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Greg Davies: Looking For Kes • Full Documentary 

AINHAINS
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Greg Davies: Looking For Kes
A Kestral For A Knave • Kes
Barry Hines • Ken Loach
Tony Garnett • David Bradley
Comedian, actor and ex-English teacher Greg Davies is a lifelong fan of Barry Hines' classic novel A Kestrel For A Knave, the story of Billy Casper training a kestrel as an escape from his troubled home and school life. In this documentary, Greg goes in search of the book's enduring appeal, travelling to Barnsley, where the book was set and where Ken Loach's famous adaptation, Kes, was filmed. In a series of encounters with Barry Hines' friends and family, collaborators and admirers, Greg offers a warm, funny and poignant tribute to a book that gave a unique voice to the working-class experience and, in Billy Casper, created a young rebel whose story continues to connect with readers more than 50 years after it was first published in 1968. In the fish and chip shop young Billy visits in Kes, now renamed Caspers, Greg meets Dai Bradley who played Billy Casper. Together they wonder what might have become of him. “I think he would have kept that fighting spirit,” says Dai. “There’s a lot of kids like him out there and the message of the book is that we need to find ways to harness that energy.” Greg also meets members of the local community in the working men's club, where Barry was a regular, and discovers how many characters in the book were inspired by the people he met there, including the notorious PE teacher. Ken Loach explains why the book provided such perfect source material for the film. “The truth of the book shone through: the comedy, the use of language and dialect and, of course, the central image of a boy who is trapped, training a bird that flies free.” Greg visits the site where Barry Hines's brother, Richard, found his own kestrel, the encounter that inspired the character of Billy and the location used in the film. For the first time in 50 years, Richard flies a kestrel again. In the Sheffield University archives, Greg is thrilled to discover the original handwritten manuscript of A Kestrel For A Knave. There he meets Jarvis Cocker, another fan of the book, who discusses why the book meant so much to him “That symbolism of escape was powerful for me growing up,” says Jarvis. “The desire for escape has been a massive engine for creativity for people from working-class backgrounds. You want to make, write or sing something to help you escape.”

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22 май 2021

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Комментарии : 437   
@AINHAINS
@AINHAINS 5 месяцев назад
Man Tips Guests Food Down The Sink Come Dine With Me ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-07Xpp3ZDfX4.html
@LeonEvans_Guyver1
@LeonEvans_Guyver1 2 года назад
and this is why I love RU-vid. I never knew this documentary existed. I would never have found it on BBC iPlayer or any of the the UK's terrestrial TV 'apps'. I was gifted it by the RU-vid algorithm and I am grateful for that. What a fantastic hour of film making.
@noeyes6151
@noeyes6151 Год назад
Same, yeah this wouldn't come up on bbc, obvious reasons, too cultural 😂
@gaz4840
@gaz4840 Год назад
Casper, get down off that crossbar, and that boys is how to take penalty, and here we see the slighlty balding bobby charlton to kick off, classic Brian Glover
@ukqwerty999
@ukqwerty999 Год назад
5 minutes in and this is a gem, glad it popped up ❤❤
@andybutcher6251
@andybutcher6251 Год назад
Superb
@Liofa73
@Liofa73 Год назад
It was a BBC documentary and it was on iPlayer. Whether the Tory overlords at the BBC wanted you to see it is another matter.
@jack8988
@jack8988 Год назад
Never seen the film Kes but stumbled across this documentary and the next day I watched the film! What a film! Thank you RU-vid
@jujulionesselsa1416
@jujulionesselsa1416 Год назад
I know from my Dad's fight to keep the Mines open. That is where our whole lives were completely better. The village was thriving and so united. And I can completely understand why he made a friend of a Kestrel which is so unique. I am born and bred in a mining town of which I am incredibly proud. I am lost for words. Things for us will never be the same. Everyone knew each other. Now everyone is drug dependant. And the people who I once knew and deeply adored are now gone. And they were a different class of character that will never be replaced. I am so devastated at what happened to the Place I love and the people I loved. Thanks Maggie Thatcher you horrific heartless rotten thing, you brought a very much loved mining town to its knees. Everyone looked after each other. There was never any strangers because they never ignored anyone no matter where they were from. My heart will never mend.
@fizzie1959
@fizzie1959 Год назад
Thatcher ripped the hearts out of every community the mining towns got the worst of it.
@shaunmartin6767
@shaunmartin6767 Год назад
Well said, I couldn't agree more. Being an ex miner from a pit village in Nottinghamshire, yes times were hard and was a struggle but I would say a lot happier, at least the majority of people had morals and respect for eachother unlike now thatchers legacy.
@leopoldstotch3524
@leopoldstotch3524 9 месяцев назад
South wales valley’s here and I couldn’t agree more with your words ! . I don’t think anyone from a mining town will ever forgive thatcher.
@jonharrison9222
@jonharrison9222 2 месяца назад
Staffordshire here and fully agree.
@wenchangeljac6343
@wenchangeljac6343 Год назад
Greg. That was a brilliant documentary. I read the book at school and it destroyed me. All that hope and promise ended up in the bin. Brutally. It had a profound impact on my life. In 2018 I was working for a charity in Coventry. I was asked if I would work extra hours because the local theatre was screening ' I Daniel Blake'. I was lucky enough to watch the whole movie standing next to Ken Loach. One of the highlights of my life. I love that Jarvis was featured in the documentary too. At the end, Kes represented the death of hope and humanity. But you cannot kill hope. I'm so grateful that you revisited the impact this incredible novel had on our lives. Thank you ☺️
@shealey9763
@shealey9763 6 месяцев назад
To see Dai Bradley calling the kestrel interspersed with him doing it in the movie as a young lad... wonderful. Beautiful documntary all round
@smokingbrush2498
@smokingbrush2498 9 месяцев назад
What a brilliant documentary. As human and compassionate as both the book and the film. Thank you so much. Two observations; 1 As usual, George Orwell has a hand in there 2 This book must never be allowed to slip from the curriculum. This universal work of art is essential reading for everyone, everywhere
@Lena-kc4tj
@Lena-kc4tj 2 года назад
Watching this I genuinely don't think Greg was a bad teacher at all. I think he probably didn't take the job as seriously as other teachers, but I'm convinced he was compassionate and nice and hilarious and he made it easy for students who maybe weren't as comfortable or didn't really like school and that's already a great deal better than most of the teachers I had
@flippetskater
@flippetskater 2 года назад
I absolutely agree with everything you've said. Anyone who has that love for a story, for the humanity of it, and wants to share that love with others? That's a good teacher, no matter what else. He's lighthearted and flippant, sure, but he has a serious core, wrapped in love and as you say, compassion.
@juliannechan7282
@juliannechan7282 2 года назад
He was nominated for the Teacher of the Year Award after all ;)
@pia91
@pia91 2 года назад
he wasn't, he just... wasn't "on schedule" if you will I've got a good friend who now teaches in the UK, was educated in Ireland, we met through an exchange programme way back and she was positively (literally and metaphorically) shocked, how school is in Germany - same for me. I was shit at maths in Germany, the maths in Ireland was easy. The way they thought any and all languages was horrid to me. hammering vocabs and grammar into you, no speaking skills whatsoever, no fun - that's still the same to this very day. There's a lot that is wrong with the german schooling system but what I keep hearing from my friend - no thanks, we're still better off here. No wonder he effed off. I would, too.
@MartsTravel
@MartsTravel Год назад
Good teachers dont take the job seriously, they try to ignore the bullshit of data that is put infront of them by box ticking bosses who dont teach but create extra work for the ones that do, so they can earn double what the teacher does. I classed myself as a good teacher and definitely got results with my students but i chose to leave teaching because of the bullshit tgat you have to put up with, it isnt the students that cause you to leave at all.
@suzannewilson9918
@suzannewilson9918 Год назад
I fully agree. I think he emits genuine joy and relatability many students would want to work hard for. Just ordered the book and cannot wait to immerse myself into it!
@drewcampbell8555
@drewcampbell8555 Год назад
I've loved the film and book for as long as I can remember. I was 6 or 7 years old when I saw it in the cinema and 12 when I read the book. It spoke to me as a skinny working class boy with no dad, trying to cope with all the bullies I seem to meet at every turn. And that eternal symbol of hope, the soaring bird. Thanks to all concerned with making this documentary, and to you for posting on RU-vid. Thanks too to the brilliant Dai Bradley, and to the always wonderful, always true Ken Loach. And above all to the late Barry Hines, whose inspiration lives on.
@PNEKarl
@PNEKarl 2 года назад
Oh wow! That was emotional. I'm 60 and was a scrawny kid from the same era. I used to go bird nesting. I used to get caned at school. I wore scruffy clothes. But, my God, I loved my years. Kes the film always makes me cry. Cracking documentary Greg. Thanks for sharing. I've never had a tattoo but now I want one of Billy Casper flicking his 'V'.
@magumba1000
@magumba1000 2 года назад
Mate...you and me both...We aint alone in this world xXx
@wonderwoman5528
@wonderwoman5528 2 года назад
Looking great for 60 if that’s you in the pic :)
@nodders6830
@nodders6830 2 года назад
Lol , I could have wrote that :)
@buxvan
@buxvan 2 года назад
Great comment, exactly what I would have written. I'm 59. I've got a T shirt of Casper doing the 2 fingers. Amazing how many people recognize it.
@philipatkinson7039
@philipatkinson7039 Год назад
Some here pal from just daarn the roooard 👌👍
@billycasper50
@billycasper50 Месяц назад
This is the only fictional book I’ve read, I’m now 65. I’ve kept hawks since I was 12 years old. Coming from a northern industrial town this is the story of my childhood. I cry every time I watch the film. I can’t bring myself to read the book again. I have lived the moment of losing a hawk many times. Best film Ever made.
@danielrobbins349
@danielrobbins349 Год назад
Growing up in a mining town in Idaho, this book really sang to me. For me, it's an amazing and moving tale.
@helencarter3666
@helencarter3666 Год назад
Seems to be a quality to Greg that he can chat to everyone and look just as at home in the club as he does as a tv host. His genuine interest and love for the story and the history shines through and makes it a refreshing and very watchable interesting documentary.
@BrayTube
@BrayTube Год назад
That was inexplicably emotional. Thank you, Barry Hines.
@welshwarrior5263
@welshwarrior5263 2 года назад
Always loved the film which I found heart breaking and still do. I am reading Life after Kes at the moment which delves into the characters who played the parts on set. At the time of writing, I am staying with my other half at her mother's house in Barnsley so visiting the film locations of Kes. Today I went to the old Tankersley Hall, Fitzwilliam Street and 56 Parkside Road Hoyland. An experience which brought tears to my eyes and memories I shall cherish for the rest of my life. On a end note, my stay in Barnsley ended today. However, due to my other half knowing the people of Barnsley, I was extremely lucky enough to meet Dai Bradley yesterday as he was kind enough to have a chat with me. A very down to earth gentleman and his kindness as a human being shone through. I am still overwhelmed and in disbelief of meeting the lead actor of I believe the finest British movie of all time.
@clara_hp6254
@clara_hp6254 Год назад
I came for Greg Davies but I stayed for the incredible heartfelt story.. thank you
@johnnyboy62parker39
@johnnyboy62parker39 2 года назад
The scene where Richard lures the Kestrel again after 50 years wow so emotional and the music was just perfect. If you aren’t moved by that you’re a stone hearted person
@kevinparker461
@kevinparker461 Год назад
When i heard him say " Is it a Jack?" i thought you don't call male Kestrels a Jack only male Merlins are called Jacks. Then when i see him walk towards the camera & the bird on his fist come into focus that is exactly what it was, a Jack (Male) Merlin not a Kestrel.
@msmichelle6279
@msmichelle6279 3 года назад
I am shocked at how emotional this was, I came to watch because I adore Greg but I was instantly drawn in. The book resonates as well, growing up in a poor Northern Canadian town, I can see so many similarities. Bravo. So well done.
@mackaybrown4847
@mackaybrown4847 4 месяца назад
I’ve just re-read the book for the first time since 1994 - I never knew about this documentary so it’s a brilliant watch
@user-io7yk7qb1k
@user-io7yk7qb1k 7 месяцев назад
A really moving documentary about a book that so many of my generation read at secondary modern schools and felt a real connection too. How we also took turns in reading the pages in class and took so much pleasure in reading out the swear words which were strictly forbidden and rarely allowed on tv or film. Of course, between friends we would swear like troopers but never within earshot of adults! It was wonderful to hear the stories of everyone so closely connected with Barry Hines and the film which Ken Loach made into a classic masterpiece with Dai who brought Billy to such vivid life. The scenes flying the kestrel with Dai and Barry’s older brother were magical and beautifully shot. Well done Greg, the most enjoyable documentary I’ve watched in a long time, you really let the jesses go!
@Limabelasun
@Limabelasun Год назад
read the book at school in the early 1980s. as a 70s and 80s kid in south London, yet access to the parks and old building sites, the brutality of teachers by today's standards, the grime, fighting, the adventures and imagination, this book resounded life for me. it inspired me and drove my passion and such a surprise just to be mooching through youtube over a lunch break coffee to find this fantastic documentary.
@fallingdownalot
@fallingdownalot Год назад
Exactly where I’m at. Even down to the south London element (peckham) My 70/80s working class life was a long way from a northern mining town but the story definitely had an impact and a resounding echo with me.
@robinfereday6562
@robinfereday6562 Год назад
The portrayal of billy Casper by Dia Bradly has to be one of the greatest pieces of acting ever put on film a true masterpiece
@gaz4840
@gaz4840 Год назад
i dont think he did another film after this, did he?
@robinfereday6562
@robinfereday6562 Год назад
@@gaz4840 yes a few Zulu dawn comes to mind
@jakehope6811
@jakehope6811 Год назад
I think I remember him being in the 70s version of all quiet on the western front aswell ?
@obasplobs6381
@obasplobs6381 Год назад
My Grandad is Barry Hines' cousin. I met him several times throughout my childhood and even have an autographed copy of Kes that he gifted my grandad before he died. Weird that this popped up in my youtube feed...
@TheDeadknots
@TheDeadknots Год назад
This was brilliant. Thank you so much for making this available on RU-vid. Being American, this story was unfamiliar to me, but I was close to tears several times as the emotional connection everyone felt to the book and the movie shone through. Now off to find and experience them myself. Greg Davies was great, showing a perfect balance of his natural humor and a genuine reverence for the subject . This was a treasure waiting to be found.
@johnmccnj
@johnmccnj 3 месяца назад
I read the book and saw the movie when I was in school, nearly 40 years ago, and I only saw Threads about 10 years ago. Before today, I never knew they were written by the same author.
@tonyjoel9489
@tonyjoel9489 Год назад
This is an absolute classic northern film and reminds me of my youth...born and bred in Sheffield and understood been brought up this way....a masterpiece of writing and understanding of life in the north... absolutely classic
@hownhallshooting
@hownhallshooting Год назад
A poignant and beautiful sign-off...a lovely thing indeed. Well done big man!!🙏
@laurencevan-togen2728
@laurencevan-togen2728 Год назад
Just found this and loved it. I'm nearly 60, from near Hoyland Common and can confirm Casper's life was not unique by any stretch. In fact it was the norm. God know how today's kids would have survived that time. Thanks #gdavies #BrianGlover #DavidBradley #KenLoach
@andrewmcp7563
@andrewmcp7563 Год назад
This is a beautiful tribute to a wonderful book and movie. It's as much a part of the North as the gritstone and mud. Bravo, Greg (and team)!
@AlonsoRules
@AlonsoRules 2 года назад
The actor who played the teacher in the scene at 31:10 is Colin Welland who wrote the screenplay for Chariots of Fire
@chrisjones2224
@chrisjones2224 Год назад
Kes was on tv the week before I went to Secondary School in 74, in a Yorkshire City, frightened me to death, to say it was an accurate description of School, back then is an understatement, we even had the 'mad' PE teacher!
@andrewnorris1
@andrewnorris1 Год назад
Charming documentary. Like many people here Kes left a deep impression. I watched it again many years ago but what struck me especially then was how cleverly the film appeared to look like a documentary in parts before it seemed to switch back to being a film, seamlessly. A testament to Ken Loach’s directional skills.
@jimjoelliejack
@jimjoelliejack Год назад
Fantastic! I was like billy when I was a school boy in the early 70s. I had a female kestrel (it’s a Falcon) called Cara. I grew up in the industrial midlands I think it was grimmer that the Northern towns. I was caned lots of times, I’m now in my 60 and I still love this film and the memories that it brings back.👍
@1azrealdeal
@1azrealdeal 5 месяцев назад
Absolutely wonderful documentary. 10/10.
@garyhulme3673
@garyhulme3673 Год назад
Brilliant program and brilliant film. Thanks for showing
@Nagrom_le
@Nagrom_le 6 месяцев назад
It was really emotional not only finding out Kes took place in the town i live in but seeing the documentry include places ive been and the very school i went to. Watching this was brilliant and gave me a whole different view on the statue that stands in barnsley centre. At first i didnt understand what was so important about it until my nan decided to make me watch the film and im glad she did.
@mbgames73
@mbgames73 Год назад
Lovely Docu .. Kes the film was Beautiful and brutal .. saw the film at 11 in the 1980’s and was so emotionally blown away. Coming from Yorkshire, all those local spotty kids in the class and Brian Glover as the footy bully PE teacher was just perfect casting and close to home. Ken Loach is such a Geeza. Met him once in the 90’s at Granada studios and he crossed out the Lloyds bank logo on the programme before he signed his autograph for me … I was in awe.
@smokingbrush2498
@smokingbrush2498 9 месяцев назад
Yes; Ken is quite a man.
@Bobfahrer
@Bobfahrer 2 года назад
So here’s a thing: I love Greg Davies. The problem: I have absolutely no ducking idea why. But I have to watch everything this giant pan face is in.
@keithlow3056
@keithlow3056 Год назад
Thanks for the post. I had to study this book in English when I was at school in the mid 80s and it still holds memories. It's a window into a time that still resonates.
@newforestpixie5297
@newforestpixie5297 2 года назад
In 1979 A Kestrel for a Knave was part of our CSE year 4 curriculum and the first mandatory book which wasn’t boring or forgettable . As soon as it was advertised to be shown on C4 in the ‘80s I recorded it , showed it to both of my children when young in 1999 and 2008 and still have the vcr cassette on the bookshelf . Thanks for posting this 👍😁
@Cchogan
@Cchogan 2 года назад
It is interesting how, mostly through Hines, the story comes back to being somehow a portrayal of working class. I grew up in the south in a predictably middle-class family, and yet when I saw the film when I was a young teen, and then again years later, I completely related to it. The accents might be different, but his school was just like mine. The arguments were the same that I saw in my life. The bullying was the same, and it was aimed at the same people who never deserved it. And I think that is the true success of the story. Hines wrote a true story, a story about truth, and, without perhaps meaning to, wrote about a truth that stands outside of class or race or nationality or all those other fake divisions we love shoving up because we can't somehow bare to admit that just perhaps, we are all the bloody same. I loved the film, and I loved the book.
@jonharrison9222
@jonharrison9222 2 месяца назад
Good for you!
@susanjoy1501
@susanjoy1501 21 день назад
I was Billy's age in 69 this film really took me back to my schooldays and my teens
@paulmccarthy7061
@paulmccarthy7061 Год назад
Beautifully acted, fantastic screenplay, without doubt, a Great British film, if not one of the greatest. I'd read the book, when l finally saw the film. I wasn't prepared for the emotion it conveyed. I blubbed like a baby, and laughed like a lottery winner. An emotional roller coaster. Brilliant film..
@aupaaupa2377
@aupaaupa2377 Год назад
I remember I came to KES the book after having read so many distinguished authors etc, having worked my way through so many classics, but when I read KES it cut through me. I saw everything I knew of home in Yorkshire, I could see my grandad, his friends and it resonated with me and the fact my family are all working class. It resonated so so much more than anything that I'd read before, none of the classics could do it in the same way.
@neilblackburn6869
@neilblackburn6869 Год назад
My dad went to the school that the movie was shot at and years later my cousin interviewed Mr Hines. An incredible novel and wonderful film.
@jetbairn1370
@jetbairn1370 Год назад
So, so good. What an excellent watch. Well done to Greg Davies and everyone involved.
@petercockerill7366
@petercockerill7366 Год назад
Dear Greg, Just found this wonderful documentary, fantastic memory’s of when I first saw this film, so many years ago. Personally for me it tells a story of a boy growing up with not fitting in, just like I was, I was brought up in care, caring for my rabbits. I used to race home from the school bus with pulled vegetation from the verges to feed them and clean them out, read my library book from the village library, they where my life. The school where Kasper was, was just the same as mine, typical 60s secondary, characters like the games teacher, my teacher was called “Killer” very much the same as portrayed in the film. For me, such a wonderful film, a wonderful story, very true. Brings a wet eye and a tingle, if I could say the choice of music with Billy flying his KES couldn’t have chosen better. Thank you.
@elvingtonred
@elvingtonred 8 месяцев назад
Watched this again last night on repeat, what a great programme Greg! I also had this book in our English lesson, it made me chuckle about reading a swear word out! Someone was lucky enough to say 'Hands off cocks on socks' I can remember the noise of laughter to this day. If you didn't have a tear in your eye watching Casper finding his dead Kestral, then you aren't human. Fantastic!
@modmutha8608
@modmutha8608 Год назад
Isn’t Dai a complete gent.? What a delight
@dubsnbuds6668
@dubsnbuds6668 Год назад
Im 52 and from west Yorkshire, i discovered this film at an early age and like all was drawn in lije a moth to a flame, the acting is brilliant the story is phenomenal and the whole setting is perfect, school was tough for me, working class family, caned and slippered at first school, set me off to terrible education thankfully the children of today will never have to experience life like that, i did have an awesome time playing out though never a moment spent indoors, scratched knees and elbows gravel rash was a daily 😂😂
@johnnimbus8761
@johnnimbus8761 Год назад
I (now 61) live in Australia and we studied the film at my school and yes it was impactful. Said as much about my left wing teachers. Of course...from a school kids memory..."Down pit" and "wakey wakey...." Still come to mind.
@sammy6868
@sammy6868 Год назад
I was in year 7 or 8 when this was filmed and I remember when everyone said he was here we dashed to the door before being told off, definitely wish we could have met him but was great to see him in person, unfortunately my school never even told us or at least my year group about this documentary. Definitely cool to see this guy in a classroom I was sat a few weeks back! Even though I was born a long time after kes came out, I definitely watched it when I was younger so I was happy to see someone acknowledging it as amazingly not many other people my age mention it anymore even though it is a reason this area is known for.
@furryglass
@furryglass Год назад
Richard Hines was one of my teachers at Highfields school I can remember him fetching in photos of the kestrel training with Casper 🙂
@eamo106
@eamo106 Год назад
Worth doing for the North, Barry Hines and Kes. Still my best film from Ken Loach, always thought it was Ken Loach's magic., this taught me more. Hines ! Great documentary ! Best film.
@bradleybarnett9545
@bradleybarnett9545 Год назад
@22:19 "Oh, I loved writing that book." ... beautiful.
@AINHAINS
@AINHAINS Год назад
@LittleJenniren
@LittleJenniren Год назад
I'd never heard of the book or film, but this was such a beautiful documentary, that I will now have to look them up. This was wonderful to watch.
@smokingbrush2498
@smokingbrush2498 9 месяцев назад
You are in for two treats.
@nikbennett4894
@nikbennett4894 Год назад
Brilliant doc on a brilliant book by a brilliant author presented brilliantly.
@1952mrpdc
@1952mrpdc Год назад
What a really lovely film. Thank you for uploading this. PC. 30. 03. 2023.
@CharlottaHalden
@CharlottaHalden 2 года назад
What a wonderful film. So much heart. I was thoroughly captivated, and now have to read the novel and see the movie. And read some more of Barry Hines' work. I came here for Greg, but I stayed for the stories. This is important stuff and deeply moving.
@wonderwoman5528
@wonderwoman5528 2 года назад
Did you manage to finish the book? :)
@taras6806
@taras6806 Год назад
Likewise. Emotive, wonderful, moving.
@smittywerbenjagermanjensen8124
@smittywerbenjagermanjensen8124 10 месяцев назад
I'm 30 now but when I was a kid I'd watch this with my Grandad. It would be a Saturday evening, I'd have a packet of crisps and a glass of pop and watch it over and over with my Grandad, laughing and crying in equal measures. Always been proud of my working-class roots. ❤️
@patriciamarshall7762
@patriciamarshall7762 Год назад
My half forgotten memory of this book has been Re-awakened. The portrayal of the cycle from book to film and beyond is enormously special. Thanks for bringing it back to the forefront where it belongs. PS. I never did see the film.
@Mattriver7
@Mattriver7 Год назад
Like many of us who studied this at school, this really was my first proper introduction to literature. Thank you Mrs. Laub. What a wonderful and sensitive documentary, beautiful.
@offal
@offal Год назад
Bravo Greg needed to be done..fantastic
@banditnumber2
@banditnumber2 Год назад
A tremendous book, a brilliant film that is true to the text and a very good documentary - I recommend all three to anyone interested in the human condition. Thanks for making this.
@ellydub5893
@ellydub5893 2 года назад
Fantastic watch. This was my grandma’s favourite book and movie. She loved how real it was and true to the struggles of the time. Loved everything about this documentary!
@pauljames77777
@pauljames77777 Год назад
Great to see this Video loved the book and the film ,true about working class people and areas in the 60 and 70s in Northern England
@sshaw4429
@sshaw4429 Год назад
This was brilliant. Mr. Davies, you are awesome.
@stephanblack4558
@stephanblack4558 Год назад
I seen the film "Kes" 53 yrs ago on a school trip to a small movie theatre in the North of England, I love the film to this day. Thank you.
@reuse_or_die
@reuse_or_die Год назад
Thanks for sharing this 👍🏼❤️. I am exiled to France because of the housing crisis in the UK and being working class, we don't have a satellite dish so we don't get UK TV. I read this book at school in the 70's so it's a piece of cultural diamond for me.
@staceyogier6154
@staceyogier6154 Год назад
I was only watching this because Greg was in it, and I've never read the book or seen the movie, but when that boy found the bird dead in the bin a cried ugly cries in the carpark of Aldi.
@ikarus_incarnate
@ikarus_incarnate Год назад
One other comment I would like to make: Greg Davis also easily demonstrates he was not only a passionate Mr Gilbert is obviously just a character ), but is a great educator...
@TonyCarrolls
@TonyCarrolls Год назад
Phew. I grew up a couple of miles away. Went to the comp that Barry taught at. Generations of my family worked and some died down Hoyland, Tankersley, Worsbrough and Elsecar pits. I was a 15 year old extra in Threads. We read the book in school. There are thousands of life stories to be told from that tiny part of the world and it's a tragedy that Barry isn't here to tell them, but thanks Greg. Thanks for bringing just one of them to life.
@mizofan
@mizofan 7 месяцев назад
Excellent! And so right that each child has something in them that can be enabled to flourish
@johnloftus1684
@johnloftus1684 2 года назад
I love this book. My best subject at school was English and this was my exam piece. A very mad English teacher , mr camish st joes Swindon and this film he showed us. A kestrel for a knave is the most beautiful film I ever seen still
@newforestpixie5297
@newforestpixie5297 2 года назад
We studied it during CSE English in 1979 at Priestlands Comprehensive, a few miles south of Salisbury. Instead of her reading aloud , our teacher mrs Rycroft set us the portion or chapter in which Billy repeatedly calls his brother a Bastard as homework reading - probably being aware of our certain immaturity and the fun we’d have got from hearing her have to swear out loud ! 🙄
@mrdeafa25
@mrdeafa25 Год назад
I hardly read a book as a kid but I read this fucker. Fucking brilliant.
@sallyrose4711
@sallyrose4711 Год назад
I loved the film and still one of my favourite. I named my German shepherd dog keys because of the film
@sallyrose4711
@sallyrose4711 Год назад
Named her kes
@stoolpigeon4285
@stoolpigeon4285 Месяц назад
Wonderful. Loved the film and the book
@dianejury9500
@dianejury9500 Год назад
Thanks again, Greg. You are my favourite comedian because you’re fearless. This doco confirms your place in the top 100 of my favourite brilliant people.
@wonderwoman5528
@wonderwoman5528 2 года назад
I’ve just finished reading A Kestral a for a Knave and watching this documentary afterwards was magic. It has left a deep impression upon me and is now one of my favourite books. Greg managed to articulate and bring to life the novel and its context in a way that captures its themes and poignancy for future generations. Thank you for uploading - watching this was the icing on the cake after finishing the book
@willwebb3037
@willwebb3037 Год назад
Loved this watched kes with my grandad and dad through the years I'm 26
@Max-ux2rc
@Max-ux2rc Год назад
One beautiful moment after another..... don’t know how I came across it but thank you smiLee andGreg Davies and everyone involved in te film and Barry Hines for the beauty of the book
@AINHAINS
@AINHAINS Год назад
You’re welcome.
@divinebeingsoflove2121
@divinebeingsoflove2121 Год назад
What an incredible documentary! So emotional and so real compared to yep the “shit show of the world today”. I read the book and saw the film and both will haunt me to this day for the impression they left me to love one of our feathered friends so dearly and so richly despite the poverty of that time. Beautiful, thank you 🥰
@Oakleaf700
@Oakleaf700 Год назад
Wonderful. It made me cry as a child, and still does, today. Great documentary. 🪶 💖
@VieenRennes
@VieenRennes Год назад
Thank you for posting. Came here for Davies, stayed for Kes.
@frankbrodie5168
@frankbrodie5168 2 года назад
Lovely to watch. This book was of my time and based in my part of the world. I'm a South Yorkshireman who knows all 4 of our towns/city intimately. But on the subject of "you learn something new every day" I wasn't aware that Barry Hines was the author of 'Threads." So that was a point of interest for me.
@trishhobson6640
@trishhobson6640 2 года назад
Likewise Frank...though from North Yorkshire It was a beautiful book and heart wrenching and so thought provoking.
@seanhazlewood634
@seanhazlewood634 Год назад
Great Documentary fantastic film I lived in a town nearby this book was filmed always takes me back to happy times thanks for sharing this
@mrsfranczak1714
@mrsfranczak1714 8 месяцев назад
Great little documentary great presenter- and so honest and refreshing.
@bartpickford1836
@bartpickford1836 Год назад
What a smashing documentary. Greg is so enthusiastic and dai has the most intriguing voice
@22Phantasm
@22Phantasm Год назад
I've always loved the story of the book, but after this fantastic programme I've learned to appreciate why it was written. Thanks, smiLee, for slapping this wonderful programme onto RU-vid for me to watch it.
@AINHAINS
@AINHAINS Год назад
You’re welcome 🙂
@ikarus_incarnate
@ikarus_incarnate Год назад
Like so many others, I cannot fault this at all. The documentary itself, the book ( compulsory reading during my High school years ) the film... To see the passion and childhood innocence in Dai when he flies the kestrel again... in so many ways, a real classic... thank you for sharing... I almost want to watch/read it all over again...
@richardwilliams3369
@richardwilliams3369 Год назад
A brilliant film at a time of my youth everything was true to life early 70s the teachers were clones of mine I kid you not in a mining village in North Wales. I loved this film as being fixated on raptors and still am today in my 60s .🙂
@pia91
@pia91 2 года назад
what a lovely and heartfelt documentary! and, if I may may say so, proof that Greg didn't hate teaching or the kids (we all know that was always ever an act anyways) but the system. I'm still glad he made the jump but sure was and would've been an excellent teacher - it's the system that needs to change. thanks so much for the upload
@seanwilliams1534
@seanwilliams1534 9 месяцев назад
I love the film Kes, never read the novel. I was born 73 but not much had changed in school when I first watched this. Such a nostalgic film but portrayed brutal in today's thoughts. I hated my school years, excelled when I left
@scorelineupdate129
@scorelineupdate129 9 месяцев назад
🙌CRAIG DAVID 🙌THAT PROPER BO I TELL YA
@jamesrichards802
@jamesrichards802 Год назад
50:04 next minute is gold XD the dudes gingerly coming to get their pints back cracks me up
@chrisworthman3191
@chrisworthman3191 Год назад
Just goes to show that I can watch anything Greg is in. He seems like a good person.
@JackMellor498
@JackMellor498 2 года назад
Watching this after listening to the audiobook on Audible for the first time, and I as many before me was utterly drawn in. That central theme of a young lad finding something to be interested in, in a life that’s pushing him down I find to be pretty relatable. What a wonderful little documentary and Greg is effortlessly watchable.
@terryjacobs2536
@terryjacobs2536 Год назад
As many others this documentary popped up on my you tube and boy was I taken back, though being born n bred on the south coast and never travelled north of the Thames till late teenage yrs I could somehow understand the the tightness of life in mining towns and the surrounding areas and in a way be envious of that way of life. I remember reading this as a school book and absolutely loving it and the film as well, my parents never said anything about the cover of the book or even asked what it was about. some of my teachers were on the brutal side, yet a couple of them just clicked with us and we with them and we had no problems learning or discipline.
@editabutterfly7223
@editabutterfly7223 Год назад
I was really enjoying this documentary, Greg's voice and expressions of his face. Great job, Greg! Please continue! ❤❤❤
@craiglinaker5686
@craiglinaker5686 Год назад
Lived in Cudworth when I first read Kestrel for a Knave at Snydale Rd Secondary Modern School
@briz1965
@briz1965 Год назад
I've tried to show the caning scene to friends in Canada, and it went over their head. Any tribute to Kes is well right. I grew up in these schools at this time. All true.
@martinburke362
@martinburke362 Год назад
Yes but Canadians have become to americanised nowadays, and everything goes over their heads
@stephenowens3687
@stephenowens3687 Год назад
I'm from Manchester, but live in Canada and my wife who is Canadian, watched this film with me. She didn't get it at all and just found it 'Depressing' and 'Boring'. Must be a British thing?
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