The Big Parade – Film with Live Music
  • Saturday 11 November 2023, 7:00pm
  • Carole Nash Hall
  • Standard £20. FTE/U18 £5.50
Image The Big Parade – Film with Live Music

Presented by Northern Silents

A silent film with live, improvised score by acclaimed silent film pianist Jonny Best and percussionist Trevor Bartlett.

This sweeping, eloquent First World War epic was the biggest grossing film of 1925 and remains a deeply affecting testament to the psychological trauma of war.

Jim (John Gilbert), son of a wealthy businessman, is swept up in the nation’s patriotic fervour and his fiancée’s suggestion that he’ll ‘look gorgeous in an officer’s uniform.’  He joins the army and is sent to training camp in a small French village where he falls in love with Melisande (Renée Adorée), a farmer’s daughter. Then he is sent to the front.

Five years before All Quiet on the Western Front, The Big Parade brought home to audiences the effects of war on the ordinary soldier and established the benchmark for anti-war cinema.

‘A superlative war picture’ (New York Times, 1925)

 

 

Black and White images of soldiers

The Big Parade – Film with Live Music
  • Carole Nash Hall
  • Standard £20. FTE/U18 £5.50

Performers

Performers

Jonny Best - Piano
Trevor Bartlett - Percussion

Programme

Programme

The Big Parade
Directed by King Vidor
With John Gilbert, Renée Adorée, Hobart Bosworth
USA, 1925
151 minutes
Rated U

Presented by Northern Silents

A silent film with live, improvised score by acclaimed silent film pianist Jonny Best and percussionist Trevor Bartlett.

This sweeping, eloquent First World War epic was the biggest grossing film of 1925 and remains a deeply affecting testament to the psychological trauma of war.

Jim (John Gilbert), son of a wealthy businessman, is swept up in the nation’s patriotic fervour and his fiancée’s suggestion that he’ll ‘look gorgeous in an officer’s uniform.’  He joins the army and is sent to training camp in a small French village where he falls in love with Melisande (Renée Adorée), a farmer’s daughter. Then he is sent to the front.

Five years before All Quiet on the Western Front, The Big Parade brought home to audiences the effects of war on the ordinary soldier and established the benchmark for anti-war cinema.

‘A superlative war picture’ (New York Times, 1925)

 

 

Black and White images of soldiers