Barbara is an assertive, clever, liberated woman, her own boss. Who'd think she could be swept off her feet by a handsome stranger for whom she'd give up her career, London, everything? Especially as her new husband maybe wants to kill her. Directed by Alan Cooke and written by Marc Brandel.With Toby Robins, Scott Forbes and Frederick Danner.
A writer is having an affair with a married woman and gets embroiled with the other women in her life.
Directed by Peter Duguid and written by Thomas Clarke.With Barbara Jefford, Denholm Elliott and Caroline Mortimer.
Peter and Cathy are initially delighted to see their charismatic, subtly domineering friend Robin. But he outstays his welcome, and that's to say the least of it.
Directed by Anthony Page and written by John Hopkins.With Alfred Lynch, Nicol Williamson and Glenda Jackson.
The Headmaster and governors of a boarding school are accidentally locked in the new memorial room with the convicted Great Train Robbers.
Directed by Warris Hussein and Hugh Whitemore.With Richard Pearson, John Le Mesurier and Jane Eccles.
A soldier faces a court-martial for killing his friend.
Directed by Brian Parker and written by Bill Meilen.With Peter Jeffrey, David Collings and Godfrey Quigley.
A soldier, out on reconnaissance in the American Civil War, finds himself buried alive and alone under the rubble of a fallen wall. Unable to move, he is overcome by a mad terror as he hallucinates and awaits his certain death.
Directed by Tony Scott, adapted from and idea by Ambrose Pierce.With Stephen Edwards and Ridley Scott.
Loving Memory, the second film directed by Tony Scott, can be watched on Youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7xNWn3pLl0
A mentally disturbed Welsh teenager is obsessed with Westerns. His volatile temperament loses him the few people who might have been sympathetic, and helped him. Instead, he spirals down to inevitable destruction.
Directed by Gareth Davies and written by Dennis Potter.With Hywel Bennett, Megs Jenkins and Aubrey Richards.
This film is shared not for profit but to educate people.It belongs to the talented director, writer and actors who made it.
Satirical play in which businessmen want to destroy Westminster Abbey to make way for a bypass.
Directed by Ian Curteis, written by John Betjeman and Stewart Farrar.With Derek Francis, Kenneth Fortescue and Pamela Ann Davy.
Semi-autobiographical TV play by Dennis Potter, dealing with the experiences of Nigel Barton, a young man from a poor mining community who wins a scholarship to Oxford University. The villagers accuse him of snobbery, while the rich University students treat him like a peasant. Uncertain of which sphere he should be moving in, Nigel tries to reconcile himself with his proud but stubborn father, and also succeed at University, despite its pretentions which apall him.
Directed by Gareth Davies and written by Dennis Potter.With Keith Barron, Jack Woolgar and Katherine Parr.
In a series of small vignettes, we follow the course of a manic-depressive woman through high and low instances, slowly following her disintegration as she deals with her doctors and family, especially her hot headed, unimaginative father. Eventually she is brought back to a mental asylum where she'd been committed before.
Directed by Ken Loach and written by David Mercer.With Anna Cropper, George A. Cooper and Helen Booth.