Past screening

The Camera is Ours

Directed by: Various
Runtime: 1hr 38min Year: 2023

Details

Directed by: Various
Runtime: 1hr 38min Year: 2023
Country: United Kingdom
Topics: History & Archive
Last Screened: Sat 11th Jun 2022

This revelatory programme of five newly-restored short documentaries is a tribute to the work of pioneering female documentary-makers.

John Grierson is sometimes referred to as the father of British documentary and credited with coining the term documentary itself. But from the beginning, female innovators were at work within the genre, including Grierson’s own sisters Ruby and Marion.

This revelatory programme of new digital restorations showcases their work alongside that of other pioneering female documentary makers.

It begins with Marion Grierson’s lyrical and inventive Beside the Seaside (1935) which uses a witty array of techniques to stylish effect.

In They Also Serve (1940) Ruby Grierson’s dramatised documentary is dedicated to “the Housewives of Britain”.

A public information film by Brigid ‘Budge’ Cooper, Birth-day (1945) explores the mysteries of maternity – this is the real Call the Midwife! – while Kay Mander’s powerful Homes for the People (1945) uses the then radical technique of allowing working-class women to describe their own lives.

Finally, the psychedelic spirit of the 1960s is ushered in by Sarah Erulkar’s Something Nice to Eat (1967), featuring Jean Shrimpton.

Please note that: Beside the Seaside and Birth-day include scenes reflecting harmful racist views that were pervasive at the time of their making.