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"newsreel" Definitions
  1. a short film of news that was shown in the past in cinemas

136 Sentences With "newsreel"

How to use newsreel in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "newsreel" and check conjugation/comparative form for "newsreel". Mastering all the usages of "newsreel" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Mr. Wajda tells his story like a thriller: The truth emerges through the shifting Communist propaganda of two decades as depicted in interview after interview, newsreel after newsreel.
Today that aging newsreel is being played in sharp reverse.
Newsreel footage and audio (1:19 long) is HERE on YouTube.
But "VR newsreel" is the closest I can come to describing it.
Zeligs don't only have to appear in the frame of a newsreel.
Newsreel footage of the actual unrest barely scratches the surface of events.
Silent newsreel that has to get your attention in the first few seconds.
As soon as the ceremony ended, it was repeated for a newsreel camera.
Newsreel footage of the ceremony shows the first meeting between Hudner and Daisy.
This unending newsreel creates an eternal visual register for Black excellence, lest anyone forget.
But he wanted no images from the camps, no newsreel footage, since those were sacrilege.
Earlier this year, the Times made a virtual reality newsreel of the 2016 presidential campaign.
It was in that practice that I first came across newsreel video of the Afronauts.
While in his 20s, Mr. Slocombe documented Germany's 1939 invasion of Poland as a newsreel cameraman.
The combination of natural lighting and newsreel-like use of "shakycam" created an erratically voyeuristic experience.
But I fear that we are once again in the same newsreel that I've seen before.
While closely adapted from Mr. Desnoes's novel, Alea's film is greatly enriched by interpolated newsreel material.
Newsreel reporter: We still like to remember that, once upon a time, Texas had its own president.
" Newsreel clips available on YouTube capture the charm of what Lewis calls "this large, disheveled, cerebral male.
And while you wait, take a look at the video of Truman's 1947 speech in the newsreel above.
They were taken to Glenborrodale Castle, where they were shown a newsreel of the year that they had missed.
For the past 58 years, Williams's last game has been seen in grainy, black-and-white, newsreel-like footage.
Except for some brief, grainy shots from a newsreel covering the divorce, footage from that night was never screened.
If her image is to carry some weight, she has to make it part of our contemporary newsreel world.
Other than the odd bit of newsreel footage before the latest Douglas Fairbanks picture, that was pretty much it.
MGM's cameras were given prime positioning in the Cathedral of Monaco, alongside four newsreel cameras and four live television cameras.
John Kidd's early life is like a Wes Anderson newsreel of an American upbringing — extraordinary and crackpot, bending toward fabulism.
The team worked from original archaeological drawings, models, photographs, first-hand testimonies and newsreel footage to piece together the ruins.
Here's some newsreel coverage and NASA footage of Glenn's 1962 orbital flight and a PBS interview on the 50th anniversary.
Or there was this move to Facebook, and everybody's doing this short, silent autoplay, silent newsreel, and it wasn't good work.
Why has a newsreel that showcases a technology that's over 60 years old struck a chord with savvy beauty lovers today?
Most of today's quantum computers are best-likened to jolty, primitive airplanes from 19th-century newsreel footage — they're far from perfect.
The video's colors feel duller than those of earlier NYT VR project the Displaced, which also adds to the newsreel feel.
"Fats, how did this rock 'n' roll all get started anyway?" an interviewer for a Hearst newsreel asked him in 1957.
" Ten Things Everyone Should Know About RaceA fact sheet from the California Newsreel documentary series "Race — the Power of an Illusion.
Relive the sadness of Barb's disappearance with this old newsreel from 5 WIYZ Hawkins, Indiana — the setting of Netflix phenomenon, Stranger Things.
The seemingly endless, dystopian newsreel of Trump's America, and the rise of the 'alt-right' all contributed to a more protective mood.
Dick's mother is said to have been "overwhelmed" when taken to a cinema to see newsreel footage of his recent race victory.
The haunting newsreel rolls behind her eyes: The tree-lined avenue of Paseo de la Castellana — home to Spanish royalty and grand palaces.
You'd be forgiven for thinking this is a story from the early days of the suffragette movement or a black-and-white newsreel.
At times, the filmmakers seem to be producing a historical family doc, building a timeline out of home videos and old newsreel footage.
Federer appears in old-timey mock-newsreel footage with a wooden racket and a cable-knit sweater, shaking hands with a mustachioed duke.
I think that although Holocaust historians have taken issue with a lot of the assertions in it, it's almost like watching newsreel footage.
As a soldier in postwar Paris he brashly barged in on the American writer Gertrude Stein trailed by an underemployed Army newsreel crew.
This explains why this vintage British newsreel segment — which shows the magical mixing process for face powder — has already racked up millions of views.
At La Capelle, flashes lit up the night as the envoys were photographed by waiting press and newsreel cameramen, then transferred to French cars.
Down the hall from my room were that night's victims of automobile accidents, and as I watched the newsreel I could hear their screams.
Inside Terminal 4, a line of hungry men, women and children like something from a Depression-era newsreel formed outside a Dunkin' Donuts stand.
"I found an old vintage newsreel of Walt Disney on opening day of this attraction and there he was leaning on it," he said.
In footage from one newsreel, the voice-over describes Japanese-Americans being sent not to concentration camps but to "pioneer communities" in the desert.
The video is actually a clip from a larger documentary by British Pathé, a newsreel production company from the first half of the 20th century.
Haynes made meticulous sets and props for his Lilliputian world, and structured his story using documentary tropes—talking heads, newsreel footage, performance clips, laxative ads.
A production of Cuba's Teatro el Público, it includes newsreel footage that seems to show the suffering of soldiers and civilians during the Cuban revolution.
The show opened with a newsreel-like montage—the Iran-hostage crisis, J.F.K.'s motorcade—which culminated with the sweet, smiling face of Trayvon Martin.
Scenes from the 1952 ordeal were captured by a British Pathé newsreel photographer who arrived two days in, and broadcast the story around the world.
In a newsreel released by the National Archives, polling places in Alabama in 1966 were notably "swamped" by record breaking African-American and white voter turnout.
You guys and your audience knows this story better than I do, probably, but everybody jumps on that and begins pumping out this silent newsreel video.
The Hindenburg ended up exploding in front of a waiting group of newsreel cameras and becoming the first aviation disaster filmed as it was taking place.
WINNER: GOD HORSE ON TREADMILL No. 22015 UNC–UCLA, 24 Almost entirely unremarkable newsreel from the 20033 title game, which, of course, found UCLA the victor.
She spent a few years working in journalism and as a film distributor at Third World Newsreel, a media center that highlights the work of minorities.
Nevertheless, I suggest that watching that old newsreel should become (along with a communal reading of "The Night Before Christmas") part of a family's holiday ritual.
Among them is Newsreel Collective's 50-minute cinema verité-style Columbia Revolt (1968), which captured the chaotic standoff between Columbia University's administration and antiwar student protesters.
It moves like a newsreel, rarely spending more than a few minutes with any given location, and transitioning from one event to the next with little fanfare.
Go back to 2000 and if you wanted to find a document on an extremely old person, you had to use the old hand-crank newsreel. Wow.
We would see two features, a newsreel, cartoons and a serial in which a young lady was tied to the tracks with a train heading toward her.
"In this jar, we have a sample of cancerous human tissue," Dr. George Gey (Reed Birney) explains in a 1950s-style newsreel in the film's early moments.
"My father is buried three gravestones from a stone: 'Here lies the heart and soul of a newsreel cameraman,'" Krause told The Chicago Sun-Times in 2003.
In "One Tenth of a Nation," a 1953 newsreel about prominent African-Americans, Ormes appears sporting a wicked pair of Eartha Kitt eyebrows and pin-curled bangs.
The decision to document the war "came from General George Marshall's belief that Hollywood filmmakers could grab people's hearts in a way that newsreel films couldn't," said Harris.
Timeless themes of tyranny, family loyalty, and loss are updated with ostentatious fashions, drag cabaret, and newsreel projections, as five actors energetically take on a series of roles.
You can hear it in his fireside addresses and radio talks, read it in his formal speeches to Congress and the nation, watch it in the newsreel clips.
The choice the NBA made is only a single frame from a newsreel that's been playing out on televisions across the nation, and unfortunately the move is not surprising.
Newsreel reporter: Whenever illegal hooch or beer was discovered by the feds, it met the same fate: crack open the kegs and let the contents flow down the drain.
Much of it consists of archived material: diary entries, correspondence, newsreel footage and other cinematic records, plus many evocative stills—Bell was, among her other accomplishments, a fine photographer.
With a script by the poet Archibald MacLeish, narration by Eric Sevareid of CBS News and an abundance of photographs and newsreel footage, Mr. Kaplan created a warm portrait.
President Dwight Eisenhower welcomed a curly-haired 5-year-old girl in 21625, signing her autograph book and giving her a peck on the cheek for the newsreel cameras.
Black-and-white films were consistent with the newsreel footage that brought details of the war to American and British audiences — and where then did they see the newsreels?
You might enter halfway through the main movie, watch it until the end, see the cartoons and the newsreel and then start from the beginning to catch what you'd missed.
The visual style, however, is striking: Scenes are filmed against hazy backdrops of other films; a short introductory segment imitates an old-style newsreel, replete with scratches on the film.
Close examination of the newsreel footage of the 1919 World Series, improbably recovered from the permafrost of the Yukon, offers no help in determining which plays were on the level.
When the last Nazi concentration camps were liberated in spring 21970 and the public saw newsreel footage and photos of emaciated prisoners and piles of corpses, those reports were brutally confirmed.
The film is built around long takes and evolving conversations between the group, and uses dream-like sequences, newsreel footage, and occasional off-screen narration that breaks into the realist narrative.
The First Purge kicks off with newsreel footage from our real world showing unrest and protests over inequality, racial violence, and everything else you can't escape outside the movie theater's walls.
CreditCreditJustine Kurland for The New York Times The way the lawyer William Timmons described the case, it was practically a newsreel melodrama, with a helpless widow being menaced by a heartless tycoon.
Mr. Lester's two-dimensional characters are set amid clips of newsreel footage and subject to jolting bits of violence as the movie, continuously self-reflexive, jumps from one theater of war to another.
The intertwined sensations associated with those environments—the roiling of crowds, collective ecstasy, blood, sweat, the beating of drums—fuel Irrelevant, an assemblage of tortured club tracks, snipped newsreel samples, and atonal static.
Blending newsreel footage, Baldwin's televised appearances (like his Dick Cavett interview or Yale debate with William F. Buckley), and modern-day media, he frames callbacks across time of political rhetoric and social unrest.
In the archival newsreel from 5 WIYZ, anchor Brenda Wood tells viewers that there is still no word on the fate of Barbara Holland, sadly her friends could not be reached for comment.
So instead of asking for the newsreel, we can quickly dive into the substantive stuff, like what she gained from that trip to Marrakesh or how she really feels about her career change.
The newsreel footage of the Germans advancing on Paris shown in the film is what I saw in newsreels (the television of the time) at my neighborhood movie theater that spring, May 1940.
The new Golden Age is heralded with a series of newspaper headlines and newsreel clips that condense six days of social chaos, as euphoric mass production gives way to inflation, panic and catastrophe.
"Art of Memory" (1987) became Mr. Vasulka's best-known work — a reshaping and manipulation of photographs and newsreel footage of 20th-century wars that rolls, unfurls and overlaps onscreen like jagged, disturbing nightmares.
"The Drift" (2006) explored similarly grim subject matter with songs such as "Cossacks Are" and "Clara", a track inspired by the newsreel footage of Mussolini's death that had haunted Mr Walker since his youth.
Unlike "Post Zang Tumb Tuuum," it limits documentary material to an initial gallery, where a newsreel montage takes us from the foundation of the republic in 1946 to the "dolce vita" of the 1960s.
Early 20023th-century newsreel footage accompanied 22002th-century crafts by Chalon-speaking artisans, as well as grimy assemblages, bulbous mid-century pottery and other eclectic items, culminating with a gargantuan plywood mural referencing 22155/22.
Because Spielberg didn't want the action to come across as fake, he proposed that Private Ryan's visual style should look antique—more like newsreel footage or a documentary like Memphis Belle than a Hollywood film.
Old black and white army newsreel footage of the blossoming mushroom clouds would be next; then fast-forward to the ruins and citywide aftermath of the 19533/11 World Trade Center attacks in New York.
Luckily, there's more eye candy to be had: As one Reddit user notes, British Pathé posts historical beauty videos in its newsreel archive to YouTube — and the beauty geeks inside of us just can't get enough.
"Just like life," another character says of watching the newsreel; he could be talking about the story itself and about the best of Kipling's fiction in general — its specificity, its busyness, its energy and depth of feeling.
His most notorious flick, A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Moon, takes Kaysing's assertions and illustrates them with a surreal pastiche of newsreel footage, Latin chanting, and lots of screen dissolves of Bible verses.
It also helps that the Manhattan Archie has little curiosity about what he calls "current events," thus sparing the reader the newsreel-like interludes of potted history that are constantly interjected into the two other story lines.
Later, in an act of détournement, found newsreel celluloid footage of factory workers and the French occupation of Indochina are spliced in and crazily attacked with the creative-destructive technique of painting out and scratching out faces.
One of the final shots in season 1 showed Prime Minister Anthony Eden (Jeremy Northam) passed out in a drug-induced haze as newsreel footage of Egypt's leader, Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser (Amir Boutrous) fizzles out before him.
Mr. van Hove's version, brilliantly designed by his constant collaborator Jan Versweyveld, begins with scratchy projected newsreel footage of the 1933 Reichstag fire in Berlin, which destroyed the German Parliament building and cemented the power of Adolf Hitler.
Proud parents Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip posed for photos and newsreel footage, alongside the Queen's father, King George VI and his mother Queen Mary, meaning four generations of former, current and future royals were seen all together.
To get callers prepared, the company sent a film to local theaters, demonstrating its use:This short subject newsreel was shown in movie theaters the week before a town's or region's telephone exchange was to be converted to dial service.
In October 1965, I was in a California hospital recovering from an appendectomy when I watched a newsreel showing American B-52s dropping napalm on Vietnamese villages, while troops on the ground methodically set fire to thatched-roof huts.
Once it gets to you, you're drawn back again and again, the way the navy man in the story is compelled to watch over and over a newsreel in which he thinks he catches a glimpse of Mrs. Bathurst.
The film is notable for its violence and its Ennio Morricone score, but also for its removed and newsreel-like visual style, which made Pontecorvo's fictionalized depictions of freedom fighters and French officers all the more realistic and memorable.
Set up by the ruling Justice and Development (AK) party, they display a newsreel dominated since the coup attempt of July 15th by anti-coup advertisements, images of pro-democracy rallies and the slogan "Hakimiyet Milletindir" ("sovereignty belongs to the nation").
He told me about the Elevated trains of Brooklyn, about the all-day programs at his local movie theatre: a newsreel, a cartoon, a serial, a comedy short, the B picture, and, finally, the A picture, all for a dime.
Loader and the Rafferty brothers combined newsreel footage, propaganda films, candid and news photos, cartoons, public service announcements, songs, and other materials from the 1940s, '50s, and '60s, all dealing with nuclear weapons and their looming threat to human civilization.
Notable films include home movies by the songwriters George and Ira Gershwin; issues of the "All-American News," a newsreel intended for black audiences in the mid-20th century; and a selection of instructional films about mental health from the 1950s.
Investigate sound elements: Embellished by an elegantly produced mix of intricate musical interludes, soundbites and archival newsreel, the conversations on "The Daily" give listeners an inside glimpse into the firsthand experience of reporting major news developments and watching them unfold.
A newsreel sequence nods to "Citizen Kane," while other shots — and onscreen text that sometimes has the florid formality of silent-film intertitles — would look perfectly at home in a reel from 1919, the year around which the story is set.
Some have pointed to the political sensitivity of "One Second," which tells the story of a man who escapes a Chinese prison farm during the Cultural Revolution in search of a newsreel and encounters an orphan girl along the way.
But watching John McEnroe — sweets aside, we should all be in the shape he is in at 24 — and his still uncommonly gifted touch before the main event was like watching an old black-and-white newsreel before a modern 231-D movie.
But in recent weeks, its real breakout star has been a patriotic squirrel from a 1953 newsreel, which has been viewed more than three million times since it was posted online as part of a collection of GIFs made from the archives' holdings.
Nevertheless, a crowd estimated at 20,85033 gathered just beyond the fence, listening with a quiet attention in the cold, nearly starless night as first FDR and then Churchill spoke from the balcony; a grainy newsreel of the two speeches is available on YouTube.
John McWhorter, a linguist at Columbia University, grew up with a black family and friends in Philadelphia and New Jersey, but as he writes in a deeply personal recent essay, he has no—his term—"blaccent", sounding "like an announcer in a 1940s newsreel".
I returned a week later for "Jackie," and was charmed and moved by the package of preshow films, which included a newsreel of Jacqueline Kennedy water-skiing with John Glenn — "the astronaut and the first lady put on a dazzling show" — and another announcing Mrs.
He was later an assistant on an experimental expressionist film and worked for a newsreel studio, where a disagreement with his manager led to a six-month banishment to a farm, according to the book "The Cinema of Central Europe" (2004), edited by Peter Hames.
The set design, by the gifted Michael Yeargan, nimbly jumps among locales, and includes a turntable that cleverly evokes the spinning of an LP. Adding groovy oomph are the projections by Nicholas Hussong, black-and-white newsreel-style footage evoking the hysteria surrounding the boys' every move.
Joe and Juliana's growing relationship was the glue that held much of season one together: the former is a Nazi spy whose real allegiance was frequently in question, and the latter a woman who reluctantly joined the resistance after her half-sister Trudy died transporting a newsreel.
Ms. B alluded to an incident last year where female news anchor Lim Hyeon-ju happened to be wearing glasses on television that became a significant moment for bucking beauty standards, saying: "It all started with a female news anchor who wore glasses during a newsreel."
This post originally appeared on VICE CanadaYou know that scene in Children of Men where Clive Owen is riding the bus while a propaganda video is listing the names of world capitals over apocalyptic newsreel footage before declaring "THE WORLD HAS COLLAPSED; ONLY BRITAIN SOLDIERS ON"?
You can check out some of our favorite picks so far below: The Beatles arriving in America A clip from 1967 dating advice film "How to Succeed with Brunettes" Waving hello in Yosemite Valley in 1924 Ernest Hemingway enjoys a drink The destruction of the Nazi swastika from the 1945 film The War Ends in Europe United States Forest Service mascot Woodsy Owl gets rid of some trash Performing dogs from archive newsreel footage More newsreel footage, this time from just before the Battle of Okinawa in 1945 It's a neat selection and a valuable initiative from NARA, but when it comes to online historical and cultural archives, this is really only scratching the surface.
By slowing down and repeating the government footage in CROSSROADS, in some sense dragging out the destruction, Conner re-creates the fascination and horror he experienced as a teenager, watching patriotic newsreel footage in a movie theater before the main attraction played, reports that documented the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
While Adamson addresses aesthetics, her primary focus is on film as an activist tool: her subjects include the American Newsreel Collective's documentary studies of the antiwar movement; feminist cinema in Italy; early video groups such as Videofreex; and the Marxist work of France's Dziga Vertov Group and Argentina's Third Cinema.
Using newsreel footage, interviews with art historians, curators, and even Hitler's one-time neighbor, the film makes the case that the purging (read: theft) of art associated with Jewish artists, collectors, and intellectuals was just another step before the attempt to exterminate the Jews themselves while claiming their property and erasing every trace of their existence.
His 1986 "Handsworth Songs," documenting English riots of the previous year for Channel Four, was at once forthright and elusive: Combining still photography and newsreel footage with the classic hymn "Jerusalem," which imagines Jesus walking on "England's mountains green," the film presented viewers with a kind of hands-off but intensely evocative buffet of sadness, irony, hope, and despair.
NB: I think making it in black and white became very important for many reasons, some of which [were] replicating 1960s African video or images of Africa that you usually see in black and white … [it was] an immediate way to transport us into that era … but then the film also questions the validity and the reality of newsreel.
The Soviet anthem blared waywardly within and my propaganda newsreel alter ego was born: please to welcome Comrade Timoteya, Stakhanovite hero cyclist, on glorious mission to celebrate majesty and large scale of Soviet Union, to admire mighty border defenses against rapacity of capitalism and lackey who snivel, to live proud dream of friendship and cooperation in socialist brotherhood.
Juliana Crain (Alexa Davalos), for instance, is supposed to be the crux of the series, as the man in the high castle himself (Stephen Root, a great actor wasted in a MacGuffin of a role) has named her as crucial in the collection of the newsreel-style films that tell of alternate universes and are at the heart of the series' resistance movement.
Looking at Donald Trump stoking his supporters into a frenzy, attacking "them" -- whoever "they" happen to be at the moment -- vowing to return American to greatness and then flashing his self-satisfied smile, the mind harks back to those grainy newsreel images of Benito Mussolini, the theatrical Italian "Duce," the leader, who became the central figure of fascist Italy a century ago.
There's bootleg audio footage lurking on the internet of Anika Noni Rose — Tiana in Disney's The Princess and the Frog — doing an early version of "Satisfied" before Renée Elise Goldsberry took over the role of Angelica; seeing even a minute of that would have been miles more interesting than what we actually get, which is a newsreel montage of all the magazine covers on which the Hamilton Broadway cast has appeared.

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