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CINEPIX
Australia
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 22 พ.ค. 2017
Vintage Movies
AUSTRALIA'S NOR WEST - 1926
A transfer from on original 1926 35mm nitrate film. with added music track.
มุมมอง: 63
วีดีโอ
Room Down Under
มุมมอง 124หลายเดือนก่อน
Australian advertisement to come and live or study in Australia (Down Under).
THE HOLDEN STORY (1986)
มุมมอง 9Kหลายเดือนก่อน
The story of General Motors Holden's production of the Holden car in Australia, as told by "Holden Enthusiast" Graeme Blundell. Note: This was originally in Color - unfortunately it had faded badly, making a B&W copy the best option.
Hawking Brothers
มุมมอง 214หลายเดือนก่อน
The Hawking Brothers were a popular Country & Western music band in the 1960s-1980s. They made a number of beer commercials for Carlton & United Breweries.
ESTO ES SHOW
มุมมอง 536หลายเดือนก่อน
German produced music and dance variety show - in Spanish, some English as well. Compared by Caterina Valenti.
CADBURY'S TASMANIA
มุมมอง 102หลายเดือนก่อน
Promotional film made by Cadburys showing their factory at Claremont in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
Cyclone Tracy Darwin 1974
มุมมอง 92หลายเดือนก่อน
This color film was made within a couple of days of Darwin being destroyed by a cyclone in 1974.
Cadbury's Bourn-Vita
มุมมอง 54หลายเดือนก่อน
A 1950s British produced Cinema ad for Cadbury's Bourn-Vita. Filmed in Technicolor.
TORANA 2 Theatrical Advertising film
มุมมอง 3713 หลายเดือนก่อน
Transfer for 35mm theatre advertising film for a (General Motors-Holden) TORANA car.
OLYMPICS 1956 Melbourne 1956
มุมมอง 933 หลายเดือนก่อน
A short film made by Pacific Films. Opening ceremony of Games, plus snippets of some events.
Menschen in der stadt
มุมมอง 3653 หลายเดือนก่อน
This is a 1947 Oscar winning short film from Germany "People in the City". Original music soundtrack - no dialog.
Traffic Police
มุมมอง 4113 หลายเดือนก่อน
A look at the operation and training of the German Traffic Police - circa 1950s. [English dialog].
Supplying The Fleet
มุมมอง 6725 หลายเดือนก่อน
Shows the work and tells the history of HMAS SUPPLY in refuelling other ships in the fleet while at sea.
ROAD TO VICTORY: MILESTONES IN THE STRUGGLE FOR LIBERTY
มุมมอง 439 หลายเดือนก่อน
ROAD TO VICTORY: MILESTONES IN THE STRUGGLE FOR LIBERTY
Surprisingly good colour, and interesting add. Thanks for uploading👍
I just want to say Thanks to the Liberals for killing off the Australian Car Industry 😢. Arseholes 👎🏼👎🏼
Good shot of the Chevy and the Studebaker at the end
1958 for the FC, the HD didn't have bigger engines [149 & 179] over the EH series.
No, but it got the X2 Option.
@@smooth36zero It did indeed.
Gay crowd at MCG pagent 😂
Good onya Graham. Graham Blundel as ALVIN PURPLE was the first "saucy" movie i ever saw as a young bloke. He is a national treasure. What a bright future Australia had back then. Nobody would have dreamed of the nightmare that it has become now. Goodbye "LUCKY COUNTRY". Bob. Australia.
48-215. 21.5 Horsepower. !! Wow. 🇦🇺
215 stood for the engine size being 2.15 litres, the horsepower rating was 60bhp
@sutherlandA1 That was what I always though it was the Engine Size, but in the video it also says horsepower is 21.6. ???
As a student at North Geelong primary school, we were taken for a tour at the Geelong Harbour Trust, where we kids were taken abord the tugs. The names of the tugs i inspected with my classmates were the MOORABOOL and the BARWON. They were fond memories of a once beautiful and florishing town of GEELONG. They really were much better times and a much better town and people living back then. Bob. Australia.
No mention Holden motor bodies was a South Australian company?
So sad what we lost. Miss Holden. Sure far from perfect, but unique. Still got one. Love the EH and HQ's. Simple to work on never die!
'There's glass and a half of fresh full cream milk in every half pound of "Dairy Milk".' This statement is odd to me.
Google Frazer and Duncan (also from Adelaide) to get the Ford story from the same time.
Who signed of on it....
Off
I want Australia to build a Centenary FJ Holden electric!!!!
In the 1950s, if you had suggested to any Australian that one day Holden would be no more, they would have laughed in your face. Especially, as almost one out of every two new cars sold in Australia at the time was a Holden. And imagine what Mr 1950s Aussie would have said if you had told him that Holdens would disappear and be replaced by cheaply made Chinese rubbish.
And yet Holden as much as I love them, they didn't try anything new, just sent profits back to America. We could have done so much better.
Are you missing all the "cheaply made rubbish" from europe, japan, korea, thailand, india etc.... before chinese goods became so prevalent?
Well done. Makes me wonder why this country can't make it's own cars any more, must be all the regulations that put us out of work. No work, no income, so how to buy the imported cars on the dole. Australia was good once, not so now.
Too many bludgers.
Or that GM and ford are greedy American companies that didn't let Australian arms innovate letting them die eventually.
Or that GM and ford are greedy American companies that didn't let Australian arms innovate letting them die eventually. And the liberal party didn't want them to keep going.
It's the economics of production doggsy! Australia could make its own cars up until the day the factories shut. What they couldn't do was make them cheaper than some other places. People lost jobs, and cars got a lot cheaper.... that's global trade. Nothing to do with regulations... it was deregulation of import controls that removed the high duties on manufactured goods, and sales tax.... that 32.5% sales tax you paid on tvs radios tape recorders transistors etc. Everyone can have an opinion.... some would rather live without a car or tv, with lots of kids, and sod all appliances or entertainment. Some would be mortified if they couldn't live without a mobile phone, personal car, big arsed tvs, huge houses, lots of holidays, expensive food etc etc.
@@annpeerkat2020 You forgot to mention the unions wanting more pay all the time. That isn't the answer, unions should have been hammering the government's for LESS TAX on our own businesses and products, and kept import duties. As a result, all I can say is where are the jobs for the average Joe. We have regulated ourselves to death financially and so many things are imported that used to be made here, that's all I am saying.
Every yr he didn't buy the car he got the first prototype
Made in Detroit left hand drive..I have pics...
@@neilasd3043" Holden was founded in 1856 as a saddlery manufacturer in South Australia before moving into the automotive field in 1898. It became a subsidiary of the United States-based General Motors (GM) in 1931, when the company was renamed General Motors-Holden's Ltd." So American owned Australian made.
@grumpybear3066 not the first 3!!
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Just subbed i went back through channel an watched the old oil company an car adds
Nobody comes off lookin good too good here. Atrocious acting by Jean Harlow. They even misspelled Caesar.
Nice - real collectors' items today
Had multiple examples of those Weeties car kits as a kid.
Hoyts ! Forgot about them.
I definitely believe that Paramount and 20th Century Fox invented 4K in 1953.
I fully agree. If only the city was as vibrant today as it was then.
My dad always said they were different times, hard working honest people. Good times..
WOW is Me, I missed the contest results in me local rug after buying ten tickets.
Very cool!
Thought be Australia's first animated cartoon.
Exactly the same as the TV commercial.
Not many people can say they've seen an old French film on 28mm, where a baby gets run over by a brass era car
Nostalgic trip down old memory lane, what a great add. Thanks for posting : )
Thanks for sharing this, I LOVE these classic '50s UFO films! So much fun. Cheers
I was born in West Geelong in 59 watching this video I worked for Blakistons in Thompson's Rd and used to load wool the same way the boys are doing it down at the city rail I absolutely loved doing oh my god it made us so strong and fit this video brings back so many amazing memories
AUSTRALIA. mount lofty house. dinner. lunch. breakfast. MOUNT LOFTY HOUSE. 1940s. 1960s. Noarlunga Beach. Seacliff Beach to Brighton BEACH. 1940s.
When every roof-top had a long wire radio antenna.
Warren had a good long life 89
0:03 #chamonixfrance had a #rescue911segment one time #rescue911frenchparasailing.
MAGNIFICENT....THANK YOU...made my day....and a crew member is wearing a 'bluey' coat.
This animation looks very good!!!
A great historical document. A shame about the amateurish and laboured attempt at a rhyming narration, and that musical score by Dreyfus is quaint but laughable.
Geelong looks more vibrant at that time than it does in 2024.
Wow indeed! Haha there’s an animated ad on TV now depicting a vehicle with just this type of system, advertising futuristic opportunities from en energy company I think. Might have to send them this link and tell them their creatives are a century behind the times. 😂
Love it!
Where can I watch this
As an 8 y.o boy every Sunday mum would pack me a lunch of jam sandwiches and cake then dad would take me here and leave me to spend the day with his mate Ernie (I think he's the younger driver). I rode up and down all day, in the loco and in the guards van. This is where my love of trains began. Thank you for posting this, I searched Belmont Common railway not expecting to find anything, I can't believe footage of this has survived.
What a great story - thanks for sharing it.
Thanks for uploading this. I had to use the mute button but enjoyed the video!
My mob arrived from Scotland in 1855 and settled in Newtown. I look at some of the buildings in town and think to myself.. this was being built back then.. Beautiful city if the council would leave it alone and stop putting in bike paths that ppl dont use.. And would be so nice if they would build parking (for free or max $5 a day) at the hospital and the train station.
Nice one. SSGN 508 is an American submarine.
Those videos are filmed at Launceston Tasmania. The post office (clock tower), First Basin and the Gorge are notable inclusions.
Thanks for identifying them - appreciated.
A Navy I joined in 1965, no woman at sea, no political correctness, you could come back onboard after a run ashore without the worry of being run in for drunkenness as long as you could do your job. The camaraderie that I still enjoy today with mates I made all those years ago.