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29 October 2014
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29.04.03

FACTUAL & ARTS TV


George Orwell: My Life in Pictures


Saturday 14 June 2003 (tbc), 麻豆社 TWO


Room 101, The Thought Police, Big Brother - George Orwell's grip on popular culture continues to be as strong as ever.


1984 and Animal Farm are still in the top ten bestseller list for English literary novels.


Yet a century after his birth, their author is buried beneath a caricature of a tweedy, eccentric and disillusioned rebel.


George Orwell: My Life in Pictures uses a bold and original approach to put Orwell on the screen.


Chris Langham plays the writer and every word he speaks is as written by Orwell himself.


But the pictures are all "invented" - the "archive" has been specially created because there is not a single frame of moving footage of Orwell in existence, nor even one word or one of his trademark hacking coughs on recorded audio.


All that is left is one oil painting and a couple of hundred photographs.


By bringing to life his extraordinary treasure trove of writing - nine books and some 8,000 pages of journalism, essays, diaries and letters - the film creates a unique dramatised biography of Orwell.


Written essays become authored documentary films shot in the style of the day; events described in diaries are "captured" on home movies; and Movietone footage is manipulated to reveal Orwell in the trenches of the Spanish Civil War.


From Eton and Burma to London and Paris, Orwell's writing - poignant and polemical, scathing and sometimes just funny - is at last caught on film.


The legacy of his writing is undeniable, but perhaps Orwell's finest creation was his own artistic and personal reinvention.


Born Eric Blair, a classic product of the establishment, growing up in the Home Counties and attending Eton, he later purged himself of privilege and re-invented himself as the penniless, crippled and revolutionary artist George Orwell.


But as the programme reveals, Orwell was both an expert in self-reinvention and a crusader after truth.


Orwell witnessed and wrote about many of the defining movements of the turbulent first half of the 20th century: colonialism, unemployment, fascism, Stalinism.


The momentous events that shaped Orwell have also shaped the world today.


George Orwell: My Life in Pictures reveals why Orwell's works, so much a product of their time, still hold such resonance today.


Producer/Director Chris Durlacher
Executive Producer Emma Willis
A Wall to Wall production for 麻豆社 TWO


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