London Visitors
The film takes us to the North of England to follow the migration of the black-headed gull down to London. There, the narrator asks viewers to "listen to their gossip", before demonstrating the bird’s flight in slow motion. We see a polecat feasting on gull eggs, and then a man collecting the eggs for human consumption, with the film telling us that they are considered a “delicacy” in London. Indeed, according to the British Trust for Ornithology, around 300,000 gull’s eggs were sold every year in Leadenhall Market in London during the 1930s, when London Visitors was made.
Műfaj: Dokumentum
Öntvény:
Legénység: Oliver G. Pike (Director of Photography), Mary Field (Director), J.V. Durden (Editor)
Kulcsszó:
London Visitors 1936
Gaumont-British Instructional
London Visitors filmek
London Visitors online filmek
London Visitors online sorozatok
London Visitors film adatlapok
London Visitors sorozat adatlapok
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