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6 votes
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Chantal Akerman’s ‘Jeanne Dielman’ becomes first female-directed film to top BFI-backed critics’ poll of greatest films of all time
4 votes -
Fanny and Alexander review – Ingmar Bergman's dark fusion of William Shakespeare and Charles Dickens
3 votes -
Asta Nielsen, the Danish silent film star who taught Greta Garbo everything – discover her in a BFI season dedicated to her extraordinary talent
2 votes -
A Short Vision (1956)
4 votes -
Snowdrift at Bleath Gill
5 votes -
Spaced at 21 - Interview with cast
5 votes -
"Children and Politics" - a 3 minute interview with British children before the 1964 general election
This is short, but it demonstrates something that's been missing from tv for a while, which is the simple interview with children that recognises they are children but still takes them seriously...
This is short, but it demonstrates something that's been missing from tv for a while, which is the simple interview with children that recognises they are children but still takes them seriously as humans.
EDIT: Somehow I missed the main link, which goes to a BFI page here: https://player.bfi.org.uk/free/film/watch-children-and-politics-1964-online
There are some amazing old (1960s, 1970s) British tv interviews with children carried out by Harold Williamson. He asks children a question and then just lets them answer. There's no attempt to laugh at the children, and there's no attempt to say "zomg look at what this cute kid is saying".
A few clips here, https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06tq93b and there are probably more on Youtube: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06tq93b
It's showing its age - "what would you do if your husbands went on strike? How would you run a household?" (asked of two girls) isn't acceptable.
7 votes