Wednesday 16 May 2012

Hell Is A City

I've mentioned 'Hell Is A City' before. Crime Noir shot in Manchester in 1960, starring Stanley Baker. I think the look of the film influenced some sections of my final film. The hard black and white. It's all tied in to the fictional/dream thing I've been concentrating on.

Starfish site - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Starfish sites, or bombing decoy sites, were deliberately created simulations of burning towns that were constructed in Britain during World War II. The name came from the code name for one of the sites, "Starfish", itself from the original code, SF, for Special Fire.

Starfish sites were used to decoy German night bombers away from bombing real towns. Towns thus successfully protected, according to some[who?], include Bristol, Sheffield, and Derby. 'Starfish' decoy sites were part of Britain’s war of deception against German attacks, and were designed to protect various targets, including airfields, factories, and even cities. They were established in July 1940 by the National Decoy Authority, as part of a programme of civil defences known as the 'C-series' of civil decoys. They were operated by lighting a series of controlled fires or other pyrotechnics during an air raid, in order to simulate an urban area targeted by bombs. There were various types of smaller decoy sites, including the “QL” decoy sites, which used lights, and the “QF” sites, which were dummy fire sites. The 'QL' decoys used a grid of muted lights to resemble factories during a poorly observed blackout.[1]

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[edit] Examples of Starfish sites

During World War II, a bombing decoy town was constructed on Black Down on the Mendip Hills, which was intended to represent the blazing lights of Bristol. The decoy, known under the code-name "Starfish", derived from the original code, SF (Special Fire), used fires of creosote and water to simulate incendiary bombs exploding. In addition, glow boxes were used to simulate the streets and railways of Bristol; the light bulbs were powered by electrical generators turned by Coventry Climax petrol engines contained in two bunkers.[2][3] The success of this endeavour is questionable, with no ground indications that the hills were used as targets.[4]

A Starfish decoy site existed at Long Wood at grid reference NS 540 524 outside Eaglesham in East Renfrewshire, Scotland. Clusters of impressions where basket fires once stood, bounded by fire-break trenches, covered much of the area in World War II photographs, and a prominent structure near the site may have been the decoy control bunker. Anti-aircraft gun emplacements have been noted at the site.[5] Carrington Moss, near Manchester, was another Starfish site.[6]

A relatively intact Starfish control bunker can also be seen at Liddington Hill overlooking Swindon. The bunker is at the edge of the small copse on the eastern summit of the hill, which is a landmark easily visible from the M4 motorway.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Hunt, Bob (2004-09-23). "Surface Sites - 'Q' Decoy Site". Portsdown Tunnels. http://www.portsdown-tunnels.org.uk/surface_sites/qsite_p1.html. Retrieved 2009-05-14. 
  2. ^ Davies, Les (March 2009). "Starfish and subterfuge". Mendip Times. http://www.mendiptimes.co.uk/. Retrieved 2009-02-24. 
  3. ^ Brown, Donald (1999). Somerset V. Hitler: Secret Operations in the Mendips, 1939-45. Countryside Books. ISBN 978-1-85306-590-3. 
  4. ^ "Mendip Hills An Archaeological Survey of the Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty". Somerset County Council Archeological Projects. http://www1.somerset.gov.uk/archives/hes/downloads/HES_MendipAONB.pdf. Retrieved 16 January 2011. 
  5. ^ "Long Wood, Starfish Decoy Site". RCAHMS. http://canmore.rcahms.gov.uk/en/site/229135/details/long+wood+starfish+decoy+site/. Retrieved 2009-11-16. 
  6. ^ Smith, Peter J. C. Luftwaffe Over Manchester: The Blitz Years 1940-1944, p.14. Neil Richardson 2003. ISBN 1-85216-151-5

[edit] Further reading

  • Fields of Deception - Britain's Bombing Decoys of World War II, Colin Dobson, Methuen Publishing, 2000, ISBN 978-0-413-74570-5.
  • The Bombing of Rolls-Royce at Derby in Two World Wars, 2002, Kirk, Felix & Bartnik, RR Heritage Trust

[edit] External links

[hide]
Allied military deception in World War II
General
Organizations
Units
Fictional formations
Operations
Leadership
Other people
Other
  • Starfish site

A little information of the Starfish Sites which prompted my building of a cardboard cut-out Manchester.

Composite Skyline

One 

Manchester_skyline_composite
of the earlier experiments with photography to capture Manchester on a broader scale. Not used in the final film, but I still like the piece.

A.R.C. Soundtracks

Media_http4bpblogspot_zhiiv

Collaborative experimental music from A.R.C Soundtracks, a part of which was used as the basis for the soundtrack of the final piece. This was an improvisational experiment I was involved with and I which felt had the right dream-quality I was looking for.

Saturday 12 May 2012

'The Kingdom Of The Rough'

Re-creating the street gangs of the 1800's. The Bengal Tigers fought the Holland Street Gang, amoungst others, patrolling Oldham Street and Ancoats, 'The Kingdom Of The Rough'. Youth gang culture was a huge problem in Victorian Manchester. They carried knives, wore a fashionable uniform (including a proto-Burberry) and terrified everyone. Fighting in the streets and 'Monkey Parades'. 

scuttler_on_oldham-vimeo_HD.mov Watch on Posterous

Sketchbook

Some sketchbook images and scribbles for the Unit X work. There are a couple of spider diagrams and the general working out of themes, characters and events. Not all of them tie into the animation itself, but they do show the gestation of the work. I was happy with the lion drawings, but sadly I couldn't make it work as an animation at the minute. I would have liked to have gotten Charlie Peace into the work as well, but I think thats an animation in itself. The Adam Dant and Ian Whadcock pages are included because I was trying to keep what they said during their lectures in mind whilst working on the animation. Apologies for the terrible handwriting.

 

Friday 11 May 2012

I Built Manchester In My Basement

Well, I photocopied it. After reading about 'Starfish Sites'. During WWII, there were nine Starfish Sites around Manchester, on the moors. Built out of cheap materials and lit by a few bulbs, these 'Other Manchesters' were in place to protect the 'Real' Manchester from German bombing raids. They weren't a real success, but I really like the idea of other, less complete versions of the city, out on the moors, unpopulated and empty. The face in  amongst the buildings is Dr John Dee, alchemist, mathematician, scientist and magician. He was Warden of what is now the Cathedral at the turn of the 16th century. There was something about the misdirection and duplicity of the Starfish Sites, and the otherworldliness of them that made me include him. There will be more of Dee in my finished work.

NWFA

Finally gotten the archive film from the NWFA. It was strange to call and ask for permission to use the films from the copyright holders. They were very interested in what I might be doing with the films, and one woman became quite emotional about it. I promised to send her the finished film so she could see it. Working with archive footage isn't something I've done a lot of. The problem will be integrating the drawn animations and the collage films with the archive stuff. I'm hoping the fragmented nature of a film about dreams and histories will lend itself well to using various animation methods. Either that or it'll be very confusing. Or both.

Inervtdee1

Also, I think I've managed to combine live action with animation in a shot of Dr Dee in Manchester  Cathedral. Looks kinda spooky, anyhow.