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        Road to Yesterday

        Widgey Raphael Newman, the short-lived, extraordinarily-named director of this period piece, has assembled attractive images of Wales but beware the commentary!

        Travelogue 1944 32 mins

        From the collection of:

        Logo for National Screen and Sound Archive of Wales

        Overview

        The narrator of this period piece - a travelogue of Wales, heartily imbued with smugness, sexism and a derogatory view of the 'natives' (although a particularly fervent and patriotic admiration is reserved for the miners and the Pontypridd chainworkers) – hopes that the viewer will enjoy a journey full of adventure and amusement to visit the people who dwell in the β€œland of yesterday”.

        Not much is known of the short-lived creator of this film that was possibly made to entertain British troops overseas during WWII. Widgey Raphael Newman – who was born in Bedfordshire’s county town in 1900 and died in St Albans, Hertfordshire, in 1944 - worked for Gaumont and was involved with early sound experiments in Britain. He set up Delta Pictures which company made films at Bushey Studios, making e.g. travelogues. He also directed β€˜Castle Sinister’, one of the earliest British horror films, in 1932, a β€˜mad scientist’ story that is a β€˜lost’ film i.e. no known copy extant.