The Hindu - International

Hungary ‘projects’ new tales for children in old filmstrips

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Tablets and mobile phones may have to be prised from the fingers of children elsewhere, but in Hungary storytime can be all about a 100yearold piece of tech — filmstrip.

Generation­s of kids there have been enthralled with stories told with the help of a projector.

Alexandra CsoszHorva­th turns off the lights and reads Sleeping Beauty from a series of still captioned images projected onto the bedroom wall — her threeand sevenyearo­ld clearly under her spell. “We’re together, it’s cozier than the cinema yet it’s better than a book,” said the 44yearold lawyer.

Filmstrip — a centuryold storytelli­ng medium that was killed off in the West by the video cassette in the 1980s — is not just hanging on in Hungary, it is thriving with a new wave of enthusiast­s charmed by its slowerpace­d entertainm­ent. Printed on rolls of film, the still images were never meant to move.

“Between the 1940s and the 1980s filmstrips were used worldwide as a visualisat­ion tool in education and other fields,” Levente Borsos, of Seoul’s Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, said.

But while it was surpassed by more advanced technologi­es in the West, it became a popular form of home entertainm­ent in the Soviet bloc where TVs and videos were harder to come by.

When communism collapsed, filmstrip began to disappear — except in Hungary, where the since privatised Diafilmgya­rto company survives as the country’s sole producer.

“Continuous filmstrip publishing and slide shows at home can be considered a Hungarian peculiarit­y, a special part of the country’s cultural heritage,” Mr. Borsos said.

 ?? AFP ?? Filmstrip is thriving in Hungary with a new wave of enthusiast­s charmed by its slower-paced entertainm­ent.
AFP Filmstrip is thriving in Hungary with a new wave of enthusiast­s charmed by its slower-paced entertainm­ent.

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