Posts from the “Video” Category

Bridport celebrates a man who has lived by his wits

AN AMUSING show of cartoons by Sam Smith has opened at Bridport Arts Centre.

The display on the walls of the café and the foyer celebrates half a lifetime’s work.

Mr Smith, who lives in Bothenhampton, had his first cartoon published in the Evening Standard in 1976.

Before that, his sense of humour hadn’t always been appreciated. As a boy, he was asked to leave his grammar school in Ipswich because the head didn’t like him clowning about.  

But a wild streak of wit suits a cartoonist well.

“If I can make people titter, chortle and think about something at the same time then I’ve achieved something,” says Mr Smith.

On the evidence of the exhibition at Bridport Arts Centre, he’s achieved many, many things. Judge for yourself Tuesdays to Saturdays, 10am to 4pm, up until the end of May.

Or you can see and hear Mr Smith by clicking on this link.

Dorset film shocker The Damned out uncut

NOTORIOUS Dorset film The Damned has been re-released uncut on DVD.

Oliver Reed and Shirley Anne Field in The Damned

Shot in Weymouth and Portland in 1961, The Damned features Oliver Reed as the leader of a gang of thuggish Teddy Boys who attack American tourist Macdonald Carey, after he’s lured by Shirley Anne Field into a side street. Field and Carey later fall in love. Fleeing the jealous Reed, they find themselves imprisoned by a sinister scientist who keeps children with special powers in caves on Portland, in preparation for a nuclear war.

Macdonald Carey and Shirley Anne Field in The Damned trespass into a secret installation on Portland

Even this briefest of summaries shows why The Damned is generally reckoned to be the strangest Hammer film ever made.

It was directed by Joseph Losey, who’d been blacklisted from working in America during the Cold War paranoia of the McCarthy era.

The Damned was not released in Britain until 1963, and only then in a cut-down version.

It was not released in America until 1965, as These Are The Damned, and it was trimmed even more, to 77 minutes. It was seen then as “an English shocker” and “a strong comment about the nuclear age”.

Now – this week, in the USA and Canada - The Damned has been re-issued in its original 96-minute form in a three-disk DVD set from Columbia (Icons of Suspense: Hammer Films).

It’s provoked some fascinating re-assessments.

Richard Brody in The New Yorker magazine: “Losey’s strongest critique of the times emerges in his wide-screen, black-and-white images, which convey the superficial charms of conventional society, the reproachful serenity of the sea and the sky, and the despairing humanism of modernistic sculpture—and do so with a unique stylistic flourish…

“The cutting-edge accessories—from chic attire and whiz-bang audiovisual equipment to a convertible sports car and balletic helicopters—are emblematic of the moment, and dazzle Losey even as he rues them.

“His complex relationship to modernity makes this film as quintessentially modern as those by Antonioni and Godard which were its contemporaries.”

To read more – and it is worth reading more – click here.

Bunkered children in The Damned

Dave Kehr in The New York Times also refers to Antonioni’s L’Avventura and continues: “A film of influences, These Are the Damned was also influential — at least on one other American director then working in England. The modernistic design of the bunker and the weirdly avid embrace of nuclear Armageddon reappear in Stanley Kubrick’s 1964 “Dr. Strangelove”; the thematic contrast between the impulsive, interpersonal violence of Reed’s Teddy Boy character and the chilly, authoritarian violence of Knox’s government functionary is echoed in Kubrick’s 1971 film, “A Clockwork Orange.”

To read more – and again, it is well worth reading more – click here.

It’s also crisply reviewed on American film blog Fangoria.

To buy The Damned – or to think about doing so – click here. A multi-region DVD player would be required to see the uncut version, and Amazon warns of possible problems [though - Editor's Note - I've never had any].

And you can watch the start of the film on YouTube.

Dorset potter Tim Hurn on “a romantic process”

THERE’S a superb photograph of the Bettiscombe potter Tim Hurn in a new book coming out next month. It shows Tim carefully reaching out from the mouth of his kiln for a plankful of pots.

The kiln itself is surrounded by gigantic quantities of wood. Different sorts and different sizes burn in different ways, and at different rates, and this helps to produce the variety of finishes that you see on Tim’s pots. I keep one of his weighty bowls on the windowsill right by me where I type and I love its starry black-brown finish, its randomly pitted caramelisation.

Anyway, I’m not going to reproduce the photograph here because the book it’s in costs £50 and I haven’t got permission to use it BUT there are exclusive extracts from Jasper Conran’s Country, with pictures by Andrew Montomery, on The Daily Telegraph’s website and you can see Mr Hurn by clicking on this link

“I’m keeping to a tradition of English pottery that’s been going on for generations,” Tim says. “I think there’s a certain romance in the process.”

If you want to see what he means, you could also watch this fiery film, made in the 21st century but suffused with history.

Dorchester town centre plans move a step closer

 
 
 

Dorchester town centre redeveloped: an artist's impression of what new West Dorset District Council offices could look like

WEST DORSET District Council is making a big effort to win support for plans for the revamp of Dorchester town centre, and below – word for word – are two press releases issued today. Why word for word? Because on big issues like this, hours and hours of effort goes into producing press releases, and if you regard them as rhetorical rhumbas or peruse them as political poems, they can actually give a surprising amount of pleasure.

The first one, for example, starts with the word “the”? Why “the” and not “a”, when there have been a couple of other schemes before that failed to come to anything? That’s the reason. “The” sounds more planned and definite, whereas “a” would subliminally raise the possibility that this scheme too might never materialise.

But then whoever wrote this is also honest. That’s why “long-awaited” comes next. The council has been wanting for the best part of twenty years to get a scheme going on the Charles Street site, and the writer feels compelled to acknowledge this fact while at the same time seeking also to suggest that over the last two decades the people of Dorchester have been chafing for action… But have they? 

There are also points omitted. I’ll just pick out two for now, one good, one bad. The bad, but hardly surprising, point is that there’s no mention of the recent fine Simons was given for bid rigging. I’ve put what WDDC had to say about this last September at the bottom of this press release.

The good point is that there is no mention of the Olympics. I was told a while ago that Team Dorset wanted to include the Charles Street redevelopment as an Olympic legacy – think how the spending of £60 million could swell the benefits claimed – but thankfully the idea was squashed. It’s bad enough seeing the Dorchester to Weymouth Relief Road claimed as an Olympic legacy. But that’s another story… For now, seriously, enjoy what’s below.     

THE LONG-AWAITED £60 million redevelopment of Dorchester town centre will move one step closer if a planning application is submitted next month.

The redevelopment of the Charles Street car park in Dorchester is a key priority for the district council.

The planned redevelopment would provide a more vibrant county town with quality facilities including extra shopping, a new library and adult learning centre, affordable housing, 484 public car parking spaces, a 60-bedroom hotel and a new bus stop.

There will be a place to leave cycles and new public toilets are also planned.

Developers, Simons – whose work with West Oxfordshire District Council recently landed a Best Regeneration Partnership award in the Community Partnership Awards – intends to submit a planning application to the district council by April.

Some major retailers have already shown interest in occupying the anchor store.

Pedestrian walkways will link the development to South Walks, Tudor Arcade and Hardye Arcade, meaning that the whole of the town centre will benefit from the development.

New council offices are also planned, and Dorset County Council is looking at whether relocating Dorchester Library Read more

Bridport Trick Factory: A Mum’s view. “If they weren’t doing this, they’d be trashing the house.”

 

 

Harriet Laurie with sons Caspar and Dillon

 

You can see Harriet Laurie on You Tube by clicking on this link  

GRAPHIC designer Harriet Laurie is one of the leaders of the fight to save Dorset’s only indoor skate park from destruction.

The Trick Factory on St Michael’s Trading Estate in Bridport is in danger of being knocked down so that landowners Haywards (originally teamed up with West Dorset District Council) can build flats on the site.

Ms Laurie is involved because she has three sons. She says, “If they weren’t doing this, they’d be at home trashing the house. This [place] is geared up for testosterone, and my home is a little bit of a cosy cottage where three big boys are just busting out at the seams, so they come here, they get it all out of their system, and they come home and they’re lovely.”

One of her boys, Caspar, admits: “I can skate, which I like doing, and I’m tired out when I get home, so I don’t stay up late, and I’m ready for school and stuff like that. It’s just a lot easier to come here and it’s something to do at night rather than going out around the town.”

The Trick Factory is thronging with boys trying out risky sporting moves. There’s plenty of fallings-off but no visible fallings-out.

Ms Laurie says: “There’s an awful lot they’re learning about how to co-operate with other people, and how to be generous, you know, allowing other people the space and the time to do their stuff and they all really encourage each other, there’s a wonderful kind of bonhomie.”

More activities for teenagers a West Dorset priority

The last major survey of public opinion in West Dorset was bmg research’s Place Survey, carried out in late 2008, published in full in October 2009.

According to this survey, residents’ two top priorities for improving life in West Dorset are more affordable decent housing (47% overall – 57% in Bridport) and more activities for teenagers (43% overall – 45% in Bridport).

This is why the future of the Trick Factory has become such an explosive issue – because it brings the two priorities of affordable housing and activities for teenagers into direct conflict.

(This is also why it’s remarkable that the Trick Factory should – until recently – have been so ignored by West Dorset District Council planners and landowners Haywards: – so casually earmarked for destruction – or so it seems to everyone I’ve spoken to about it…)

Should one priority give way to the other? Harriet Laurie: “Affordable housing is really important, but I think there’s not much point having affordable housing and then having that all full of kids who’ve got nothing to do, who are going to trash the place. You have got to get a balance, haven’t you, between keeping people busy and positive, as well as housing them. I don’t think one has to give way to the other. You can create a scheme that works for everybody.”

But is it now possible to get a scheme that works for everybody? Haywards’ planning appeal – against district councillors’ refusal to allow the transfomation of St Michael’s Trading Estate and the South West Quadrant of Bridport – will begin in West Bay on January 26.

Click here for the Trick Factory’s website 

Click here for the Trick Factory Support Group on Facebook, which (at the time of writing this) has nearly 1,500 members 

Future of Dorset’s only indoor skatepark hangs in balance

Trick Factory 1

A UNIQUE sporting venue for young people is in danger of being shut down and smashed to bits.

The Trick Factory in Bridport is popular with skateboarders and BMX bike riders from across Dorset, among them contenders for Britain’s BMX team in the 2012 Olympics.

The indoor park is threatened because it stands in the way of controversial plans for the redevelopment of Bridport’s South West Quadrant, which includes the St Michael’s Trading Estate.

Landowners Haywards are appealing against West Dorset District Council’s refusal earlier this year to grant permission for the transformation of the historic SW Quadrant. The Trick Factory is housed inside a relic of Bridport’s net and cordage industry called the Stover Building, which Haywards want to demolish and replace with housing.

Fire officer called in

Haywards’ architect Ken Morgan, as part of preparations for the appeal inquiry, twice in November inspected the Stover Building. Acting chiefly on concerns about a fire escape he saw blocked externally with some loose timber, he called in Dorset Fire and Rescue Service to assess whether it was safe for the Trick Factory to continue.

The Trick Factory has been built up over the last ten years by expert BMX rider Robert Ridge.

Watch Rob Ridge on YouTube talking about the future of The Trick Factory and the South West Quadrant by clicking on this link.

In an email to Mr Ridge, Mr Morgan stated: “I cannot comment for the landlords but my ‘newly realised concerns’ stem from the fact that I must prepare for the appeal inquiry scheduled for January, part of which directly relates to the refusal of Conservation Area Consent for demolition of the Stover Building. During inspections of the building I recognized the potential fire risk and danger to life and cannot, professionally or personally, ignore that.”

Fire officer visits

Mr Ridge has responded to Haywards’ moves, and fire service recommendations, by taking time off work to make improvements.

He said that when the fire officer arrived: “We duly gave him a little tour, and he was fortunate enough to see a busy, boisterous, functioning evening going on here, a lot of people having a lot of fun. He even took the time to speak to a few people, as well as assessing the situation for his obvious concerns, and he said that whilst there were things that needed doing, the measures that we had here, and the way we were running the facility, from what I could interpret, he was satisfied that he could leave, with certain things in place, he could leave the place, and we’re waiting to hear back to find out recommendations to bring us up to a fully satisfactory level. So whilst not everything is perfect here, we’re still running and we hope to keep running and hope to carry out the necessary remedial work.”

On the same night the fire officer came back, an hour or so later. “And in that time we’d already got hands on deck, as it were, to start tidying the place up, making our fire extinguishers more visible, and start on the list of things that he’d recommended, so, on that revisit, I’d like to think we scored a few points there, and I’m hoping that we can satisfy their obligations. We’re certainly hoping to make every effort to keep ourselves running here, to keep all parties happy.”    

Mr Ridge has also begun amassing his own team of supporters and advisers, including the high-profile human rights lawyer Clive Stafford-Smith, best known in Britain and America for his work with captives at Guantanamo Bay.

Mr Ridge got to know through Mr Stafford-Smith through a plumbing job he once did for him.

Possible weakness in Haywards’ case

The issue has become more intense because of the way the Stover Building’s future has been dealt with in planning applications so far. This has been identified by one objector as a potentially severe weakness in Haywards’ case.

Catherine Searle, of the Bridport Environment Group, has told the Planning Inspectorate that she wishes to speak at the appeal in January about the Stover Building and the Trick Factory. Ms Searle is a battle-hardened veteran of Bridport’s last major planning dispute, the bitter struggle between West Dorset District Council (WDDC) and a range of protestors over the future of Downe Hall back in the 1990s. Haywards’ applications for the redevelopment of the SW Quadrant were initially made with WDDC.

Ms Searle believes that the Stover Building proposals – because they affect a Conservation Area – should be “assessed against the same broad criteria as proposals to demolish a Listed Building, ie that ‘all reasonable efforts have been made to sustain existing uses or find viable new uses, and these efforts have failed’” [she is quoting planning guidance].

Ms Searle says that neither Haywards, nor district council committee reports, have referred to the existing use of the Stover Building as the Trick Factory, nor have they indicated any attempt to find any other viable new uses for it. This despite the fact that the Trick Factory has been going for ten years and attracts boys from across Dorset and East Devon, and sometimes places further beyond, such as Southampton. The Trick Factory is the only indoor skatepark in Dorset, and the nearest alternative to it is in Bristol. There is also an indoor park in Newquay.

Call for support to avert “great loss”

Trick Factory 2

Mr Ridge says that having to shut down the Trick Factory would be “a great shame” and “a great loss”, not just for himself but for many others, including the young people of Bridport.

He asked for people’s support: “Support is great, and I would say to anybody out there, if anybody knows, or anybody feels they can help in any way, they are more than welcome to come down or contact us.

“Any grant assistance is also useful as well. We’ve now got people looking at applying for grants as well, because we only run the place on a shoestring budget, on a very modest budget, and as with so many things the key to a lot of it is money and resources, so that would certainly help us in a lot of ways.”

For more details about the Trick Factory, and more pics and videos, click on this link here 

Old Bridport to Maiden Newton railway line may become Trailway

The branch line became a well-loved part of the local landscape. Poet and author Sylvia Townsend Warner, who lived in Frome Vauchurch just outside Maiden Newton, described the locomotive as trotting obediently under the shadow of Eggardon Hill like a little horse. She also wrote of the train’s “marmalade” light.