John Grierson Movies

Producer/director and film theorist John Grierson is the founding father of the British documentary movement; in fact, it was he who first used the word "documentary"--derived from the French word documentaire used by the French to denote travelogues--to describe Robert Flaherty's 1925 film Moana in a film review for the New York Sun. After obtaining his degree in philosophy from Glasgow University, and serving on a British minesweeper during World War I, he worked as a lecturer at Durham University. In 1924, he received a Rockefeller Research Fellowship to study the effects of media on public opinion in the U.S. He returned home in 1927 intrigued with the idea of using film as an educational medium. In 1928, with government sponsorship, he founded the Empire Marketing Board (EMB) where he made his first film, Drifters (1929). The film's popularity encouraged him to gather together an elite cadre of talented filmmakers who made 100 documentaries before the EMB dissolved in 1933. The unit then moved to the General Post Office (GPO) where with higher budgets and better conditions they produced such fine works as Song of Ceylon. He directed one more film, The Fishing Banks of Sky, in 1934. In 1937, he left GPO to found the Film Centre, an advisory and research organization for documentary filmmakers. Two years later he founded the prestigious National Film Board of Canada where he worked until 1945. He then came to the States and formed The World Today, a company designed to make films to promote international understanding. In 1947 he became director of Mass Media at UNESCO for 10 years, after which he became a host for the British television show This Wonderful World. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
1956  
 
Filmed in Uganda, Man of Africa was assembled by legendary documentary producer John Grierson. The film depicts the mass migration of the Bakija and Batwa tribes to a new territory after the natural resources of their native soil has been depleted. The pro-ecological message is always present, but never so much as to degenerate into fatuous speechmaking. As a means to introduce the semblance of a plot, writer/director Cyril Frankel concentrates on the trials and tribulations of clerk-cum-farmer Jonathan (Frederick Bijurenda) and his native sweetheart Violet (Violet Mukabuerza). Print quality in Man of Africa varies from adequate to murky. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Violet MukaburezaFrederick Bijurenda, (more)
1953  
 
Time Gentlemen Please is a phrase that is all too familiar to British pub patrons; it means that it's closing time, and everyone is invited to go home. Actually, the film has less to do with elbow-bending than with the vagaries of British traditions. A tiny English village is thrown into a panic when the Prime Minister announces an impending visit, to honor the community for 100-percent employment. Alas, Irish reprobate Dan Dancer (Eddie Byrne) steadfastly refuses to get a job. In trying to force Dan into seeking work, the locals lock him up in the local almshouse -- where, thanks to an archaic law, Dan finds himself in line for a yearly income of 6000 pounds! Time Gentleman Please is based on R. J. Nimmey's novel Nothing to Lose. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Eddie ByrneHermione Baddeley, (more)
1953  
 
Background is a tearful flashback drama centering around a dysfunctional family. Valerie Hobson and Philip Friend play a long-married couple on the verge of divorce. As they ponder the question of who will receive custody of their children (Janette Scott, Mandy Miller and Jeremy Spencer), the couple has second thoughts about their upcoming litigation. It is the children who eventually bring Hobson and Friend back together, though the reunion seems strangely without passion. Background was released in the US as Edge of Divorce. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Valerie HobsonRick Hart, (more)
1952  
 
A small Scottish island has never paid its mandatory road tax. This brings forth an investigating committee of Parliament members, including the formidable Ronald Squire. The committee heads to the delinquent Hebridean isle, where they succumb to the easygoing charm of the residents. Cowritten by director John Eldridge, Laxdale Hall was an adequate imitation of the Ealing farces (notably Tight Little Island), with an overload of whimsy in place of originality. out to the Hebridean isle to check into this breach of law. The film made it to the States under the title Scotch on the Rocks. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ronald Squire
1952  
 
Brandy for the Parson is a wafer-thin comedy with plenty of maritime humor. James Donald and Jean Lodge play a young couple on a yachting vacation. They agree to share a ride with a few seemingly benign fellow landlubbers. What they don't know (but we do) is that their "harmless" yacht-mates are actually running a slick brandy-smuggling operation. With a few alterations here and there, the basic premise of Brandy for the Parson bobbed to the surface again in 1969 for Disney's The Boatniks, which like the earlier film, benefitted from a strong cast of supporting comic players. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
James DonaldKenneth More, (more)
1952  
 
The Oracle stars Robert Beatty as a weary British reporter sent on assignment to Ireland. While in a remote village, Beatty hears a man's voice emanating from a deep well. The voice turns out to be a modern-day oracle, gifted with the ability to foresee the future. Needless to say, the once-sleepy village becomes a hub of activity for fortune seekers, speculators and all-around gawkers. A lesser comedy of the Ealing school (though not from the Ealing studios), The Oracle was released to the US as The Horse's Mouth (not to be confused with the 1959 Alec Guinness vehicle of the same name). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Robert BeattyMervyn Johns, (more)
1952  
 
The Brave Don't Cry aspires to the "feel" of a documentary, right down to the deliberate absence of background music. A mine in Scotland falls victim to a cave-in, trapping some one hundred workers. Rescue parties are formed as the tremulous families of the miners wait in agony. As in the actual incident upon which this film is based, the rescue is nip and tuck and times, but eventually successful. The faces of real-life Scottish mining folk are melded with the professional actors in The Brave Don't Cry, adding poignancy to this otherwise cut-and-dried film. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
John GregsonMeg Buchanan, (more)
1952  
 
A notorious Irish rebel poet disguises his true identity while working as a gatekeeper at a Scottish university. He also moonlights as a bookie and things go well until a pretty young relative shows up and spills the beans. Comedy ensues. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1952  
 
In this whimsical fantasy, a mild-mannered writer of wild adventure novels for young girls finds himself presented with an intriguing proposition from an elderly fan. She suggests that they conspire together to steal the whiskey formula from the distillers who took it from her family many years ago. They do so, and with the recipe find themselves receiving many partnership offers from distillery's. The writer's partner then insures that he has plenty of young fans to inspire him to keep on writing. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1951  
 
In this drama, a reporter helps prove the innocence of a man wrongfully incarcerated for dealing drugs. The reporter learns of the situation when the convict's vagabond pals, with his influence and support, justice soon prevails. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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