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In 1929 the
young Scots film maker John Grierson made a film 'Drifters' about
the North sea herring boats which has become a classic. A few years
before he had decided to use the word 'documentary' for films such
as this, which derive their power to hold the audience not from
invented dramatic situations, but rather from the presentation of
factual material.
Not long after
Grierson's film, a surrealist artist and critic named Humphrey Jennings
followed in his footsteps. Jennings was born in Walberswick in 1907
in the Gazebo and his father Frank was an accomplished architect.
The family home was Marsh Way: both houses still exist.
The young Jennings
joined the renowned GPO Film Unit in 1934 and began to make a series
of perceptive and moving documentaries on various aspects of life
in Britain. His artistic background stood him in good stead and
he was, with good reason, described as the only real poet produced
by the British cinema.
The Second World
War was his making. After a few small films the first of his several
masterpieces was 'Listen to Britain' which he co-directed in 1941.
The film spoke with economy, but with extraordinary power, about
how the British people faced up to the war. Jennings combined image
and natural sound with an often unexpected and usually emotionally
charged effect. The pianist Dame Myra Hess is seen playing Bach
in a lunchtime concert in the National Gallery, with an RAF man
turning the pages for her. Outside, service men and women hurry
through the London streets carrying gas masks. A goods train is
seen in an industrial setting and the scene changes abruptly to
a toolroom in which young women are working at lathes. 'Music while
you work' - a radio programme of the time - is heard, with the young
women joining in a current popular song 'Yes, my darling daughter'.
There is no narration and it is astonishing how Jennings could select
or create this material and anticipate the effect which it would
have on those watching it.
'Fires were
started' is widely regarded as his finest achievement. It tells
the story of firemen struggling all night to contain a blaze in
the docks following a German raid and of a ship, saved from the
flames, sailing the following morning. The firemen are shown coming
on duty. As they arrive one by one to collect their equipment and
face the dangers to come, the station officer plays 'One man went
to mow' on the piano. One is well prepared for the story of bombs
and fires which is to follow.
In contrast
to the poetry of the film, one of the crew has described prosaically
how the making of the film required fires to be lit deliberately.
On one occasion in the London docks, Jennings had got a good blaze
going and was surveying his handiwork when the sirens sounded to
announce the nightly arrival of the German planes. As people trooped
to the air raid shelters a woman screamed at him 'You'll get us
all bleedin' killed' but Jennings, absorbed in his art, was quite
oblivious to the consternation he caused. He was by no means oblivious
to human suffering, indeed his work was to draw attention to it,
but he was a dedicated artist.
Towards the
end of the war, in 1944, he made a unique film 'A Diary for Timothy'.
Highly formal yet intensely personal, and with a deeply felt respect
for the individuality of ordinary people, it remains widely regarded
as the finest achievement of the British documentary cinema. The
film bids us to look at a baby and consider the world into which
that child would grow up. 'There are big changes afoot, Tim, and
there are huge forces at work' speaks the unseen narrator. It focuses
attention on a point in time sharply and it was a brilliant follow-up
to the wartime films which preceded it.
The war over,
a bright future for his genius in the then thriving British film
industry seemed assured. But it was not to be. In 1950, while surveying
a mountain scene in Greece for a film project, Jennings fell and
was killed. A lamp which had been lit in the village of Walberswick
only forty odd years before had been cruelly snuffed out.
Further reading:
Humphrey Jennings' remarkable collection of contemporary observations
of the coming of the machine was published after his death in, Mary-Lou
Jennings and Charles Madge (eds), Pandaemonium 1660-1886 (1985 and
later in pbk).
Bill Barrett, Kenton, June 1999
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