Confessions of a Foyer Girl
Confessions of a Foyer Girl | |
---|---|
Directed by |
Peter Lord David Sproxton |
Production company |
Aardman Animations BBC Bristol |
Distributed by | British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (1978) (UK) (TV) |
Release dates | 13 July 1978 |
Running time | 5 min |
Country | UK |
Language | English |
Confessions of a Foyer Girl is a 1978 short film created by Aardman Animations. It is part of the Animated Conversations series. In this short, creators David Sproxton and Peter Lord "applied the groundbreaking technique of using recorded conversations of real people as the basis for the script".[1]
Production
Aardman Animation explains:
Peter and David had always thought there was an adult audience for animated films, and in 1978 made two short films using real-life soundtracks, for BBC Bristol under the guidance of Colin Thomas. Although these two films (‘Down and Out’ and ‘Confessions of a Foyer Girl’) were disregarded by the BBC they were seen a couple of years later by Jeremy Isaacs who was creating the shape of the newly formed Channel Four. This led directly to the commissioning of five similarly constructed films (‘Conversation Pieces’)[2]
Plot
Imdb explains: " Viewers are treated to another "Confessions" film, this time about the girl who actually works in the cinema. "[3]
Critical reception
Confessions of a Foyer Girl received a rating of 4.2/10 from 23 users on imdb.[3] Dr. Grob's Animation Review gave the film a rating of 2 stars out of 5. It said "The dialogue is hard to understand and the lip-synch is not as good as in ‘Down and Out’. Moreover, the animation is associated with seemingly unrelated stock live action footage, which leads to a film, which is both experimental and vague. The result never quite works and the result must be called a failure."[4]