David Bradley made his first venturesome films in the early Forties, when he was in his late teens, and went on to a multi-faceted career as director, producer, actor, professor, and collector of rare and important films. We welcome Mr. Bradley on his first visit to the PFA, tonight through Friday, September 11, during which he will present films from his collection, including his own enormously successful early film, Julius Caesar, featuring Bradley and a young Charlton Heston; a German silent Othello with Emil Jannings; two masterpieces of the French avant-garde, L'Herbier's recently rediscovered L'Argent (Money), and Jean Epstein's The Three-Sided Mirror (see September 10); a rare Clarence Brown silent, Smouldering Fires, and Bradley's own well-received film noir, Talk about a Stranger, shown with his Sredni Vashtar, based on a Saki story (see September 11).