This film is available to license from our website at Huntley Film Archives, by searching for film 1063206 in our Film # search bar:
[ Ссылка ] Tell a Story With Archive showreel 'Protest'
A compilation of films documenting protest marches and demonstrations of the 20th century. Starting with anti atom bomb, anti-nuclear warheads and missiles, CND marches. Anti-Vietnam war. Trade union, workers protests, hunger marches in the U.K. and America in the 1920s. post WW1 workers protest for the right to work in the country they saved. Russian people protest after the revolution. Grunwick protest in 1977. The binmen strike of the 1970s, with piles of rubbish in Leicester Square in London. Gay Rights activists. Suffrage, emancipation of women, marchers with Pankhurst banners. Women being arrested. Marie Stopes and the first birth control clinic. Women still marching for the right to free contraception in the 1970s. Gandhi and followers during the Salt March protest in India in the early 1930s. Navaho, Native American Indian men and women protesting the loss of their land and being rehomed on reservations. The Troubles in Northern Ireland. The 1916 uprising. Montage of Protestant and Catholic murals on the sides of houses. H block prison. Two men protest from their cell. Apartheid in South Africa and Civil Rights demonstrations in America in the 1960s - specifically the Selma to Montgomery marches.
Huntley film numbers in order of appearance: 45894 47151 93839 47151 49130 39459 63139 7915 17416 7937 36496 x 3 39037 97739 16921 63205 98510 16921 93335 36496 35903 16921 93340 98983 19738 x 3 16654 45319 92826 x 2 91461 98186 98192 98189 48328 x 2 62046 48328 62046 61736 90038 94070 38623 38634 61736 x 3 90989 18137 92582 x 3 99224 18137 99266 91055 14506 x 2 99266
Huntley Film Archives is a film library holding tens of thousands of films. The large majority of the films are documentaries. Films cover a wide range of subjects and production dates range from the 1890’s to the 2020’s. As with all libraries we make no judgement on the content of our holdings and make them available for educational purposes for all to see. Films may have content or express opinions some may think inappropriate or offensive, but it is not the work of a library to censor educational resources. Films should be viewed with historical objectivity and within a context relevant to the times in which they were produced
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