Thorold Dickinson has been called the "major lost talent of the British
film industry." Nevertheless, four of his films, Gaslight, Men of Two
Worlds, The Next of Kin, and Queen of Spades are among the most
critically respected British films of all time. Although he directed
only nine feature films and a handful of short documentaries, he devoted
his life to the advancement of cinema. After his directorial career
ended, he became Chief of Film Services of the U.N. Department of Public
Information in New York and later returned to England to establish the
first department of film studies in a British university. This book
explores in detail every aspect of the life and career of Thorold
Dickinson (1903-1984). It is based on extensive interviews with
Dickinson and a number of his colleagues and friends, an examination of
his papers, and a detailed analysis of each of his films. Thorold
Dickinson and the British Cinema begins with a re-examination of
Dickinson's career in the light of ten years of a new writing about
British cinema, and in particular, about the options open to a British
cinema permanently dwarfed by Hollywood. Illustrations.