Blue Black Permanent (Region B)
This haunting and magical film moves between Edinburgh and Orkney as it tells of a womanās attempts to come to terms with her motherās death through her childhood memories. Filled with flashbacks and dream sequences, itās also a film about islandersā relationship with the ever-present sea.
Margaret Taitās only feature-length film, from her own screenplay, was produced by the BFI in 1992 and was the first Scottish feature film directed by a woman. Now newly remastered in 2K and available on DVD and Blu-ray for the very first time.
- Film poems ā the work of filmmaker Margaret TaitĀ (2018, 31 mins): BFI curator Peter Todd welcomes academic Lucy Reynolds and writers So Mayer and Anna Coatman to talk about the work, rhythm and poetry of film poet Margaret Tait
- Margaret Tait Film MakerĀ (1983, 34 mins): Arts Council England film featuring the only filmed interview with Margaret Tait
- A Portrait of GaĀ (1952, 5 mins): Margaret Tait's hypnotic and deeply personal short documentary by about her mother. Made in Orkney shortly after Tait returned home from Rome in 1952
- The Leaden Echo and the Golden EchoĀ (1955, 7 mins): Tait's entrancing interpretation of Gerard Manley Hopkins' poem
- Rose StreetĀ (1956, 20 mins): Tait's 1956 film about the Edinburgh street that runs parallel to Prince's Street
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Blue Black Permanent (Region B)
Blue Black Permanent (Region B)
This haunting and magical film moves between Edinburgh and Orkney as it tells of a womanās attempts to come to terms with her motherās death through her childhood memories. Filled with flashbacks and dream sequences, itās also a film about islandersā relationship with the ever-present sea.
Margaret Taitās only feature-length film, from her own screenplay, was produced by the BFI in 1992 and was the first Scottish feature film directed by a woman. Now newly remastered in 2K and available on DVD and Blu-ray for the very first time.
- Film poems ā the work of filmmaker Margaret TaitĀ (2018, 31 mins): BFI curator Peter Todd welcomes academic Lucy Reynolds and writers So Mayer and Anna Coatman to talk about the work, rhythm and poetry of film poet Margaret Tait
- Margaret Tait Film MakerĀ (1983, 34 mins): Arts Council England film featuring the only filmed interview with Margaret Tait
- A Portrait of GaĀ (1952, 5 mins): Margaret Tait's hypnotic and deeply personal short documentary by about her mother. Made in Orkney shortly after Tait returned home from Rome in 1952
- The Leaden Echo and the Golden EchoĀ (1955, 7 mins): Tait's entrancing interpretation of Gerard Manley Hopkins' poem
- Rose StreetĀ (1956, 20 mins): Tait's 1956 film about the Edinburgh street that runs parallel to Prince's Street
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Description
This haunting and magical film moves between Edinburgh and Orkney as it tells of a womanās attempts to come to terms with her motherās death through her childhood memories. Filled with flashbacks and dream sequences, itās also a film about islandersā relationship with the ever-present sea.
Margaret Taitās only feature-length film, from her own screenplay, was produced by the BFI in 1992 and was the first Scottish feature film directed by a woman. Now newly remastered in 2K and available on DVD and Blu-ray for the very first time.
- Film poems ā the work of filmmaker Margaret TaitĀ (2018, 31 mins): BFI curator Peter Todd welcomes academic Lucy Reynolds and writers So Mayer and Anna Coatman to talk about the work, rhythm and poetry of film poet Margaret Tait
- Margaret Tait Film MakerĀ (1983, 34 mins): Arts Council England film featuring the only filmed interview with Margaret Tait
- A Portrait of GaĀ (1952, 5 mins): Margaret Tait's hypnotic and deeply personal short documentary by about her mother. Made in Orkney shortly after Tait returned home from Rome in 1952
- The Leaden Echo and the Golden EchoĀ (1955, 7 mins): Tait's entrancing interpretation of Gerard Manley Hopkins' poem
- Rose StreetĀ (1956, 20 mins): Tait's 1956 film about the Edinburgh street that runs parallel to Prince's Street













