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Film

Where Star Wars meets Chaplin

London has now got the film museum it deserves, thanks to the vision of two movie buffs.

January 21, 2010 13:35
Rexy at The Movieum

ByMarcus Dysch, Marcus Dysch

4 min read

A 25ft Tyrannosaurus Rex roars at Charlie Chaplin while a Dalek looks on — and all within sight of the Thames. No, not a scene from the imagination of a particularly eclectic movie buff, but one of the prop-filled exhibition rooms at the London Film Museum.

This is where memorabilia marking some of the greatest moments in British cinema history can be viewed by visitors, ranging from the original Rank gong to a spear from Michael Caine’s epic Zulu, via the Pinhead costume from Hellraiser.

Occupying a vast 45,000 sq ft in one of the capital’s most recognisable buildings — the historic Grade 11-listed County Hall on the south bank, opposite the Houses of Parliament — everything about the museum suggests the big screen.

“Everything is designed to get you mentally into the scale of the movies,” says chief executive Jonathan Sands, who with Rick Senat as chairman, runs the museum. This month the pair have overseen the renaming of the venue from its previous title of Movieum, which it has operated under for the past three years. The name-change coincides with the opening of a major exhibition on the life of Charlie Chaplin, who grew up within a mile of County Hall in south London. It is the most substantial study of the actor’s life for more than 20 years and features hundreds of original contracts, scripts and images from his silent movie star’s career.