London Renters Union Fundraiser Screening: Twilight City

4 September, 2019
– 4 September, 2019
7pm
DIY Space for London
96-108 Ormside St, London SE15 1TF
Twilight City, Black Audio Film Collective (1989)

A screening of Twilight City by the Black Audio Film Collective followed by an LRU Social.
The London Renters Union is a member-led campaigning union taking grassroots action to transform the housing system and win homes for people, not profit. Londoners face the highest rents in Europe. Many of us live with the threat of eviction or in unsafe housing. The unfair housing system that favour landlords and investors, is making our city more unequal. When we organise together, we are powerful. We support each other, stand up to landlords and win lower rents, longer tenancies and better housing for everyone.
Twilight City, Black Audio Film Collective. 1989. 
UK, 52 mins, 16mm transferred to SD Video, colour, sound. 
A young woman, Octavia, receives a letter from her mother, Eugenia. Eugenia wants to return to London, after 10 years in Dominica, to live with her daughter again. The old resentments, hurt and anger that Octavia thought had been buried by the past resurface. She begins to compose a letter to her mother…
…Paul Gilroy reminisces about his earliest memory of London. He was walking with his father through the Docklands – before its glossy redevelopment – looking at all the old buildings, the strange symbols daubed on the walls, and wondering what the great fire of London did to the city. He asked his father many questions he couldn’t answer…
…Gail Lewis grew up around Kilburn and Harrow. She remembers the neighbourhood as derelict. George Shires, another interviewee, talks about the images of London he grew up with at his school in Zimbabwe. The London of his imagination was affluent, modernised and promised a better way of living. While Homi Bhaba’s impression of London as a 12-year-old immigrant was dark, dull and restrictive, with a disorienting lack of smell…
…Rosina Visram tells the story of a nineteenth-century Alaskan community, brought to London by the East India Company and then abandoned to poverty. When David Yallop was growing up, Clapham was a working-class district – a safe neighbourhood where he was free to roam. But Clapham is now a middle-class enclave and he feels that he has lost his roots. 
Gilroy, Lewis, Bhaba, Visram and Yallop discuss how London has changed through the centuries and talk about the changes wrought by the Conservative Government through the 1980s. The city has become decentralised, fragmented and a pawn of the business elite, especially the Docklands. They talk about the people on the margins and how they survive. Meanwhile, Octavia writes to her mother about their strained relationship, how the London she left behind is no longer the same as the one Octavia inhabits. She tries to understand her mother’s life, why, for example, she joined the Conservative Party and took comfort in the Church while Octavia and her friends demonstrated for gay rights. Octavia would like to have her mother’s faith but not her mother’s silence.
The event is free for members, with .the option to sign up at the door or admission for a small donation (£3 min), which goes towards London Renters Union and DIY space. To join the LRU in advance of the screening sign up here.

DIY Space for London is a totally independent volunteer-run social centre and event venue run as a members’ club. But don’t worry! If you are not currently a member you can be signed in as a guest of the promoter. Membership is open to all and only costs £2 per year. You can join quickly online at: ​http://diyspaceforlondon.org/join​
email: ​[email protected]​ if you have any questions.

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