Books by Matthew Harle
Bloomsbury Academic, 2019
Writing by Matthew Harle
Times Literary Supplement, 2018
Journal of Film Preservation
Literature Film Quarterly
Curating by Matthew Harle
Cine Lumiere, Whitechapel Gallery, Horse Hospital, Birkbeck
Whitechapel Gallery, BFI Southbank, RIBA, Horse Hospital
Conferences by Matthew Harle
‘Child be Strange’ is a one-day symposium on Penda’s Fen, organized in partnership with the Briti... more ‘Child be Strange’ is a one-day symposium on Penda’s Fen, organized in partnership with the British Film Institute, the Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image, and Strange Attractor Press.
Program Notes by Matthew Harle
from the BFI SOUTHBANK June 2016 Guidebook.
Archives by Matthew Harle
Papers by Matthew Harle
Introduction: The Proust Project Is AbandonedAccounts of Harold Pinter's abandoned adaptation... more Introduction: The Proust Project Is AbandonedAccounts of Harold Pinter's abandoned adaptation of A la recherche du temps perdu vary considerably. Often overlooked by critics, who prefer to dive straight into the screenplay, the story of the project's expiration has echoes of the text itself (Newland and Losey 33-54; Billington 203-21). In 1971, the actress Nicole Stephane, who held the screen rights to Marcel Proust's text, approached Joseph Losey and Pinter to adapt the novel after a string of other writers and directors had already abandoned the task. In January 1972, a contract was drawn up for pre-production with Losey and Pinter to deliver a script-the pair soon recruiting BBC producer and Proustian authority Barbara Bray to act as a consultant. Working as a trio, they spent time in France visiting significant Proustian sites and planning the film before Pinter sat down to write a draft of the script. The script was completed in just three months in November 1972, P...
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Books by Matthew Harle
Writing by Matthew Harle
Curating by Matthew Harle
Conferences by Matthew Harle
Program Notes by Matthew Harle
Archives by Matthew Harle
Papers by Matthew Harle