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1
UID:
kobvindex_ZLB13881251
Format: 1 DVD (ca. 184 Min.) : s/w , Tonformat: Mono (engl.) , 1 Beih. (6 Bl.) , Bildformat: 4:3
Content: Features three films from the man described by Lindsay Anderson as perhaps 'the only true poet of the English cinema': Listen to Britain, Diary for Timothy (both from the newly-made BFI 2004 prints) and I Was a Fireman. In Listen to Britain, Jennings collects and edits the sounds and sights of wartime Britain into an extraordinarily moving and effective collage. Diary for Timothy is a film that is relevant for every generation and bears repeated viewings. The feature-length I Was a Fireman, the story of 24 hours in the life of a fire crew during the Blitz, is an innovative work that should be as iconic to British cinema as Vigo's L'Atalante is to French. (Moviemail)
Note: Ländercode: 0 , Bonus-film: Kevin MacDonald's Humphrey Jennings: The Man who listened to Britain (50 Min.). , Listen to britain (1942). Diary for Timothy (1945). I was a fireman (1943).
Language: English
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Associated Volumes
  • 2
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB14719322
    Format: 40 Min.
    Content: While many propaganda films rely on conventional narration and strong images to deliver a message, Humphrey Jennings chose to work with a fluid mix of images and sound in a more artistic style. The combination of music and image - the radio cue light that starts the film (suggesting the now somewhat clichéd image of a parachutist's jump light) - builds expectation in the viewer. Timothy, born on the fifth anniversary of the start of World War Two, represents the future, giving hope for those recently at war. The narrator fills in the history, but this is the transitional phase between war and peace, with war effectively absent. Instead it is conjured up by news bulletins and images of its impact on the home front. A farmer, a miner, a train driver and a wounded pilot represent the British people, playing their part. All are 'fighting' for Timothy, that is, for his, and the, future. The land, its riches (food and coal for instance) and its weather evoke a sense of England, underpinned by a strong appreciation of tradition and culture, emphasised mainly by Shakespearian references, the choice of Gielgud, Redgrave (to narrate words by E.M. Forster) and the Beethoven music, which serves also to remind us that Germany can produce beauty too. Many positive images of cosy home are shown (Christmas dinner, communal radio listening) and the tide of war has turned favourably, with reports of the Russian offensive, reduced blackout, and the home guard stood down, and some sense that the routines of babyhood imply return to normality. So: life goes on, culture can survive, and there will be a future, but it's a hard life - and will get harder before it gets better. There is a war against ill-health and unemployment to be won, too. (David Sharp)
    Note: Engl.
    In: The Humphrey Jennings Collection : a collection of key war-time documentaries from britain's finest documentary filmmaker ; [DVD Video], [s.l.], [ca. 2004], (2004)
    Language: English
    Keywords: Großbritannien ; Zweiter Weltkrieg ; Nachkriegszeit ; Soziales Lebensgefühl ; DVD-Video ; DVD-Video
    Author information: Addinsell, Richard
    Author information: Forster, E. M.
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  • 3
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB13946257
    Format: 50 Min.
    Content: The Channel 4 programme, Humphrey Jennings: The Man Who Listened to Britain, made by Figment Films, told the story of an exceptionally talented film-maker who changed the way we look at ourselves and our past. After a career which took in surrealism as well as Mass Observation, Jennings became part of the new British documentary film movement. During the Second World War he made a series of classic morale-boosting films, such as London Can Take It and Fires Were Started. Jennings's name may be unknown to the general audience today, but he is a fascinating figure in the history of cinema. Not everyone would agree with director Lindsay Anderson's assessment that Jennings was 'the only real poet that British cinema has yet produced', however, few dispute his importance in the development of the documentary form. This programme was made by Kevin Macdonald, who won an Oscar in 2000 for One Day in September - his documentary about the 1972 Olympic Games massacre. Humphrey Jennings: The Man Who Listened to Britain included interviews with film-makers Lord Attenborough and Mike Leigh, and with Jennings's daughter, Mary-Lou Legg. Using testimony from those who worked with him, the programme reclaimed Jennings's rightful place in British cinema. (Channel 4)
    In: The Humphrey Jennings Collection : a collection of key war-time documentaries from britain's finest documentary filmmaker ; [DVD Video], [s.l.], [ca. 2004], (2004)
    Language: English
    Keywords: Jennings, Humphrey ; Biographie ; Filmarbeit ; DVD-Video ; Biographie ; DVD-Video ; Biografie
    Author information: Leigh, Mike
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  • 4
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB13946258
    Format: ca. 80 Min.
    Note: Engl.
    In: The Humphrey Jennings Collection : a collection of key war-time documentaries from britain's finest documentary filmmaker ; [DVD Video], [s.l.], [ca. 2004], (2004)
    Language: English
    Keywords: London ; Luftangriff ; Geschichte 1943 ; Feuerwehr ; DVD-Video ; DVD-Video
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  • 5
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB14719323
    Format: 19 Min.
    Content: Jennings' most celebrated film represents the pinnacle of his associative non-narrative methods of construction, using little commentary and only natural sounds to evoke a day in the life of Britain during the Blitz. Images of factory work are juxtaposed with the dance hall - fighting men with women in machine shops. The Old Bailey has become an ambulance station, and tanks rumble past an English teashop in a picture postcard village. Through surreal association the film expresses the indivisibility and unity of Britain. (National Film and Television Archive)
    In: The Humphrey Jennings Collection : a collection of key war-time documentaries from britain's finest documentary filmmaker ; [DVD Video], [s.l.], [ca. 2004], (2006)
    Language: English
    Keywords: Großbritannien ; Luftangriff ; Geschichte 1942 ; Alltag ; DVD-Video ; DVD-Video
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