Posts Tagged ‘video production’
From the Archives: ‘Tall Ships’ (1982)
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In August 1982 a production company called Lens & Co, run by ex-BBC soundman Bill Hammerton, was asked by Southampton City Council to make a film (yes, 16mm film!) to record the impact the finish of the Cutty Sark Tall Ships Race at Southampton made on the city.
It was presented by round-the-world yachtswoman and subsequently best selling author Clare Francis. It was shot by cameraman Ian Clarke, and directed by Focus’s Ian Ward. Ian has some great memories of flying over the final ‘parade of sail’ in helicopters, and then working nights in the edit suite surrounded by rolls of film (‘that unique smell!’), and having a ‘real giggle’ with Clare Francis in the studio when they recorded the voiceover!
For older Southampton people this film will bring back many memories, as it features the world famous Ocean Terminal, built in 1950 and opened by the Prime Minister, Clement Atlee. It was eventually demolished in 1983, and is now replaced by the spectacular QEII Cruise Terminal, with Southampton once again hosting some of the most famous ships in the world.
The Tall Ships arriving in Southampton from Lisbon were, as ever, a magnificent sight in full sail, and the film starts by joining a Polish ship on its journey up Southampton Water. It later shows some of the practical arrangements the City had made for what were expected to be two million visitors to Southampton. In the event there were probably nowhere near that number, but it was a wonderful occasion for everyone who was there.
Copies of the full film on DVD can be obtained by contacting us.
The Trouble with Handovers
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The Film “The Trouble with Handovers” has been made to highlight the vital importance of clinical handovers to patients’ safety.
We follow the story of David, an elderly man with dementia, after he develops pneumonia and a crush fracture in his thoracic spine. David and his partially – sighted wife have been coping OK at home with support of their daughter. But an admission to hospital goes badly wrong due to important information being lost at various handovers between staff.
The Patient Safety Federation (PSF) is made up of, run by and funded by the healthcare organisations of Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. Its members collaborate to address those wider patient safety issues of particular relevance to them, bringing to bear on these a multi-agency and multi-disciplinary approach.
The No Needless Ignorance (NNI) workstream is one of ten work streams under the PSF and consists of clinicians from different backgrounds with a common vision who have come together to create this innovative piece that can be used right across the NHS to illustrate how handovers between services can go wrong. Giving clinicians the opportunity to reflect on individual day to day practice and therefore improve handovers and communication to ultimately affect patient safety.
Assessing Risk: Slips, Trips & Falls
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When Headland Media Ltd, owners of Walport maritime training DVD library, wanted to produce a new series on Risk Assessment they asked Focus to tender for the work. This was our second commission for Headland, the first being about Lifeboat Drills. One reviewer of that programme commented that ‘training doesn’t have to be boring’. But the real success was the fact that it sold extremely well to shipping companies and operators.
This first new title in the Risk Assessment series made by Focus is ‘Slips, Trips and Falls’, and not surprisingly it wasn’t an easy commission. Demonstrating how a seafarer can be seriously injured or killed through a slip, trip or fall wasn’t easy. Focus considered everything from using stuntmen to animation or puppetry. In the end the programme makes its point in a variety of ways, and hopefully will also sell well for Headland.
Crucially though, in the end, what really matters is that injuries are reduced and lives are saved among seafarers.




