Alan J. Harding
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The end of government filmmaking, 1951–52
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One of the first actions of the newly elected Conservative administration in 1951 was to signal the closure of the Crown Film Unit, thus ending more than two decades of government film production. Although the unit had had some recent success such as the Oscar awarded for Daybreak in Udi (1949), there had also been a number of badly received and very expensive productions. Amongst these were the mining disaster film, The Cumberland Story (1947), and a desperate attempt to explain economic hardship in A Yank Comes Back (1949). Although Grierson returned from Canada, his brief appearance as film controller had little real impact. Similarly, several key staff, such as Humphrey Jennings, successfully sought employment elsewhere. By the turn of the decade there were several powerful enemies ranged against the CFU. Not only was there ideological opposition to the unit in the Conservative Party but it also faced hostility from the commercial sector and, perhaps most deadly of all, the Treasury. Other producers of documentary-style PIFs always believed that the CFU had been given preferential treatment by the government. However, most damning was the Treasury’s assessment that the CFU was far more expensive than its competitors, especially now it had a major studio facility in Beaconsfield. As the government had been elected on a platform of reducing expenditure, the CFU was an easy target.

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Public information films

British government film units, 1930–52

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