Friese-Greene and The Open Road

Still: The Open Road

Children talking to a policeman in Plymouth

The Open Road is a series of films made in 1924-26 by Claude Friese-Greene using an early colour process partly developed by his father William Friese-Greene; the film documents the progress of a car journey from Land's End to John O'Groats and offers an extraordinary vision of Britain in the 1920s in colour.

This fascinating early colour process was achieved using colour-sensitive panchromatic negative film that was shot through a red filter on every other frame. This meant that alternate frames were exposed to the red component and then all the light from a scene.

Still: The Open Road

St Ives Harbour, Cornwall

When this negative film was processed and printed, the alternate frames were tinted orange-red and blue-green so that the orange-red exposed frame was projected in orange-red light and the alternate frame in blue-green light.

When the films were projected at sufficient speed the alternating orange-red and blue-green frames combine to trick the eye into seeing an image in naturalistic colour.

Still: The Open Road

Tower Bridge, London

This colour process was considered a huge breakthrough at the time and Friese-Greene travelled to American to show his new process to Hollywood studio chiefs who were duly impressed. Although it was a significant step forward, future colour processes provided greater advantages including being able to shoot indoors; better representation of colour and more efficient filmmaking processes.

The film was eventually donated to the bfi National Archive where the challenges of its preservation and restoration proved extremely demanding.

The Lost World of Friese-Greene on DVD

Still: The Open Road

Claude Friese-Green's car at a petrol station

Following the enormous international success of The Lost World of Mitchell & Kenyon, the BBC and the bfi were delighted to announce a new co-production, The Lost World of Friese-Greene, based on a series of films called the 'Open Road'. Aired on BBC TWO during April and May 2006, the series explored the 'Open Road' footage and retraced the filmmaker's steps with the help of presenter, Dan Cruickshank.

The three part television series is available on DVD from the bfi.

During the first two weeks of July 2005 a BBC Learning bus retraced much of Friese-Greene's original journey, showing local people the films and how their part of the country looked in the 1920s. Dan Cruickshank and archivists from the bfi were also at five separate regional events to spend longer talking to audiences and attempting to piece together as much detail as possible of the people, towns and landscapes featured in the film.

Last Updated: 01 Jul 2008