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Fires Were Started

United Kingdom

1943

80 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
English
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Humphrey Jennings

PROD Ian Dalrymple

SCR Humphrey Jennings

DP C.M. Pennington-Richards

CAST Philip Dickson, George Gravett, Fred Griffiths, Johnny Houghton, Loris Rey

ED Stewart McAllister

MUSIC William Alwyn

SOUND Jock May

Synopsis

A new man joins the civilian firefighters at a London unit during the Second World War. He meets his fellow firemen and firewomen, manages to enjoy some leisure time with them, and then goes on his first mission with the crew as it attempts to save an explosives warehouse on Trinidad Street near the London docks. —IMDb

Director

Original

Humphrey Jennings

Humphrey Jennings was born in Walberswick, Suffolk on 19 August 1907 and became not only a filmmaker but a photographer, literary critic, theatrical designer, poet, painter and theorist of modern art. While studying English at Cambridge, he designed the first British productions of Stravinsky’s A Soldier’s Tale and Honegger’s King David, and founded and edited Experiment with William Empson and Jacob Bronowski. By 1936 he was a leading Modernist and organised the International Surrealist Exhibition in London, along with Herbert Read, Roland Penrose and André Breton.

Jennings joined the GPO Film Unit in 1934. His early films, like those of Alberto Cavalcanti (with whom he often collaborated), were criticised by the documentary movement’s realists for their experimental qualities, and Geoffrey Nowell-Smith has argued that Jennings’ work is better situated in the context of experimental film and the European avant-garde than within the documentary movement.

In 1937 Jennings… read more

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Matt Turner

8Mar12

Pretty great WW2 propaganda documentary film that follows, and dramatizes, a day in the life of a group of real London firefighters. The firefights are re-enactments, but it is still a useful document of British propaganda, and a solid film.

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InsertOzuReferencehere

10May10

My favourite Jennings film ... This is for British Cinema what "L'atalante" was for French Cinema

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