Tunde's Film

Tunde's Film


Tired of being hassled by the police and with no job opportunities, a group of teenage East End lads plan to rob a bank.

Filmed in 1970s East London, this rare, gritty drama deals with the trials faced by a group of young black teenagers. The film follows director Tunde Ikoli and his pals Colin, Micky and Taploe as they struggle to find work on the streets of pre-developed Tower Hamlets. Penniless and constantly harassed by the police, the boys decide to cut their losses and rob a bank. A potent, incisive slice of social realism, with music by Joan Armatrading.

Life in London's East End as experienced and recorded by a group of local teenagers. The story of two kids, Tunde and Hennessy, in trouble with the police after a fight in a youth club. They find themselves hemmed in by limited possibilities for work, and so they try the only escape route they can think of, robbing a bank.


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Black Britain on Film

Striking, illuminating and sometimes surprising images of black culture, community and characters, spanning over a century of British film and TV.

From some of the earliest appearances at the dawn of the 20th century to groundbreaking postwar documentaries and contemporary features, this collection charts changing attitudes and hidden histories. Here are the trailblazers, the icons, the stereotypes, the controversies. These richly varied films uncover sometimes surprising histories of black culture and community. They tackle troubling issues of race, representation and identity. And they highlight some of the best of black British filmmaking, from the work of pioneers Horace Ové and Menelik Shabazz to later innovators John Akomfrah and Ngozi Onwurah


15 videos in this collection

The ornate pavilions of cinematographs, boxing booths and menageries at Hull Fair.
1

Hull Fair (1902)

Young working class Londoners fight racism with the power of rock and reggae in this anarchic documentary.
2

Divide and Rule - Never!

Touching short about the friendship between a white boy and a black girl in 1960s Notting Hill.
3

Jemima + Johnny

A lost chapter in black British film: extraordinary rushes from a documentary showcasing talented members of the black community.
4

A World Is Turning

Tired of being hassled by the police and with no job opportunities, a group of teenage East End lads plan to rob a bank.
5

Tunde's Film

Insightful exploration of the relationship between a Jamaican mother and her British-born daughter.
6

Cedar Wood & Silk

A woman bus conductor struggles to ignore her black American army officer lover.
7

Top Deck

Monologue about a "nice" West Indian and his descent into postcolonial cynicism, performed by the legendary Norman Beaton
8

Nice

Black police officers? What a ridiculous idea!  Attitudes from England's colonial past linger on in the Midlands of the 1960s.
9

Vox Pops on Black Police Officers

Tense, graphic experimental short film portraying police brutality inside a jail cell.
10

Contact

An incredibly joyous TV musical about a young woman's search for her long-lost cousin.
11

The Rise and Fall of Nellie Brown

American actor and singer Paul Robeson visits an Edinburgh colliery, where he regales miners with a rendition of 'I Dreamed I Saw Joe Hall Last Night'.
12

Mining Review 2nd Year No. 11

You'd better believe it! Talented Jamaican-born dancer Fay Craig dances up a kitschy storm in this kooky 1960s dance film.
13

Fay Craig - Mirage

Jamaican dancer Fay Craig gets down to a bongo rhythym in this kitsch 1960s dance film.
14

Fay Craig - Bongo Baby

Dancers Boscoe Holder and Fay Craig shake out some sultry shapes in this vibrant vintage slice of bongo-driven kitsch.
15

Fay Craig & the Boscoe Holder Dancers - Voodoo - Cinebox

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