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The History of British Cinema: 1973 |
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24/5 - |
Melvin Franks’ A Touch of Class, an old-fashioned romantic comedy, starring George Segal and Glenda Jackson, is released. [ADD} |
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7/12 - |
Technicolor sells a film processing lab to Communist China for around £2.75 million. [ADD} |
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– MGM withdraws from EMI-MGM Elstree Studios, giving EMI sole control which leads to extensive cost-cutting measures. [ADD} |
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– The National Film School’s name is changed to the National Film and Television School. [ADD} |
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- The new Value Added Tax is imposed on cinema admissions. [ADD} |
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Other Key British Films of 1973 |
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The Day of the Jackal (Fred Zinnemann) [ADD} |
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Don’t Look Now (Nicolas Roeg) [ADD} |
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The Hireling (Alan Bridges) [ADD} |
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My Ain Folk (Bill Douglas) [ADD} |
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O Lucky Man! (Lindsay Anderson) [ADD} |
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| That’ll be the Day (Claude Whatham) [ADD} | ||||
The History of Cinema: 1973 |
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| Algeria - India | ||||
| France | ||||
| Iran - Venezuela | ||||
| USA January - June | ||||
| USA July - December | ||||
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