SEE
FILMS
SHOP FOR
FILMS
LEARN ABOUT
FILMS
RESEARCH
FILMS
DOWNLOAD
FILMS
about BFI
what's on
film & tv info
national archive
publications
join the BFI
BFI Filmstore
>
Books & Magazines
>
BFI Classics
>
Night Mail: BFI Film Classics
Information
Home
Latest BFI Products
Best Sellers
Offers & Promotions
BFI Member Discounts
Visit the Filmstore
Filmstore Events
Certification
Products
BFI Memberships
BFI Gift Membership
Blu-ray
Japan
British & Irish Film & TV
Italy
Books & Magazines
Africa
Animation
Artists' Film & Video
BFI Classics
BFI Events & Film Seasons
British & Irish Film & TV
China, Hong-Kong, Taiwan
Documentary
Early & Silent Cinema
Eastern Europe & Balkans
Film Posters
Film Theory & Analysis
Filmmakers
France
Gender Studies
Genre
Germany & Austria
India & South Asia
Industry
Magazines & Journals
Middle East
Reference
Scandinavia
Short Film
Sound & Music
South Korea
Television & Media
US & Canadian Cinema
World Cinema
DVDs
Animation
Africa
Japan 2
Belgium & Netherlands
Scandinavia
Japan
Italy
Germany & Austria
Artists' Film & Video
British & Irish Film & TV
British Transport Films
China, Hong-Kong, Taiwan
Documentary
Early & Silent Cinema
France
India & South Asia
Middle East
Russia
South East Asia
US & Canadian Cinema
Dual Editions
Japan
British & Irish Film & TV
Education Resources
Student Resources
Teaching Resources
Gifts
Clothing and accessories
Film Posters
Homewares
Stationery
Toys, games & novelty items
Special Offers
Animation
Artists' Film & Video
Belgium & Netherlands
British & Irish Film & TV
British Transport Films
Documentary
Early & Silent Cinema
France
Germany & Austria
India & South Asia
Italy
Japan
Middle East
Russia
Scandinavia
US & Canadian Cinema
Sep-07
96
Published/distributed by BFI Publishing
ISBN/EAN: 9781844572298
Paperback
Price: £9.99
<back
Night Mail: BFI Film Classics
Anthony, Scott
Also available to buy 'Night Mail: Collector's Edition' DVD.
Night Mail (1936) is one of the best-loved and best-known films in the canon of British documentary cinema. Bringing together the creative talents of Harry Watt, Basil Wright, WH Auden and Benjamin Britten, the film gave John Grierson's documentary school its first popular success. Its collectivist politics and its peculiarly modest brand of modernism is as redolent of the inter-war age as Agatha Christie, Penguin Books or The Shell Guides. Bit it was also a corporate promo, part of a publicity campaign initiated by Clement Attlee to stave off Post Office part-privatisation and to improve the morale of postal workers.
Scott Anthony's study provides a lively appreciation of this vivid, witty and often just plain eccentric masterpiece. In doing so he uncovers the remarkable stories of civic-minded idealism, creative intrigue and political trickery that underpin this classic documentary.
Contact us
|
Site map
|
Terms & Conditions
|
Privacy
|
Security
|
Postage, Delivery & VAT
website by Green Jersey