Abingdon Film Unit

The Abingdon Film Unit (known as the AFU) is an organisation based at Abingdon School, Abingdon-on-Thames, in Oxfordshire, England[1][2] that enables pupils to make their own short documentary or animated films under the guidance of a team of industry professionals. The AFU was formed in 2003 by renowned British documentary maker Michael Grigsby[3] and the school's Head of Drama, Jeremy Taylor.[4] They led the Unit together until Grigsby's death at the age of 76 in March 2013.[5] The Film Unit has been very successful with several films selected for screening at the National Film Theatre in London and others added to the National Film Archive.[6][7][8][9][10]

Abingdon Film Unit
Founded2003
FoundersMichael Grigsby, Jeremy Taylor
Headquarters,
England
Websitehttp://www.abingdonfilmunit.com/

Profile

The Unit consists of BAFTA winning directors Jonas Mortensen (cinematography) and Colin O'Toole (direction),[11] Mikkel Eriksen and Larry Sider (sound design), Nikolaj Larsen and Arvid Eriksson (editing), Duncan Pickstock and Rebekah Tolley (direction), and animators Joanna Harrison and Geoff Dunbar. The Unit has so far produced over 120 short films, many of which have won prizes or received screenings at festivals in the UK and abroad. The influence of Grigsby's distinctive philosophy and aesthetic - using the medium of film "to give voice to the voiceless", explore "the poetry of the everyday" and allow audiences time and space in which to make their own judgements about the material - are often discernible in AFU documentaries, whilst AFU animations celebrate a hand-drawn or hand-made approach. The Unit encourages students to adopt the highest standards, and to develop their ideas through a process of careful research and reflection that seeks to clarify at every stage the aims and intentions of their films.[2]

Acclaim

Many of the Unit's films have been screened at the National Film Theatre (NFT) in London. There have also been screenings at the Dinard Festival of British Cinema in France and at the BUFF festival of young people's film in Malmo, Sweden. AFU films have won first prize at the Oxdox International Film Festival, the New Shoots Festival, the BFI Future Film Festival and the Bradford Animation Festival. The AFU has come to the attention of the press on several occasions through articles in, among others, the Times Educational Supplement, Vertigo magazine and Sight and Sound. Its members have also featured in local television and radio broadcasts.

Larger projects

Two large-scale films have been made, one in Cambodia called 'Gravel and Stones' and the other in Moldova, called 'One Foot on the Ground'. Gravel and Stones was a thirty-minute film about the experience of disabled people in Cambodia called 'Gravel and Stones', made by Edward Hofman and Ben Hollins (directors), Tom Wakeling (cinematography), Andrew Mcgrath (sound recordist) and Suon Rottana (research and translation). It premiered at the BFI Southbank in November 2007 ahead of outings the following year at Raindance and LIDF. The film examines the devastating effects of land mines on the people of Cambodia, and was made with support of an NGO called Landmine Disability Support or LMDS. In 2009, the AFU produced another half-hour documentary called 'One Foot On The Ground'. This also premiered at BFI Southbank before screenings at Raindance and a new festival pioneered by the AFU in collaboration with the Westminster branch of the United Nations Association called 'We The People'. This film, made by Matthew Copson (director, editor), Tom Bateman (camera) and William McDowell (sound), follows a promising young basketball player in Moldova called Andreii as he struggles to choose between staying in his native country - one of the poorest in Europe - or, like so many of his friends, moving away to pursue his dream of playing basketball professionally in another country.[12][13]

Screenings

The Film Unit holds annual screenings at the end of September each year consisting of projects curated over the past year. These take place in the school's Amey Theatre and are open to the public free of charge and are often attended by a number of film industry professionals.[14]

See also

List of Old Abingdonians

References

  1. "Other Half-Drama, Film and Media". Abingdon School. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  2. "About". Abingdon Film Unit. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  3. "Michael Grigsby". The Times. 5 June 2013. p. 50 via Times Digital Archive.
  4. "Film Unit" (PDF). The Abingdonian.
  5. "Michael Grigsby 1936-2013". British Film Institute.
  6. "Cobblers - BFI British Film Institute". British Film Institute. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  7. "Morning - BFI British Film Institute". British Film Institute. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  8. "The Stables - BFI British Film Institute". British Film Institute. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  9. "Squeaky Little People - BFI British Film Institute". British Film Institute. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  10. "Prospects - BFI British Film Institute". British Film Institute. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  11. "BAFTA winner - BRITISH SHORT FILM - COWBOY DAVE". British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  12. "Filming Gravel and Stones in Cambodia". Close up Film Centre. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  13. "Three Abingdon schoolboys have made a film which will have its premiere at the National Film Theatre in London". The Herald. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  14. "Abingdon Film Unit Screenings". Abingdon School. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.