Visit to a Mine (British Coal Video)
Video cameras take us into the heart of a state-of-the-art colliery of the late 1980s.
“Coal puts the Great in Britain”. True once but certainly not true now, it was already becoming a desperate claim by the time this video programme’s narrator made it. It’s in the context of the mining industry’s history, and the history of its filmmaking that this film is fascinating – and melancholy. Made by the industry’s video unit, which produced all its moving image after the 1984 strike during which its film unit was closed, it has the cheesy trappings of the corporate video of its time yet is based on the same premise as films made as early as Edwardian times. The filmic trip down a mine was a sub-genre even then: A Day in the Life of a Coalminer (1910) is the most famous example.
This video production entirely lacks the romance and cinematic grandeur of its predecessors but is an instructive representation of the industry’s technological set-up in its final year: a world of shearers and coal-cutters, and conveyer-belts transporting the coal into the light, but also sophisticated computerised controls. The film uses an ancient format to try to make a case for a long future for an industry with a tragically short one ahead of it.
An introduction to a modern colliery and its safety procedures for visitors.