Bill Douglas: Scotland's greatest director

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Bill Douglas,Director,Scotland

Bill Douglas made just four fairly obscure films in his 20 year career yet he is venerated by many as one of Scotland's greatest directors.

Bill Douglas made just four fairly obscure films in his 20 year career yet he is venerated by many as one of Scotland 's greatest directors. Bill's early amateur films, made as he was learning his craft in the late 1960s, will have their public premiere days later at the It is fair to say that his work was never meant for mainstream cinema audiences. Intensely personal, austere and poetic in style, they tell their stories through fragmented moments rather than conventional narratives.

"If you care about film-making you should watch Bill Douglas. It's just the same as Stanley Kubrick or (Andrei) Tarkovsky...it's up there with Tarkovsky," she said.He was born in 1934 in the mining village of Newcraighall, near Edinburgh. His first three films, made between 1972 and 1978, were My Childhood, My Ain Folk and My Way Home. Filmed in stark black and white, the appalling poverty they depict was drawn directly from his own experience

Bill Douglas Director Scotland Films Career Cinema Poverty

 

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