Life and Death on Exmoor

Life and Death on Exmoor

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A portrait of the Exmoor stag-hunting community whose future is threatened by proposed legislation.

A rich variety of characters shine through in this observational documentary made by then student filmmaker, Cosima Spender, who has since gone on to a varied career in film and television. They are all connected by the traditional - and controversial - sport of stag-hunting with hounds, on the moorland of Exmoor.
Dave, now at an age to have retired, has been working to support this community since leaving school when he was 12 years old, and can imagine no other way of living. He declares that he was 'born here and I wouldn't like to go anywhere else'. His wife, Netty, is proud of the hunt - 'Lords, ladies, parliamentarians came, everyone came.' It appears that Netty's idea of 'everyone' is quite particular.
Netty believes that these hunting traditions are fundamentally 'the country way' - though at the time the film was made stag-hunting with dogs was under threat of abolition - and legislation was subsequently passed in 2004 making it illegal. Whatever your views on hunting, Dave and Netty are open and likeable, and portray a vivid sense of an idiosyncratic way of life, now lost.
The specially composed music is another distinctively atmospheric feature of the film -created by Tara Creme, who has gone on to a successful career composing for film and television.


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The Camera Is Ours: Women Documentary Filmmakers

Most leading documentary filmmakers in Britain today are women - a stark contrast with feature film directors who, despite some progress in recent years, are still overwhelmingly male. But prominence in documentary wasn't handed to women on a plate: a debt of thanks is due to the determination and resourcefulness of previous generations of women to seize the camera and film their own stories. Women have been pivotal to British documentary filmmaking since the 1930s. It might be a man, John Grierson, who is remembered as 'the father of documentary', but the movement he founded made (some) space for women too, including two of his sisters, Ruby and Marion, who told her brother, 'The trouble with you is that you look at things as though they were in a goldfish bowl. I'm going to break your goldfish bowl.' Marion went on to do just that, alongside others of her generation, such as Jill Craigie. This collection focuses on what we could call a 'second generation' of women documentary filmmakers who emerged from the 1970s and 80s. Notable among them is Kim Longinotto, one of Britain's most prolific and accomplished documentarists whose work over more than 40 years, has explored women's experiences in unfamiliar contexts and cultures. Also featured are the work of collectives and workshops such as the Sheffield Film Co-op who, with the help of more affordable and easy-to-use video equipment, sought to extend the tools and skills of filmmaking to women who would never otherwise have had such opportunities. The resulting films highlight how their practical feminism brought new voices, perspectives and approaches to documentary, and told new stories with fire, wit and humanity.

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Life and Death on Exmoor

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