
All
That Mighty Heart was the last film shot by David Watkin before
he left British Transport Films.
You'll notice a sequence in the film of a housewife using
a washing machine. David lit this shot from outside – with a brute – and had Frank Brice,
the BTF Gaffer, hold up a white sheet to reflect light in the room. This was
a precursor of a technique he was to to develop which earned him the sobriquet – the
Vermeer of the film business.
All That Mighty Heart is available as a DVD from Beulah.
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Born
into an illustrious railway family, David Watkin
began work with the Southern Region Film Unit of
British Railways in the late 1940's. In 1950 he became
a messenger boy and assistant cameraman at British
Transport Films.


Barry Coward writes:
One day in 1981 I received a phone call from a David Watkin asking for a video
copy of the BTF production Under Night Streets. At that time I was head
of the Public Relations Strategy Team at London Transport and BTF had recently
sent all the film they had shot for London Transport to us, as part of the winding
up operation run by Jimmy Ritchie.
We did telecine Under Night Streets for David and subsequently he paid
for other BTF titles to be tele-cined including Care of St Christopher's, What's
in Store, The Finishing Line (made long after David had left BTF, but directed
by John Krish, who's work David much admired), Holiday, All That
Mighty Heart, A Desperate Case, MFD Re-railing Equipment, Diesel
Train Driver and Snow Drift at Bleath Gill.
British Transport Films was created by the British Transport Commission following
nationalisation of much of the country's public transport, road haulage, ports
and waterways by the Attlee government in 1948. David worked as camera assistant
on BTF production No 1 Transport which set out to explain the purpose
and objectives of nationalisation. The camera department in those early days
consisted of Ron Craigen with David as his assistant and James Ritichie with
Billy Williams as assistant. Ron was a consummate technician who could strip
and reassemble any camera with ease, something David never mastered.
Technology was never David's forte, instead he surrounded himself with technicians
of high calibre that he could trust. Jimmy Ritchie was an artist, especially
when it came to night shooting. David was happy to be Ron's assistant and only
assisted Jimmy when Billy Williams was not available. David thought that this
arrangement enabled him to learn from Ron's technical competence and Jimmy's
artistic ability without actually copying either of them. In 1957 John Taylor,
a director often engaged by BTF, persuaded Edgar Anstey to let David become cameraman
for a travelogue John was to direct entitled Lancashire Coast. During
the summer John , David and his assistant Jack West went to Blackpool and filmed
holiday makers on 16 mm Kodachrome. Much of the best material was not used in
the travelogue. Later John persuaded Edgar to let Ralph Sheldon, a film editor
renowned for cutting to music, assemble a film from the unused material David
had shot. The result was Holiday set to music by Chris Barber. The BFI
has put an extract up at YouTube.
David's short film A Desperate Case partly shot in his home town of
Margate can be viewed here.
David left BTF in 1962 after shooting "All That Mighty Heart" to make
his way in features and commercials. BTF had given him an excellent foundation
for his future work.
In the photo below, from the shoot for Diesel Train Driver the personnel
are Inspector Tommy Sands (far left), Jack West, David's assistant (centre with
tape), Frank Brice the BTF gaffer, David Watkin with Newman Sinclair camera and
James Ritchie, director.

Photo courtesy of the National Railway Museum, York. The NRM hold a large collection
of BTF production stills.
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