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Kay Mander kept training and social issues to the fore in the 1940s with her innovative documentaries. Mander, now living in Kirkcudbrightshire, recalls her life and work, with clips from many of her films.
A tribute to a humble but great man in the film industry.
Cooking is a kind of loving, features Jean Shrimpton
A depressed middle-aged man, revisiting the seaside resort he often vacationed at as a child, encounters a highly optimistic and carefree young woman who attempts to reason him out of following through on his suicidal thoughts.
Encourages mothers to seek medical advice from the earliest stages of pregnancy and to take advantage of existing maternity services.
A BAFTA award nominated documentary paying tribute to the World Health Organisation on it's tenth anniversary in 1958.
A Shakespearean actor takes poetic revenge on the critics who denied him recognition.
Sir Anthony Blunt talks of Claude Lorrain exploring the painting of Italian classical landscape by which he interpreted the poetic themes of Virgil and Ovid.
A documentary feature detailing the engraving of the original plate for this celebrated print; the artist's experimental use of different papers and methods of inking, and the later re-working of the plate.
Barclays Bank documentary about computers in the UK and how they might be used in the future.
Comedy featuring interweaving stories of seven households caught up in a property chain on moving day, each one dependent on the other.
Beautiful young European girl, Carol, is possessed by the spirit of Ayesha – “She Who Must be Obeyed” – and led to the lost city of Kuma, where she is destined to become queen.