Skip to content

Socialist Review  
Search
Back issues
2013
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
   
2012
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
July
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2011
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2010
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
June
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2009
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2008
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2007
Jan
 
 
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2006
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2005
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
More back issues
Links
Search for text
Subscribe
 RSS feed
Pay in advance
By Direct Debit
Payments
Order copies
More About Us
Write to us
Book group
The magazine
The website

 

Under the Cranes

Film Review by Andrew Howard, June 2011

Director: Emma-Louise Williams

Under the Cranes takes us on an odyssey through the London Borough of Hackney by foot, number 38 bus and train - from the ancient marshlands to the slums, from the theatres and market places to the private villas and squares of modern times. It urges us to consider that lively, diverse, intense cities contain the seeds of their own regeneration.

This beautifully constructed film invites us to engage with the fragmentary and multi-layered narrative of Hackney, using a montage of location shots, long buried archive footage, still images and moving paintings, combined with a soundscape of field recordings, poetry, music, song and personal testimony.

Here the intrigues of Shakespearian Shoreditch are juxtaposed with the brutality of fascism in post-war Dalston, the brave deeds of the Jewish 43 Group, a history of social housing, the plight of a Bangladeshi restaurant owner or a Jamaican builder, the courageous resolve of waves of immigrants, local enterprise and industry and the spectre of Olympic developers.

Despite its wonderful evocation of Hackney's past, Under the Cranes is no nostalgic trip down memory lane. Nor is it a rallying call against development. It simply allows us to draw our own conclusions about the fate of our inner cities.

In the end, the film urges us to recognise what is already there, at the heart of a diverse and thriving community, while raising the question that perhaps we are all living in the shadow of the cranes.

"If you let it, a street will grow."

Under the Cranes is out now. It will be shown at Marxism 2011


Write to us

We welcome letters on all issues raised in Socialist Review.

Please keep contributions to under 300 words if possible, and indicate which article you are responding to.

Your name

Your address

Your email address

Text of your letter


Comments?

Email letters@socialistreview.org.uk

Contents

Complete list for this issue

Donate

Access to this website is free - help us keep it that way. Please make a donation.

Subscribe

Letters

Get each issue
delivered - and save money
as well!