From Bioscope to Cinema
From Bioscope to Cinema Denzil Jayasinghe 5 min read · Just now T here was a time — in my boyhood of the sixties — when films did not trouble themselves with realism. They existed elsewhere, in a dimension faintly superior to our own, and we entered the cinema as one might enter a shrine: subdued, expectant, prepared to be altered. The theatre was part of the enchantment. Fluorescent bulbs trembled in their sockets, unsure of their allegiance to light or darkness. A dusty shaft from the projector travelled across the hall and struck the lime-washed wall, its cracks and blisters briefly dignified, as though they marked territories on some ancient chart. We watched the beam as much as the screen; it was proof that something invisible had been set in motion. Before the main picture, a disembodied voice would rise — clipped, colonial, faintly paternal — recounting British football tournaments. It was an inheritance we had not chosen. The players, pale and grainy, ran across distant fields ...