An industrial film which shows the operations inside the Philips Radio plant: In a mêlée of activity, glassblowers make delicate glass bulbs. Machinery assists the bulb manufacture. A virtuoso glassblower begins a more complex tube used in radio broadcasting; it is then turned, fired, and sculpted. Conveyors carry partially completed units. Workers perform their various specific assembly-line tasks. Cases are manufactured and machined, wire harnesses are assembled, loudspeakers are produced. As radios near completion, they are run through a series of tests. Engineers and draughtsmen define future developments. In a closing stop-motion sequence, in a style reminiscent of Norman McLaren, a group of loudspeakers performs a playful dance. The film overall is a poetic depiction of an industrial process.
Release Date | August 27, 1931 | |
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Status | Released | |
Original Title | Philips-Radio | |
Runtime | 36min | |
Budget | — | |
Revenue | — | |
Language | — | |
Original Language | Dutch | |
Production Countries | Netherlands | |
Production Companies | Capi-HollandNederlandse Philips, Eindhoven |