Film Weekly was one of the leading popular film magazines published in the United Kingdom during the late 1920s and 1930s.
Background
Launched in 1928, the magazine became known for its gossipy interest in contemporary film stars. Columnist Nerina Shute became known for her "sweetly poisonous copy".[1]
Film Weekly attracted a number of lawsuits from film professionals displeased at their portrayal by the magazine. The director Dinah Shurey sued for libel after her film The Last Post (1929) was not only panned in review but followed by an article by Shute questioning whether women were capable of directing films at all.[2] Shurey won the action. The actress Alma Taylor also sued and won when Film Weekly said in 1932 that her career as an actress was over.[3]
Film Weekly merged with fan magazinePicturegoer in 1939.[4] For much of its life it was edited by Herbert Thompson.
Awards
The magazine held an annual reader ballot to determine the best film of the year and the best performance by an actor or actress in a British film. For 1936 these were won by The Ghost Goes West and Nova Pilbeam (for Tudor Rose) respectively.[5]