THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA: THE EXPEDITION
Thursday 16 October, 7.00pm
Literature/Conservation
Martin Falklind was 14 years old when
he first read Ernest Hemingway’s novel The
Old Man and the Sea, the tale of an unlucky fisherman who sets out to
capture a giant marlin. Since then, he has dreamt of capturing one of these
fabled giant fish, the size of a boat. Martin decides it is time to fulfil his
dream. He sets out on the expedition of a lifetime, to catch an 18 foot (5.5
metre) fish in a small boat, on the open waters of the Gulf of Mexico. However,
the world is a different place now the marlin population is severely endangered
due to overfishing. Martin’s expedition is no longer about the glory of the
catch. It’s about highlighting the terrible effect overfishing has had, even on
remote waters.
WRITERS OF EUROPE: ENGLAND OF MARTIN AMIS
Monday 20 October, 8.30pm
Literature/Culture
Writers of Europe sets out to explore the countries of Europe
and to depict them as perceived and experienced by one or several major figures
of the literature they have produced. English novelist Martin Amis is
perhaps best-known for his novels Money
and London Fields. His work centres
on the excesses of late-capitalist Western society, whose perceived absurdity
he often satirises through grotesque caricature; what the New York Times called "the new unpleasantness".
JUDITH KERR: HITLER, THE TIGER AND ME
Tuesday 21 October, 8.30pm
Literature/Interview
The utterly compelling story of bestselling author and illustrator
Judith Kerr, creator of The Tiger Who
Came to Tea and the Mog series. Alan
Yentob interviews the warm, wise and articulate writer as she celebrates her
90th year. She revisits her childhood home in Berlin, recounts the excitement
of fleeing the Nazis, and reveals the influence of Dr Seuss. Her father was a
theatre critic and friend of Einstein, her mother was a translator for the
Nuremberg War Crimes Commission. In 1932, the family fled for Paris, then
London, leaving everything, including Judith’s toys. Her autobiographical
volume, When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit,
is now a set text in German schools. Exploring her much-loved masterpieces and
detailing how she met her husband, Quatermass
creator Nigel Kneale, this film unveils
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