Michael Grigsby-Enginemen (1959)
198.5 MB | 0:17:00 | English with English s/t | XviD, 1380 Kb/s | 544x416
198.5 MB | 0:17:00 | English with English s/t | XviD, 1380 Kb/s | 544x416
Made at the time when steam trains were being supplanted by diesel, Enginemen lovingly records not only the men who work and look after the engines, but also the machines themselves. Enginemen was filmed in and around a locomotive shed in Newton Heath outside Manchester and was shot over a period of 18 months, early on Saturday mornings, with virtually no equipment other then a 16mm camera and a tape recorder. BFI
Enginemen was the first film made by Unit Five Seven, a group of young independent TV technicians from Manchester. Produced thanks to a tiny grant from the BFI Experimental Film Fund, it was shot over two years at weekends and early in the morning with virtually no equipment other than a 16mm camera. However, the Unit later admitted that the most difficult stage was to add the sound - hence the poor quality of the soundtrack. Thanks to the BFI connection, Michael Grigsby's film managed to attract the attention of Free Cinema mentor Lindsay Anderson. It was finished just in time to be included in the sixth programme in Spring 1959. Screenonline
Enginemen records the life and work of enginemen in a locomotive shed outside Manchester. Grigsby remembers that "it was the time of British Railways' modernisation plans and among other things the film explores the enginemen's sense of loss, frustration and perplexity". The film looks at the men at work on the footplace or during a break in the canteen with similar compassion to previous Free Cinema films. It also employs the same impressionist technique of disjunction between what we hear and what we see, shunning voice-over commentary. For instance, as the camera pans across the canteen room, focusing on the men's bewildered faces, we can hear some of them describing how they feel about the coming of diesel engine with a hint of nostalgia. Screenonline
The result may not be as powerful as in Anderson's Every Day Except Christmas (to which Enginemen was often compared) but the beautiful shots of the engines earned the film a comparison with J.M.W. Turner's depiction of smoke and steam. Screenonline
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