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PLAY ME SOMETHING

Timothy Neat
1989 United Kingdom 72 minutes English

“A few years ago some peasants and their children in the village where I live decided that they would like to go to Venice, which isn’t very far by road. They hired a bus and asked me to come also. We got home after two sleepless nights. I had a marvellous time with my friends, who were seeing Venice for the first time. Quite a long time afterwards, I began to think about how I might write a story out of this experience.”

An admirer of Neat’s documentary films on MacDiarmid and Sorley MacLean, Berger wondered if his friend wanted to try his hand at directing a fiction film. ‘’The crucial idea arrived; maybe for the first time, let’s try to make a film about a story in which we don’t see the protagonists as actors. When you’re lying in bed as a child and your parents are telling you a story you see all these creatures inside your head, not out there. We thought: let’s see if we can do that in the cinema.’’

(Excerpt from the interview “Listening to llamas’ Toenails” by Lorn Macintyre, Herald Scotland, 14 January 1989)

Timothy Neat

Né en 1943 en Cornouailles. Etudes à l’Université de Leeds. A enseigné l’histoire de l’art dans les écoles des Beaux-Arts de Plymouth et Dundee. Ecrivain et cinéaste indépendant, il a publié de nombreux livres, notamment sur l’Ecosse, et réalisé des documentaires et des fictions.

Production :
Kate Swan; Colin MacCabe
Editing :
Russell Fenton
Sound :
Stuart Bruce
Photography :
Chris Fox
Copy Contact :
L'écarquillé

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