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The Running Jumping & Standing Still Film

United Kingdom

1960

11 Min
Black and White
Silent
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Richard Lester, Peter Sellers

PROD Peter Sellers

SCR Peter Sellers, Richard Lester, Spike Milligan

DP Richard Lester

CAST Peter Sellers, Spike Milligan, Richard Lester, Leo McKern, Graham Stark, David Lodge, Norman Rossington, Bruce Lacey

ED Richard Lester, Peter Sellers

MUSIC Richard Lester

Synopsis

Filmed by Richard Lester (using Peter Sellers’ new Bolex 16 mm camera), and edited by Lester and Sellers, The Running Jumping & Standing Still Film was a home movie made ostensibly by friends for friends, but who were in truth desperate to break into movies. Shot over two Sundays at a cost of £70 (including £5 for the rental of a field), this eleven-minute film features the comedic talents of Sellers, Milligan, Richard Lester, Graham Stark, and others. Even though the film lacked a plot and had no dialogue, it nevertheless quickly gathered a following and eventually won a prize (at the San Francisco Film Festival). Amazingly, it was even nominated for an Academy Award. —Alastair Roxburgh

Director

Original

Richard Lester

If any single director can encapsulate the popular image of Britain in the Swinging Sixties, then it is probably Richard Lester. With his use of flamboyant cinematic devices and liking for zany humour, he captured the vitality, and sometimes the triviality, of the period more vividly than any other director. This has been somewhat to the detriment of his later work which, whilst more conventional in style, has qualities which have been overshadowed by his fashionable earlier output.

Lester was born in Philadelphia, USA, on 19 January 1932. After graduating in clinical psychology from the University of Pennsylvania, he began his career in American television as a stagehand, rising to become a director at just 20. He left for Europe in 1954, settling in Britain in 1956.

His sympathy for anarchic comedy made him an ideal director for the television series A Show Called Fred (ITV, 1956), where he worked with Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan. He teamed up with them again for… read more

Original

Peter Sellers

One of the greatest comic talents of his generation, Peter Sellers had an exceptional gift for losing himself in a character — so much so that, beyond his remarkable skill as a performer and his fondness for the humor of the absurd, it’s difficult to draw a connection between many of his best performances. While his fondness for playing multiple roles in the same film may have seemed like a stunt coming from many other actors, Sellers had the ability to make each character he played seem distinct and different, and while he was known and loved as a funnyman, only in a handful of roles was he able to explore the full range of his gifts, which suggested he could have had just as strong a career as a dramatic actor.
Born Richard Henry Sellers on September 8, 1925, Sellers was nicknamed “Peter” by his parents, Bill and Agnes Sellers, in memory of his brother, who was a stillbirth. Bill and Agnes made their living as performers on the British vaudeville circuit, and Sellers made his… read more

Wall

Displaying 2 wall posts.
Picture of lizle

lizle

10Jan12

next is jumping and hopping

Picture of Andrés Baldíos

Andrés Baldíos

15Dec11

¡Esto sí que es juntarse con los cuates a experimentar relevancias cinematográficas y no mamadas!

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