Manufacture of components for Black and Decker tools. [Incomplete]
Shots of the "Empress of Britain" leaving Greenock for Canada and of the interior of the Parkhead steel works.
Craigbank Gardens, Edinburgh. The film has extensive footage of allotments, vegetable gardens and people tending the crops. Portree Horticultural Show also features towards the end of the film.
A tour of the principal centres in Scotland for road and rail networks - Stirling, Perth, Dundee, Aberdeen and Inverness.
Jeannie and Mattie are accepted for a seaside holiday camp. One of a series of fund-raising films produced in aid of the Necessitous Children's Holiday Camp Fund.
A camping expedition by an uncle and his nephew, showing the do's and don'ts of the countryside code.
A film tracing the introduction of movement as a factor in 20th century art. It records various ways in which artists have tackled this development such as Gabo, Calder and Soto.
Surrealistic view of the "Honeymoon couple", interrupted by salesmen, consumer goods, jealousy, anger and infidelity. [Award winner in the 1957 Scottish Amateur Film Festival.]
Emil Jannings in "Faust" (1926)
Leo Slezak (second from left), Hans Albers (second from right) in "Münchhausen" (1943)
Hans Albers, Brigitte Horney (left to right) in "Münchhausen" (1943)
Gustav Fröhlich, Joe May (left to right) while shooting "Asphalt" (1929)
Gustav Fröhlich (left) while shooting "Asphalt" (1929)
Gustav Fröhlich (front) in "Asphalt" (1929)
Betty Amann, Gustav Fröhlich (left to right) in "Asphalt" (1929)
Albert Steinrück, Else Heller, Gustav Fröhlich (first to third from left), Betty Amann (right) in "Asphalt" (1929)
Memo for the shooting for "Fanny Hill".
Synopsis of "Fanny Hill".
Internal correspondence regarding "Fanny Hill".
English dialogue list (excerpt) for "Fanny Hill".
Screenplay (excerpt) of "Fanny Hill".
English screenplay (excerpt) of "Fanny Hill".