
Documentary about innocent people confined to prison on remand. John Pilger reports that more than half of the 500,000 people remanded in custody by magistrates each year are eventually found not guilty, fined or, as in the case of “Helen”, given a conditional discharge. Helen, charged with stealing a pair of slippers but with no previous convictions, recalls her day in Holloway Prison, London, which started at 7am when she joined 96 other prisoners in a rush to use four toilets whose conditions were “disgusting”. Between then and lunchtime, all prisoners were locked up, with just half-an-hour’s walk round a large yard for exercise. Lunch was eaten in cells, with tea at 3.30pm, before they were locked up until the following morning.
Recommendations
view all
Time

Public Speaking

Harry Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction

Champs

McQueen

Naqoyqatsi

Tabloid

Halloween: 25 Years of Terror

John Candy: I Like Me

Anna Nicole Smith: You Don't Know Me

To Be Takei

Lake of Fire

The Curious Birth of Benjamin Button

Joy Division

Fuck

Evil Influencer: The Jodi Hildebrandt Story

Elstree 1976

Being James Bond

Lovecraft: Fear of the Unknown

In the Realms of the Unreal
