Harry Bruce Woolfe
Harry Bruce Woolfe (1880, Marylebone, London – 1965, Brighton) was an English film producer and occasional director who founded British Instructional Films. The company focused on documentaries, nature films, and works concerning World War I.[1] He was himself a veteran so had an interest in using film to re-enact the war. This links to his being referred to as an "ardent imperialist" who intended to tell heroic stories of said war.[2] In addition to work on war films he initiated the Secrets of Nature series.[3]
Select filmography
Director
Producer
- Armageddon (1923)
- Boadicea (1927)
- The Battles of Coronel and Falkland Islands (1927)
- Shooting Stars (1927)
- Bolibar (1928)
- Underground (1928)
- Chamber of Horrors (1929)
- The Runaway Princess (1929)
- The Celestial City (1929)
- Tell England (1931)
- Dance Pretty Lady (1931)
gollark: The headquarters' walls are filled with holes for no apparent reason.
gollark: Unlike GTech™, they have no products, and are working on a drone delivery system which doesn't... do anything... and wouldn't be useful if it did.
gollark: Their headquarters is a ridiculous maze the construction of which nearly bankrupted them (because they don't do concrete in-house, like wrong people), their broken laser "defenses" try and lase me while in my office, many of the doors are mysteriously missing, and another company stuck a giant blob on top of their roof.
gollark: I suppose PixelTech™ is generally not very competent.
gollark: Yes, I am definitely harmed by people claiming that "potatOS" is present in random binary files they're editing.
References
- "British Instructional Films". BFI.org.uk. Archived from the original on 29 August 2008. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
- Paris, Michael (1 January 1999). "The First World War and Popular Cinema: 1914 to the Present". Rutgers University Press. Retrieved 19 February 2017 – via Google Books.
- Petterson, Palle B. (6 July 2011). "Cameras into the Wild: A History of Early Wildlife and Expedition Filmmaking, 1895-1928". McFarland. Retrieved 19 February 2017 – via Google Books.
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