Clip description
Bill Smith (Dick Hackett) now works on a commercial high-rise construction site. In this dramatised scene, Smith’s foreman (Jock Levy) persuades him that the scaffolding used on the site is safe and that the Scaffolding Act is just 'red tape’. Smith continues his work though the wooden planks don’t look strong enough to hold his weight. The scaffolding gives way and Smith falls to the ground. After the accident, Smith’s wife pushes him in a wheelchair out to the family backyard. According to the voice-over narration, his future is bleak.
Curator’s notes
Elements of this clip reveal director Jock Levy’s interest in the Soviet filmmakers Sergei Eisenstein and Vsevolod Pudovkin. Leonard Teale’s narration, the dramatic music and the close-ups of the scaffolding all build tension in this clip leading up to Smith’s eventual fall. The shots of Smith’s bloodstained hands hanging on for dear life are powerfully intercut with close-ups of his sweaty brow, followed by his spiralling fall to the ground and the foreman’s face.
Levy appears in this clip as the nasty foreman. Dick Hackett, who plays Smith, was a wharfie. Levy featured in a number of the film unit’s productions including performing four different characters to comic effect in Four’s a Crowd (1957).