adores the film and saw it many times. He asked me if I had seen Le Narcisse noir (Black Narcissus), which he also likes very much. I said I had! Then I gave him the badge: he was pleased. ;)

Ang Lee
Director
Ang Lee attended the screening of the restored version of The Red Shoes at Cannes 2009

Ben Rivers
Film-maker
Ben Rivers made a film called I Know Where I'm Going (2009) as a part of Vauxhall's Great British Road Trip. Ben explains the reason behind the commission name; "The title of the film is a reference to the 1945 film of the same name by Powell and Pressburger, they inspired me to become a film maker and I wanted to recognise them in some way. The title is a nice twist to the concept of my film, because I really didn't know where I was going when I set off on my road trip."

John Wesley Harding
Musician
Last, but by no means least is PnP group member Wesley Stace who performs using the stage name John Wesley Harding.


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