ANZAC Projection: Heroes of Gallipoli

Peter Jackson's Heroes of Gallipoli

Friday 23, Saturday 24, Sunday 25 April, 2010
7.30pm - 10pm
Northern Façade

The 20-minute projection will screen continuously for two evenings leading up to Anzac Day – and on the evening itself. Visitors are invited to watch from the steps of the newly-restored Cenotaph and then come inside the museum to sign a digital book of remembrance. Heroes of Gallipoli is screened courtesy of Australian War Memorial Museum.  (Please note the museum itself will not be open on the evening of the 25th)

Heroes of Gallipoli

For the 2010 commemorations the Museum will repeat it's popular projection of  Anzac soldiers in Gallipoli footage which was digitally restored by director Peter Jackson.

The Museum will also project a collection of rare footage from New Zealand Film Archive’s After the War was Over. This includes:

Arrival of New Zealand Troops at Cologne, 1919

With jaunty stride the New Zealand Division crosses the German frontier into Cologne where they formed part of the Allied Occupation Forces after the Armistice on 11 November 1918. The Division crossed the frontier at Herbesthal-Euphen, and reached Cologne on 26 December 1918 after a 23 days trek from the start point at Beauvois.
Maori Contingent Home, 1919

“Welcome Home to the Maori Pioneer Battalion from the front”.

The return at Auckland wharves and powhiri in the Domain to the veterans of the Maori Pioneer Battalion Te Hokowhitu A Tu.

Governor General Attends Consecration of Colours Auckland, New Zealand, 1933

The presentation of the colours of the Auckland Regiment to the Auckland War Memorial Museum by the Regiment's senior officers, including Gallipoli veteran Colonel A Plugge CMG.

Peter Jackson ’s Restored Gallipoli Footage

By Paul Byrnes

It is July 22, 1915, and we are in a trench at Quinn's Post, the most dangerous spot on Gallipoli. Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett, a famous (and bankrupt) English war correspondent with a taste for fine wine, has lugged a cinecamera up to Quinn's, where the trenches are as little as 10 metres from the enemy. The Turks throw cricket ball-sized bombs in the hundreds at Quinn's. The bombs are routine, but a cinecamera is an event.

Ashmead-Bartlett places the camera in the middle of a partially roofed trench, as men in long shorts and braces come and go.

In one shot, a soldier hands a dispatch to an officer and offers a faint salute. An inter-title preceding this shot says "Note the thinness of the men. Also the Anzac uniform - shorts and sometimes a singlet. A runner hands in a message at headquarters."

The next shot is another trench, also partially roofed. In a line, five soldiers walk self-consciously towards the camera and then turn right, out of frame. The first wears a topi, a British colonial hat, the next a flat-topped officer's cap with shade cloth and the third a wide-brimmed slouch hat. The fifth is very curious - he has on a topi (hat) and tie.

The footage - now grainy, scratched and wobbling - is priceless, as Charles Bean, the official Australian war historian, knew in 1919 when he added the inter-titles. Bean had secured a print for his soon-to-be-realised Australian war museum - which is what saved the film.

The 20-minute cine-film, now called Heroes of Gallipoli, features the only footage taken during the Gallipoli campaign, digitally restored by New Zealand director Peter Jackson. It includes scenes of British troops at Suvla and Cape Helles, soldiers at Anzac Cove, Turkish bombardments and troops embarking at Imbros Island. Unfortunately, Bean’s titles are wrong in several places, which has led to continuing debate about what the film actually shows.

A World War I buff, Jackson approached the Australian War Memorial with the idea of applying computer technology developed at Weta Digital. “He wanted to see how the technology could be applied to archival film,” says Madeleine Chaleyer, the senior curator of film and sound at the Australian War Memorial
The War Memorial had destroyed its original nitrate source material in 1967, after copying it to safety film. The best print available was scratched, fuzzy and low in contrast. Weta has removed most of the scratches, white spots and some of the shudder caused by shrinkage and sprocket damage.

The result is that the film has not looked better since it was first screened to rapt audiences at the Empire Theatre in London on January 17, 1916, under the title With the Dardanelles Expedition.

Chaleyer believes there are dangers with digital restoration. "With advanced software you can now make a film look better and cleaner than the original ever did. Peter has done a great job because it still has the feeling of authenticity. The aesthetics have been maintained."

Peter Stanley, principal historian at the War Memorial, argues that the "topi and tie" footage is more significant now because it documents a place that no longer exists. "Gallipoli has changed immensely over the years. Quinn's is now gone. It was built on the side of a cliff, with a network of trenches and earthworks and saps. The winter rains have basically eroded the whole position away so that the side that the Anzacs were on is now scattered down Monash Valley as silt."

Part of the attraction for Jackson may have been that the men in the footage now thought to show Quinn's Post may have been New Zealanders - specifically, the Wellington Battalion commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel William Malone.

"The topis and the tie are a clue, because Malone was a stickler for standards," says Stanley, whose book on Quinn's Post has just been published. "I have not seen anyone else wearing ties in trenches at Gallipoli, but Malone insisted on proper dress. He was a real martinet."

Malone's diary records Ashmead-Bartlett's visit on July 22 with a certain disdain. "He seemed a bit swollen-headed and full of his own importance," he wrote. Stanley writes in Quinn's Post that Malone took the correspondent to a section subject to Turkish rifle fire - "perhaps to teach Bartlett a thing or two".

Ashmead-Bartlett was unpopular at Gallipoli, partly because he lived like a king. He installed his own chef and catering manager at the press camp at Imbros and spent large amounts on wine - despite being ?4000 in debt. Nevertheless, he was a seasoned war correspondent and he played a significant role in the campaign. 

His private criticism of the British commanders at Gallipoli contributed to the sacking of the commander-in-chief, Sir Ian Hamilton, and may have shortened the campaign. For this, he was sent back to London and never allowed to accompany British or empire troops again.
His lecture tours of Australia and New Zealand in 1916 were dogged by official harassment.

It is unlikely he showed the film on those tours. The copy at the war memorial came from Sir Alfred Butt, the London impresario who financed it. It is only a fraction of the 10,000 feet of film that Ashmead-Bartlett took to Gallipoli, but much of it may have been ruined by his total lack of camera training. His diaries record that he had very little idea what he was doing until early August, when he met a camera expert on a British ship. Philip Dutton of the Imperial War Museum believes the camera was most likely an Aeroscope, which was boxy and heavy by later standards but the latest thing in portability in 1915. That his shots are often wobbly does not reduce the significance of the footage. It was where he used the camera that mattered, not how.

By early September, Ernest Brooks, the Admiralty's official photographer, took over most of the filming, earning a small stipend in the process (although they still had no official permission to use a cinecamera). He shot the film's most dramatic scene - a line of soldiers in topis in a vigorous trench fire-fight.

Bean described them as Australians and pointed to Ashmead-Bartlett scurrying behind the men. Peter Stanley describes them as Australian light-horsemen. Philip Dutton believes they may be Irish Fusiliers.

Choosing his words carefully, in an article in the Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television from 2004, he describes these 18 seconds as "possibly the first authentic example of British Commonwealth troops in combat during the First World War".

This is debatable, as Ashmead-Bartlett wrote some years later that the men began firing after Brooks complained that their re-enacting did not look real enough. It may be an authentic shoot-up, but one started for the camera.

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