Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-50 of 65
- Travel back in time to the mid twentieth century and discover how everyday objects can tell us something of how past lives were lived.
- "Every country in Eastern Europe currently trying to decriminalise or change its laws, the Dudgeon case is used. It even got quoted in U.S Supreme Court when the Texas Sodomy Law was overturned." P.A. "It established for the first time ever in law, a right to a private life for not only gay people but for straight people, all 260,000,0 million inhabitants of the European community." Jeff The interviewees reflect on further campaigns to gain equality. "I think the big change came in 1997 with the election of a Labour Government which was prepared to put through laws that would make gays equal to non-gay people. As a result all sorts of legislation were changed in the 1990s and early 21st century." Doug "We moved from being a group of people who had been decriminalised and tolerated into a group of people who are integral to society and were part of life. We moved from toleration to acceptance to equality and it's essential to maintain that position." P.A.
- Relatives of those who were killed and injured in the McGurk's Bar bombing talk of that night and its aftermath. On 4 December 1971, the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), exploded a bomb at McGurk's Bar in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The explosion caused the building to collapse, killing fifteen civilians and wounding seventeen more. It was the highest death toll from a single incident in Belfast during the Troubles. Despite evidence to the contrary, the security forces publicized the theory that a bomb had accidentally exploded while being handled by IRA members inside the pub. This inferred that the victims themselves were to blame. The victims' relatives talk about the campaign to clear their family members' names.
- A documentary looking at the band from the North Coast of Antrim who promote the traditional music and song of North Antrim.
- Will McAvoy returns to his old home, situated on an island in Strangford Lough, to tell stories of yesteryear. With Will Cromie and Pete Bleakley.
- Belfast Cleaning Society is a cross-community workers' co-operative, established in 2012 by women from both sides of the Springfield Road interface. Women involved in the co-op discuss the work they do and their reasons for pursuing a different kind of business model.
- Belfast has an outstanding record in innovative community arts. This documentary celebrates and preserves that extraordinary heritage and knowledge The long-term benefits of this in-depth insight into Belfast's contemporary arts heritage are vast and made available on film with extensive archive from the 1970s to present day.
- The journey of one of the world's rarest lighthouse optics from its former home on Mew Island to its recreation as one of Belfast's iconic monuments.
- Mullan Mews and Sydenham Court are bespoke supported housing schemes developed in partnership with the Belfast Health and Social Care Trust by Clanmil Housing. The design and ethos of these supported housing schemes, where the needs and choices of the tenant is central, is key to providing a unique housing option. A significant feature is the application of assistive technology to promote independence and support based on individual assessments. The on-going project with Northern Visions focuses on reminiscence therapy and delivers a fully participative artistic process with the aim of developing new standards, giving people with dementia and allied professionals ways of seeing beyond a diagnosis.
- Exploring marginalised groups and the construction of British &Irish identity in northern Ireland.
- Story of the turbulent 50 year old journey of Turf Lodge as told by its residents. "At the beginning it was our oyster: camping, fishing - it was a great environment to grow up in"
- This unique film captures the art of bonfire building in the lower Shankill estate in Belfast as it progresses through the summer for the annual celebration, the Twelfth of July celebrations.