
26 Feb 1982

Berliner Stadtbahnbilder
Documentation on the Berlin S-Bahn, which threatened to fall into oblivion as a result of the division of the city.

26 Feb 1982

Documentation on the Berlin S-Bahn, which threatened to fall into oblivion as a result of the division of the city.

08 Jun 2020

Seeing is to painting what listening is to politics. Survival as an artist demands both. Paint Until Dawn is a documentary on art in the life of James Gahagan (1927-1999), who painted all night to push the limits of vision. His life and thought reveal a correlation between art and activism through an interesting angle: the creative process itself.

17 Apr 2011

Operation 8 examines the so-called 'anti-terror' raids that took place around New Zealand on October 15, 2007 - asking how and why they took place and at what cost to those targeted.
31 Dec 1950
Documentary about the emergence of the strike movement in the iron ore mines of Rudňa in Slovakia. The miner Michal Ogurčák introduced a new way of mining iron ore here, overcame initial misunderstandings, and eventually inspired 160 followers to perform striking feats by his example.

12 Mar 2014

Documentary marking the 30th anniversary of the 1984 miners' strike, one of the bitterest industrial disputes in British history, with stories from both sides of the conflict.

01 Jan 1948

Production for the Seaboard Railroad company outlining their railroad activities in the 1940s and heading into the 1950s

01 Jan 1957

A documentary on the railroads of America produced by the Association of American Railroads

01 Jan 1942

Documentary on the evolution and introduction of modern coal burning locomotives on the Norfolk and Western Railway line.

01 Jan 1967

The story of the railroad man in his role in keeping the trains moving on the rails.
01 Jun 2021
A unique look inside over 70 signal boxes taken from Video 125's archive filmed over a period of 30 years. Features 'boxes of all shapes and sizes, all kinds of operating methods from 19th century mechanical lever frames to 20th century panels to 21st century state-of-the-art Rail Operating Centres.

08 Nov 2019

1917, The Train from Hell is an historical documentary about a train accident during WW1.

23 Jan 1977

This film documents the coal miners' strike against the Brookside Mine of the Eastover Mining Company in Harlan County, Kentucky in June, 1973. Eastovers refusal to sign a contract (when the miners joined with the United Mine Workers of America) led to the strike, which lasted more than a year and included violent battles between gun-toting company thugs/scabs and the picketing miners and their supportive women-folk. Director Barbara Kopple puts the strike into perspective by giving us some background on the historical plight of the miners and some history of the UMWA. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in partnership with New York Women in Film & Television in 2004.
01 Jan 1951
No overview found
01 Jan 1952
No overview found
01 Jan 1951
No overview found

28 Nov 2022

No overview found

01 Jan 1978

A documentary about the history of settler groups that came to New Zealand from Europe.

30 Jul 2005

A documentary about the threat posed to New Zealand's Kaipara Harbour by rapacious commercial fishing and development.

18 Apr 1996

Someone Else’s Country looks critically at the radical economic changes implemented by the 1984 Labour Government - where privatisation of state assets was part of a wider agenda that sought to remake New Zealand as a model free market state. The trickle-down ‘Rogernomics’ rhetoric warned of no gain without pain, and here the theory is counterpointed by the social effects (redundant workers, Post Office closures). Made by Alister Barry in 1996 when the effects were raw, the film draws extensively on archive footage and interviews with key “witnesses to history”.

12 Jul 2002

The story of unemployment in New Zealand and In A Land of Plenty is an exploration of just that; it takes as its starting point the consensus from The Depression onwards that Godzone economic policy should focus on achieving full employment, and explores how this was radically shifted by the 1984 Labour government. Director Alister Barry's perspective is clear, as he trains a humanist lens on ‘Rogernomics' to argue for the policy's negative effects on society, as a new poverty-stricken underclass developed.