One of Bruce Baillie’s “newsreels” from the early 1960s, “The Peace Rally” intercuts footage from an anti-nuclear rally with California rock formations. This recent digital transfer is courtesy of the University of California Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive.
Bruce Baillie
Bruce Baillie (Aberdeen, SD, USA, 1931) served in the U.S. Navy during the Korean War and studied filmmaking at the London School of Film Technique. He moved to the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1950s, becoming soon a guiding light of the New American Cinema. He founded Canyon Cinema in 1961, bringing to light underground authors of the time, and transforming it into a distribution company in 1967. He also founded, along with fellow filmmaker Chick Strand, The San Francisco Cinematheque. His film Castro Street (1966) was selected in 1992 for preservation in the United States' National Film Registry.
Courtesy of BAMPFA (Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive)