Bruce Parsons

Most Popular Bruce Parsons Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

The End of the Line Trailer (1959)

01 January 1959

This documentary short offers a nostalgic look at the steam locomotive as it passes from reality to history.

Protect and Survive Trailer (1976)

01 January 1976

Protect and Survive was a public information series on civil defence produced by the British government during the late 1970s and early 1980s.

The Cars in Your Life Trailer (1960)

01 January 1960

A light, humorous look at the motor car and the great North American itch for a place on the road. From the comparative peace of Honest Joe's used-car lot, this film hustles you onto our public speedways, where hot rubber erases any distance between all points.

White Man's Country Trailer (1973)

01 January 1973

In the late 19th century, Britain, France, Germany and other European states agreed on the division of Africa into a patchwork of colonies, and set about exploring and exploiting their new possessions.

Joshua: A Nigerian Portrait Trailer (1963)

01 January 1963

Focusing on the pressures people feel moving from the security and nurture of village life to the isolate chaos of big city life, Joshua: A Nigerian Portrait tells the story of Joshua Sobitan, a rent-collector living in Lagos.

Mau Mau Trailer (1973)

01 January 1973

In October 1952 the British government declared a State of Emergency in Kenya. Its object: the defeat of "Mau Mau.

Kenyatta Trailer (1973)

01 January 1973

Jomo Kenyatta's death in 1978 brought to an end a political career that encompassed more than 50 years of African history.

Requiem for a Village Trailer (1975)

01 December 1975

The idyllic, rural past of a Suffolk village comes to life through the memories of an old man who tends a country graveyard.

Police Trailer (1958)

30 November 1958

The misbehaving public performs for the camera in a half-hour miscellany of misdeeds. In a behind-the-scenes look at the hour-by-hour operation of a large metropolitan police force, this film presents a fair sampling of what keeps Toronto's police officers busy twenty-four hours a day.