Bred And Born (Davis/Leece, 1983): Close-Up Cinema, 7.30pm
This 16mm presentation is part of the East End Film Festival. Full details of the festival can be found here.
BFI review:
An experimental documentary that reflects on the different kinds of
relationship between mother and daughters, and the position of women in
the family, in a hybrid, disjointed but always involving way. Produced
over a period
of four years, Bred and Born emerges from
two parallel strands: a women's discussion group about mother-daughter
relations at a community centre in East London, and interviews conducted
with four generations of working-class women from one family in the
East End. The film intersperses interviews, footage of the family and local area,
archive stills, re-enactments, individual narratives, snippets from the
discussion and extracts from published materials on the topic. Thus it draws
attention to its own representational codes, and highlights the socially and
subjectively constructed nature of women's experience.All the women who speak in the film were to a large degree included
in the filmmaking process, with their reactions helping to shape the
direction the film took. This leaves a lot of space to think about which
parts of the material have been privileged and for what reasons, and
how the women perceived their filmic images. They seem to accept their
roles within the family as natural or
inevitable, but also recognise the limitations of those roles. This
awareness is partial, though strong, and it is not until the very end of
the film that we can
see how the women's consciousness of their position has changed over
several
years of their attendance at the group discussions. By the end, the
women from
the East End family start speaking more as complex subjects and less as
illustrations of a certain sociological thesis.
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