Get curated editors’ picks, peeks behind the scenes, film recommendations and more.
This excerpt from the documentary The Long Journey (1964) follows two English teenage girls as they wander, smoke cigarettes and provide stream-of-consciousness insights into their inner lives and the world around them. In a voice-over, one of the girls, seemingly a quasi-runaway, discusses her desire to live a free, non-conforming life far from the routines of school and church, before meeting a friend and commenting on the drab hues and peculiar beauty of the industrialised countryside. In every instance, the two seem to be seeking to understand their place in the world and what it means to live a free, authentic life. Pivoting between a melancholic view of their surroundings and carpe diem sentiments, they offer contradictions in earnest as, like young people coming of age in any generation, they navigate their own conflicting impulses and grapple with the question of how best to exist in the world.
Video by BBC Archive
Director: Philip Donnellan
video
Family life
One family’s harrowing escape from postwar Vietnam, told in a poignant metaphor
10 minutes
video
War and peace
A frontline soldier’s moving account of the fabled ‘Christmas truce’ of 1914
12 minutes
video
Bioethics
What a 1970 experiment reveals about the possibility and perils of ‘head transplants’
6 minutes
video
Animals and humans
The wild tale of a young animal keeper, an angry tiger and a torn circle net
10 minutes
video
Technology and the self
Why single Chinese women are freezing their eggs in California
24 minutes
video
Beauty and aesthetics
Can you see music in this painting? How synaesthesia fuelled Kandinsky’s art
10 minutes
video
Childhood and adolescence
The police camp where tween girls enter a sisterhood of law and order
28 minutes
video
Astronomy
The remarkable innovations inspired by our need to know the night sky
5 minutes
video
Knowledge
Why it takes more than a lifetime to truly understand a single meadow
11 minutes