Ideal Film Company

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Ideal Film Company
Company type
Gaumont British
(1927-1934)

The Ideal Film Company (often known as Ideal Films or simply Ideal) was a British film

production and distribution
company that operated between 1911 and 1934.

The company, based in

Soho, London, was started by the two Jewish brothers Harry Moses (1875 – 17 August 1951) and Simon (1877 – 26 June 1950) Rowson (born Rosenbaum). They were born in Manchester, where their father, an immigrant from Suwałki in Congress Poland, worked as a butcher.[1]

After having begun as a pure distribution company in 1911, Ideal also began producing films in 1916. In 1917, the company acquired the

Gaumont British
empire, where it continued to distribute under its own name until 1934.

During its 23 years, the company distributed almost 400 films and produced more than 80. Most of the films produced by the company are now considered

lost, but a number still survive. Perhaps the company's best known film is The Life Story of David Lloyd George, a 1918 biopic of the British prime minister David Lloyd George, directed by Maurice Elvey
.

Simon Rowson went on to become an adviser to the government on British film, and was the first president of the British Kinematograph Society (1931-1938).[1] His son, Leslie Rowson, became a renowned British cinematographer.

Selected list of films produced

References

Bibliography

  • Gledhill, Christine. Reframing British Cinema 1918-1928: Between Restraint and Passion. British Film Institute, 2003.
  • Low, Rachael. The History of the British Film, 1918-1929. George Allen & Unwin, 1971.

External links