![]() |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|
Night Mail (Collectors Edition) (Remastered and Restored)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Our DVD Price: £13.99 RRP:
Availability In Stock - should be despatched within 24 hours. This product will be dispatched from Guernsey. Delivery times
Earn 65 Bonus Points when you buy this product. More info |
Film Description
Night Mail remains one of the most popular and instantly recognised films in British film history, and was one of the most critically acclaimed films to be produced within the British documentary film movement. An account of the operation of the Postal Special - the Royal Mail train delivery service - it shows the various stages and procedures of that operation, through mail collection to sorting. As the train nears its destination we see the best-known sequence, in which WH Auden's spoken verse and Benjamin Britten's music are combined over a montage of racing train wheels.
Film Information
| Director | Basil Wright / Harry Watt | ||||
| Genre | Documentary
|
||||
| Country | UK | Language | ENGLISH | Year | 1936 |
DVD Extras
The Way to the Sea (UK, 1936) Features verse by Auden and music by Britten; Spotlight on the Night Mail (UK, 1948); Thirty Million Letters (UK, 1963); Night Mail 2 (UK, 1986) (updated version of Night Mail featuring poetry by Blake Morrison); Fully illustrated booklet with essays by Blake Morrison and film composer Miguel Mera; Benjamin Britten diary extracts and more.
Technical Details
| Certificate | E | Length | 116 mins | Label | BFI | ||
| Cat No | BFIVD522 | Format | DVD | Black & White | |||
| Region | 2 | Aspect | 1.33:1 | ||||
3 Stills
![]() |
![]() |
Share your thoughts and opinions - write a review
Review by Graeme Hobbs on 30th October 2007
This is a comprehensive release of a flm of central importance in British film history. One of the most highly revered productions from the GPO Film Unit, it is an experimental film that shows the nightly run of the postal special train from London to Glasgow. A highly collaborative film, with input from Harry Watt, Basil Wright, Alberto Cavalcanti and John Grierson among others, it is however the WH Auden/Benjamin Britten section (‘This is the night mail crossing the border/bringing the cheque and the postal order…’) that is its famous bit. Justly so, as a palpable excitement builds as the train speeds up and the verse speeds up as the train nears its destination. There is more to the film than this though, with its incidental noises orchestrated by Cavalcanti, and its night scenes of staff and trains at Crewe station that recall Bill Brandt photographs in their use of light and shade particularly noteworthy.
The film’s popularity and commercial success has come at a price. Original negatives suffered much wear and tear, and these materials were used to strike many prints without duplicate materials made for preservation. This new restoration of Night Mail was made using a new duplicate negative struck from the film's original nitrate fine grain element. Graded, mended, cleaned and stabilised, it still shows its age, but it now looks and sounds better than it has for many years.
A selection of related films accompany this release. Night Mail 2 is a 50th anniversary production, with its poetry from Blake Morrison roughing up the romanticism that has accrued to the former film: ‘dirty, oily, greasy … heavy work’ says a postman of that iconic catching and dispatching apparatus. Way to the Sea is a rather eccentric film about line electrification that also benefits from Auden and Britten’s inputs. Spotlight on the Night Mail uses much the same raw material as Night Mail to very different effect , while the BTF production 30 Million Letters is a real treat, boasting posties in blizzards and even using a horse and cart in the sea to deliver mail. (‘I never venture across if it’s more than four and a half feet’ says the intrepid mailman.)
View more reviews by Graeme Hobbs
![]()
Review by James White, BFI on 23rd October 2007
This new BFI Digital Restoration of Nightmail was made using a new duplicate negative struck from the film's original nitrate fine grain element, preserved at the BFI National Archive. Each frame was painstakingly graded to capture the full values of the film, with strict attention paid to contrast, detail and consistency. The film then underwent full picture restoration to remove scratches, dirt and debris, as well as improve torn and missing frames and address stability issues. The audio was transferred from the best possible source materials available and underwent further restoration, cleaning up bumps, pops, clicks, buzz and sound dips.
Our efforts to restore Nightmail were presented with many challenges. The general wear and tear on the original negatives had clearly been a consequence of the film's popularity. Over the years these materials were used to strike many prints, without duplicate materials made for preservation, as was the standard practice back then. During the film, Nightmail also incorporated shots from stock footage, making for wide variances in image quality throughout the film. Sound was recorded mainly in post-production, but had acquired a number of problems needing attention as well.
It must be said that Nightmail has not been well-served on DVD or Video until now. The film always looked quite grey and flat, with muddy details and poor sound - a sad representation of a film of such high importance to British Film History. With this release, we have worked hard to correct these problems and present Nightmail in the highest quality possible. Suffice it to say that Nightmail now looks and sounds better than it has in many years, and the BFI release is without doubt the definitive version of this seminal film.
![]()
Article - "Night Mails"
by Graeme Hobbs
Friday 8th February 2008
One of the most famous productions of British documentary film, Night Mail, was recently treated to a restoration which has been released on dvd by the bfi in a comprehensive and pleasing package which also features four associated films which provide a stimul... View article in full
![]()
Article - "Land of Promise: The British Documentary Movement 1930-1950"
by Michael Brooke
Saturday 12th April 2008
"Doubtless, were we a rational race, the spectacle of our present position would overwhelm us. But then we've always, thank heaven, remained deaf to appeals to reason, convinced that the experts are invariably wrong." So says the cartoonist Osbert Lancaster during Hu... View article in full
![]()
Hand-picked recommendations of related films
|
|
Geoffrey Jones: The Rhythm of Film Dir: Geoffrey Jones Since the 1950s, Geoffrey Jones has been making films that look, sound and feel like nothing else. With his extr... More > |
|
|
British Transport Films Collection (Vol 1): On and Off the Rails A 2-disc collection of some of the very best British Transport films from the archives. A must for transport ent... More > |
|
|
British Transport Films Collection (Vol 3): Running a Railway Dir: Various A third collection of films showing off Britain's wonderful heritage of archive films selected from the British ... More > |
This film is part of the following Customer Film Lists
The Independent Readers Offers by Independent \ MovieMail
The latest Readers Offers from The Independent, brought to you by MovieMail.
Recommendations from fellow customers
Land of Promise: The British Documentary Movement 1930-1950
The Humphrey Jennings Collection
by Jean Vigo
by Chris Marker
| Special Offers | ||||||||||||||||
|
More Great Offers |
| BestSellers | ||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
| Recommended by MovieMail | ||||||||||
|
A curated collection of the best DVDs
Latest Additions
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
| Just Released |
|
Garage Cloak and Dagger Picnic at Hanging Rock Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont The Other Boleyn Girl |
| Coming Soon |
|
La Vie de Jesus (Masters of Cinema) Up the Yangtze Im Not There A Year In Provence The Satyajit Ray Collection (Volume 1) |
| Home | Film Catalogue | New Releases | Special Offers | Top 30 | ||
| Film Collections | Film Media | News | Your Account | Help | Become a MovieMail affiliate | ||
For questions or assistance, call us on (+44) 0844 776 0900 or email on enquiries@moviemail-online.co.uk © 2004-2007 MovieMail, Ltd., All Rights Reserved. Find out more about MovieMail |
||
|