苏格兰裙、坦克和飞机:苏格兰、电影和第一次世界大战

David Archibald, Maria A. Vélez-Serna
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摘要

本文描绘了商业电影在第一次世界大战期间促进苏格兰战争努力中的作用,概述了电影与战争之间关系的三个方面,这些关系是在1914年至1918年间制作的苏格兰非小说短片中观察到的。由电影经理制作或委托制作的当地主题电影的现有做法,在电影和战争之间创造了一种特殊的参与形式,这与国家新闻片或官方电影有本质上的不同。这篇文章分析了在苏格兰制作和展出的幸存的“主题短片”,这些短片结合了当地军队游行的画面,穿着方格呢短裙的士兵和热情的旁观者,旨在吸引聚集的人群回到电影院,在屏幕上看到他们自己。本文将文本分析与电影制作背景的历史叙述结合起来,考察了电影对浪漫化的高地士兵军国主义的依赖,以及对动员和武装的新奇吸引力,并将日益增长的工业动乱和反战活动置于一边,这些活动导致了“红色克莱德”一词的诞生。随后,文章探讨了1916年后英国政府接受电影宣传后,当地电影公司(如格林电影服务公司)是如何制作直接支持战争的电影的,例如1918年为食品部制作的《爱国猪肉》。通过他们的制作和展览实践,参展商调解了国际冲突,将其作为一个吸引人的奇观呈现给当地观众,但也动员了电影在苏格兰社区中的地位,以推进战争努力的意识形态和实践方面,包括招募,难民支持和筹款。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Kilts, tanks, and aeroplanes: Scotland, cinema, and the First World War
This article charts commercial cinema’s role in promoting the war effort in Scotland during the First World War, outlining three aspects of the relationship between cinema and the war as observed in Scottish non-fiction short films produced between 1914 and 1918. The existing practice of local topical filmmaking, made or commissioned by cinemamanagers, created a particular form of engagement between cinema andwar that was substantially different from the national newsreels or official films. The article offers an analysis of surviving short ‘topicals’ produced and exhibited in Scotland, which combine images of local military marches with kilted soldiers and enthusiastic onlookers and were designed to lure the assembled crowds back into the cinema to see themselves onscreen. Synthesising textual analysis with a historical account of the films’ production context, the article examines the films’ reliance on the romanticised militarism of the Highland soldier and the novelty appeal of mobilisation and armament, sidelining the growing industrial unrest and anti-war activities that led to the birth of the term ‘Red Clydeside’. The article then explores how, following the British state’s embracing of film propaganda post-1916, local cinema companies such as Green’s Film Service produced films in direct support of the war effort, for example Patriotic Porkers (1918, for theMinistry of Food). Through their production and exhibition practice exhibitors mediated the international conflict to present it to local audiences as an appealing spectacle, but also mobilised cinema’s position in Scottish communities to advance ideological and practical aspects of the war effort, including recruitment, refugee support, and fundraising.
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