John Grierson (1898–1972) was a pioneering Scottish filmmaker and producer who shaped the documentary film movement, earning recognition as the father of British and Canadian documentary cinema. He famously coined the term "documentary" in 1926 and championed the idea that film should serve as a tool for social education and reform. As the driving force behind the British documentary movement, he founded the GPO Film Unit, which produced groundbreaking works like Night Mail (1936), and later played a key role in establishing the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) in 1939, turning it into one of the world's most influential documentary institutions. Grierson’s vision and advocacy for documentary as a vehicle for public service and civic engagement left a lasting legacy on global nonfiction filmmaking.
Production
57
Male
1898-04-26
Kilmadock, Stirlingshire, Scotland, UK
约翰·格里尔逊
Documenting John Grierson
The Face of Scotland
Creative Process: Norman McLaren
On the Fishing Banks of Skye
Night Mail
Rivers at Work
John Grierson
Hitchcock on Grierson
A Return to Memory
I Remember, I Remember
Grierson
Weather Forecast
A Job in a Million
Cable Ship
Granton Trawler
Post-Haste
Drifters
The Coming of the Dial
The Smoke Menace
Daily Round
BBC: The Voice of Britain
6.30 Collection
A Colour Box
The Song of Ceylon
Coal Face
O'er Hill and Dale
Man of Africa
Tom Mixup
Herlock Sholmes in Be-a-Live-Crook
Kuster Beaton
Kerri Cheertum in Jungle-Tungle
Our Dumb Friend
Four Men in Prison
Industrial Britain
Devil on Horseback
Spring on the Farm
The New Generation
Upstream
Children at School
Droitwich: The World's Most Modern Long Wave Transmitter
Trade Tattoo
Conquest