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the period – and was filmed using hundreds of extras, in five days, at a cost of £1,800, most of which McDowell raised by remortgaging the company. McDowell sold the
British rights for £5,000, and raised even more from overseas rights. Two reels and a further fragment, representing roughly half of the film, are now preserved in the
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in
Northamptonshire. It was made "less as a drama and rather more as a recreation of historic actuality" and contained "elaborately recreated scenes... from the point of view of an ordinary soldier in the thick of the battle". It was nearly an hour and a half long – much longer than most others of
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was formed in 1908 by Albert Henry ("Bert") Bloomfield (c.1882–1933) and John
Benjamin ("Mac") McDowell (1878–1954). At first it operated from a rented basement in central London, using a single camera and developing the negatives in McDowell's house, but soon moved to
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It developed a reputation for both documentaries and feature films, notably the
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Biography of A. H. Bloomfield at
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Biography of J. B. McDowell at
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in London between 1908 and 1924. It was also known by the abbreviation
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in 1913. For a time, it employed the exiled
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