About us

Eugene Lauste, W.K-L. Dickson and Emile Lauste, with Biograph camera

BioMax Films is dedicated to the creative presentation of archive film for audiences today. Established in the United Kingdom in 2009, BioMax Films' first production is The Biograph Project (working title), which takes 68mm films made over a century ago and innovatively exhibits them in a 15P/70mm format.

BioMax Films is led by a team with many years' experience in film archives, broadcasting and archive film exhibition.

Adrian Wood

Adrian Wood © R. Wober, 2009

Peabody, Grierson and BAFTA award winning archive documentary producer, film researcher and author Adrian Wood is known internationally for the idea, knowledge and research which gave birth to the series of "in Colour" archival film-based television programmes.

He has co-authored three books on World War II as well as writing articles on film history and his work in this field. Adrian now acts as an independent media consultant, developing archive-based documentary ideas and oversees film restoration projects.

Chris Rodmell

Chris Rodmell

Chris is one of the UK's most distinguished documentary editors. His extensive credits include the television productions Timewatch, Reputations, China from the Inside, Hell in the Pacific, The First World War, The Treaty and Unfortunate Incidents.

In 1992 he co-founded the Edit Store - now the Edit & Sound Store - which runs offline, online, grade and audio dubbing facilities in central London. Chris remains active in the industry, editing, directing and producing for broadcast television.

Luke McKernan

Luke McKernan

Luke is a moving image curator and an historian of early and silent cinema. He has made a special study of Biograph films and helped identify many Biograph films when they came to light in the 1990s. With Mark van den Tempel he co-edited The Wonders of the Biograph (1999/2000), a special edition of the journal Griffithiana on the European Biograph companies.

His publications include Who's Who of Victorian Cinema (1996, co-edited with Stephen Herbert) and Yesterday's News: The British Cinema Newsreel Reader (2002). He is the author of a widely-read blog on silent cinema, The Bioscope.

Haverstraw Tunnel

Haverstraw Tunnel

In the early days of cinema, audiences were thrilled by the sight of motion. Films taken from the front of trains became a particular favourite and were known as 'phantom rides'. Of these, the most famous was probably Biograph's The Haverstraw Tunnel (1897) which caused a sensation simply by showing the train journey through a tunnel, so that the audience was plunged into darkness before emerging into the light again. This virtual reality experience was copied by many other film producers in the 1890s.

Links