London Scrapbook

London Scrapbook is a 1942 British propaganda film directed by Derrick De Marney and Eugene Cekalski. It shows the physical devastation that the Blitz caused to London, and humorously communicates the postwar struggles of Londoners to Americans.

London Scrapbook
Directed by
Produced byBasil Wright[1]
Starring
Music byDouglas Moody[2]
CinematographyA. H. Luff[1]
Edited byRalph Kemplen[2]
Production
company
Spectator Short Films[1]
Release date
May 1942[1][3]
Running time
11 minutes[2]
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The film is preserved at the British Film Institute[2] and was released on the compilation DVD The British Home Front at War: London Can Take It! from the Imperial War Museum.[4]

Plot

American Bessie Love and Englishman Basil Radford try to sell their short film about life in postwar London, specifically highlighting various rationing measures, including petrol, cigarettes, meat, and beer.[1][2]

Cast

gollark: Are you asking:- how close we are to it- what it actually means- whether people would want itor something else?
gollark: What exactly do you mean?
gollark: You should point out that it's your opinion and that people can go around *not liking things*, then go away.
gollark: Destroy the internet.
gollark: It also isn't Windows.

References

  1. "New Documentary Films". Documentary News Letter. May 1942. p. 70.
  2. London Scrapbook. British Film Institute.
  3. British Film and Television Yearbook. 3. British and American Film Press. 1949. p. 380.
  4. "London Can Take It!". Imperial War Museum Shop.
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