Jack Ellitt

Most Popular Jack Ellitt Trailers

Total trailers found: 11

The Elephant Will Never Forget Trailer (1953)

01 January 1953

A fond farewell to London's trams - whose peculiarly endearing qualities were discovered only at the threat of their disappearance.

This Is Colour Trailer (1942)

05 March 1942

A short documentary to demonstrate what can be done with Technicolor film and to show various other colourful products.

Soldier, Sailor Trailer (1944)

01 June 1944

Life aboard merchant ships with the Maritime Regiment of the Royal Artillery.

A Place in the Team Trailer (1953)

02 January 1953

People will always need transport and transport will always need people. Addressed particularly to boys of school-leaving age and to young men completing their period of military service, this film shows some of the wide variety of careers which British Transport has to offer, whether in railways or in the docks, on the orads or on Britain's inland waterways.

Behind the Scenes Trailer (1938)

01 January 1938

A playful and affectionate look at London Zoo and the people and animals who make up its daily life.

Scotland Speaks Trailer (1941)

22 February 1941

Survey of the part played by Scotland in the national war effort including farming, coal mining, and shipbuilding.

Chasing the Blues Trailer (1946)

02 January 1946

A short film that shows a mill owner that improves working conditions to improve worker productivity.

Triumph Over Deafness Trailer (1946)

25 July 1946

Instead of learning sign-language, deaf children are taught to speak and lip-read so that they might interact with others as easily as possible.

There Was a Door Trailer (1957)

02 January 1957

N or NW Trailer (1938)

05 February 1938

Correspondence between young lovers nearly ends in disaster through a mistake in postal district. Fortunately the GPO spots the error and all ends well, but with the moral that correspondents should get the address right.

ABCD of Health Trailer (1942)

01 January 1942

Part of BFI boxset Ration Books and Rabbit Pies: Films from the Home Front.