It has its own blogspot:
http://underthecranes.blogspot.com/
The London Socialist Film Co-op are putting it on.
Here's their blogspot:
http://socialistfilm.blogspot.com/
Here's what people have said about 'Under the Cranes':
“ Engaging, gentle, dreamlike – Williams’ Hackney is a
layered, shifting place teeming with multiple voices and realities, echoed
verbally by Rosen’s collage of reminiscence, characteristically generous poetry
and collected urban folksongs. Rosen’s
presence reminds us of east London’s reputation as a place of political
upheaval.”
Sight and Sound
“ A marvellous evocation of Hackney – the place, the peoples
and their dreams too. It reveals the ruin, disconnection and the frailty of
life without giving an inch to literary misanthropy or the voyeuristic
perspectives in which east London is exploited for tales of misery, depravity
and social failure. “
Patrick Wright,
cultural historian
“ This beautifully constructed film urges us to recognise
what is already there, at the heart of a diverse and thriving community, while
raising the question that perhaps we are all living in the shadow of the
cranes. “
Socialist Review
“ A wonderfully life-affirming film-poem of place full of
lost time and effacements, reefs of
street-markets and shop fronts, painted in stock-brick yellows, steel shutter
greys and silvery monochromes; and full of people, always people, the voices
who have passed this way and called this home. As a collage of the city at its
most quick, it has the ache and tug of what has been and gone; as a moving
study of resourcefulness, resistance and resilience, it collapses time and
returns each story to its street. “
Paul Farley, poet
“ For questionable reasons, in the media, the sight in a
market of African textile prints and the sound of a Cockney voice selling
tomatoes are separated. It’s untruthful. But the truth is there on Ridley Road
Market and it is shot through the film too. And I loved it. This film is a rare
thing. “
Lemn Sissay, poet
“ Under the Cranes
is an argument to your emotions. Old grainy archive footage seems to invest
even the most mundane scenes with a bitter-sweet glow. When these images are
paired with sparse piano or traditional Turkish music – and beatboxing and
Toumani Diabeté – you’ve got a
guaranteed tearjerker. But this film is not about nostalgia. The film finds
beauty in trash-collecting, and places modern scenes next to old. “
Quietus Review
“ A film-poem that
mixes documentary footage and poetry to explore the effect of urban
redevelopment on local people. The film
weaves together the history of one small part of London in a wonderfully
impressionistic way. “
Socialist Worker
NEXT SCREENING
Sunday 8 January 2012 at The Renoir Cinema
11am
The Renoir Cinema, Brunswick Square, London WC1
Nearest London tube: Russell Square
Overground: King’s Cross, Euston
Buses: 7, 17, 45, 46, 59, 68, 91, 168, 188
For updates on disabled access, please call the Renoir on 08717-033 991
The Renoir Cinema, Brunswick Square, London WC1
Nearest London tube: Russell Square
Overground: King’s Cross, Euston
Buses: 7, 17, 45, 46, 59, 68, 91, 168, 188
For updates on disabled access, please call the Renoir on 08717-033 991