Director of Photography
The film tkes us to the North of England to follow the migration of the black-headed gull down to London. There, the narrator asks viewers to "listen to their gossip", before demonstrating the bird’s flight in slow motion. We see a polecat feasting on gull eggs, and then a man collecting the eggs for human consumption, with the film telling us that they are considered a “delicacy” in London. Indeed, according to the British Trust for Ornithology, around 300,000 gull’s eggs were sold every year in Leadenhall Market in London during the 1930s, when London Visitors was made.
Cinematography
Part of BFI collection "Secrets of Nature."
Director of Photography
Part of BFI collection "Secrets of Nature."
Director
Director of Photography
Native British birds, from common gulls and cuckoos to the rare Richardson's Skua, are filmed in their natural habitat.
Director
Native British birds, from common gulls and cuckoos to the rare Richardson's Skua, are filmed in their natural habitat.
Director
Scenes of islanders and seabirds on the remote island of St. Kilda.