British Universities Film & Video Council

moving image and sound, knowledge and access

Do You Know? How to Draw

Series

Series Name
Eve And Everybody’s Film Review

Issue

Issue No.
500
Date Released
1 Jan 1931
Length of issue (in feet)
872
Stories in this Issue:
  1. 1On the Word of a Women!
  2. 2Drill to Avoid a Drill!
  3. 3Dance Doings
  4. 4In a Paris Salon
  5. 5The Gentler Sex!
  6. 6Do You Know? How to Draw

Story

Story No. within this Issue
6 / 6
Summary
NoS Summary - Stop frame animation is used to demonstrate drawing and cartoon techniques.
British Pathe synopsis: Film begins with a C/U of an autograph book. Above the book is written: "A peep in the autograph book shows us how many people try to draw." The cover is turned and we see a drawing of a ship. More pages are turned to show a cartoon drawing of a policeman with the words "A Fair Cop" underneath and the words "but cannot!" underneath. Pages are turned to show a drawing of a cat ("An A "mew"sing sketch") and a woman ("Hell hath no fury like a woman’s corns").

The Pathe artist gives viewers a few hints on how to draw a face. "As in a Pudding the foundation is an EGG." C/U of an egg shape being drawn on a piece of paper. Surprise No. 1 is how low the Eye comes within the egg.. This is shown with the help of a compass. The extreme simplicity of the eye form is shown. The mouth is simpler still. The nose comes next "very difficult this!" jokes the caption. This is just two dots. The hair is then drawn around the egg shape. "Try these when you get home", says Joe Noble our Artist." Various sketches are made in C/U (presumably through stop frame animation as they just appear as if by magic). The last character drawn moves his mouth and the words "Red Fire Please" appear above his head. There is a two frame instruction to "Print Red" so perhaps the next section was tinted red.

We are then shown "how a cartoon begins to live" Several little bears are drawn. "Rapid substitution of each drawing for its neighbour gives the effect of movement... Faster and faster, until the eye cannot cope with the sudden changes." The bears seem to run along. There then follows a sequence where the bear repeatedly jumps over the artist’s pencil. He eventually jumps on top of the pencil and then does a somersault into an ink pot. The screen is covered with black ink and film ends with a signature in the autograph book "Yours Truly Joe Noble."
Researcher Comments
A handwritten draft of these intertitles is present in the Pathe boxfile.
Keywords
Arts and crafts
Footage sources
Pathe   Noble
Written sources
Kinematograph Weekly   7 January 1931, p25.
Pathe Inventory File   Tin No.203
British Pathe Database 1997   Reference No. EP203
Pathe Eve 494-515 Boxfile   Issue sheet
National Film Archive Catalogue
Credits:
Production Co.
British Pathe Ltd.
Length of story (in feet)
296

This series is held by:

Film Archive

Name
British Film Institute (BFI)
Email
For BFI National Archive enquiries:
nonfictioncurators@bfi.org.uk
For commercial/footage reuse enquiries:
footage.films@bfi.org.uk
Web
http://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web
Phone
020 7255 1444
Fax
020 7580 7503
Address
21 Stephen Street
London W1T 1LN
Notes
The BFI National Archive also preserves the original nitrate film copies of British Movietone News, British Paramount News, Empire News Bulletin, Gaumont British News, Gaumont Graphic, Gaumont Sound News and Universal News (the World War II years are covered by the Imperial War Museum).
Series held
View all series held by British Film Institute (BFI)
Name
British Pathe Ltd
Email
info@britishpathe.com
Web
https://www.britishpathe.com/
Phone
0207 665 8340
Address
3.29 Canterbury Court
1-3 Brixton Road
London
SW9 6DE
Notes
Pathe now also handles the Reuters Historical Collection, which includes the British Paramount, Empire British, Gaumont Graphic and Gaumont British newsreels.
Series held
View all series held by British Pathe Ltd

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