Paper Boat
- 1949
This prize-winning short amateur comedy about a distracted father highlights the best and worst of its times.
Ah, the 1950s. The wife in the kitchen. The working husband in his suit, even at the weekend. The baby parked outdoors in the pram with not a care in the world. The casual use of race in comic punchlines.... The kind of simplistic racial humour seen here would, alas, be a familiar staple of TV sitcoms until well into the 1970s. So it's no surprise to find it cropping up so early in Britain's multicultural era. It's a shame, though, that it spoils a slickly-made amateur short that takes a wry, lightly satirical look at 50s family values.
Saturday Lunch was a product of the prolific Sutton Coldfield Cine Society. As its opening title card proudly declares, it was named one of Amateur Cine World magazine's 10 best amateur films of its year.
These low- (or no-) budget creations reach beyond simple point-and-shoot, back-garden efforts towards something more ambitious and skilful, revealing their authors' passion for film and their often astonishing ingenuity with limited resources. No desktop editing software or digital special effects for these amateur auteurs. The films include fiction and documentary, competition prizewinners and private labours of love. They may be the work of cine-clubbers or individual enthusiasts. But they all show a devotion to filmmaking that far transcends hobbyism. So look out for the delightful handmade intertitles, table-top special effects and library soundtracks which decorate many of the quirky stories, ultra-local documentaries and painstakingly composed home movies featured here.