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The Concrete Garden
Programme Outline
This 25-minute film, directed by Alrick Riley, depicts
9-year-old Marcia arriving in London from the Caribbean and having
to cope with a new family situation and a different culture. The
story is told almost without words.
At her new home...
Marcia gets reacquainted with her parents and gets to know her
younger brother. Both are almost strangers to Marcia, since she has
been living with her grandmother for most of her life. At first,
Marcia and her brother find it difficult to get on. There is much
sibling rivalry. He deliberately breaks the record given to her as
a parting gift by friends from home. The film ends with the two
holding hands on the way home from their disastrous attempt at
getting into a nightclub. The image symbolises them starting afresh
in getting to know one another.
At school...
Marcia has to cope with bullies. As the only black person in her
class, she is singled out and victimised by her 'classmates'. She
is physically abused. In one incident on her very first day at
school she suffers a nosebleed.
On television...
In addition to having to endure racist abuse from those around
them, Marcia and her family encounter more racism in the infamous
television programme The Black and White Minstrel Show,
which is switched off in disgust by her parents.
Music...
The music of her island provides a link with Marcia's former
home. But in a new country the music is not the comfort that it
once was. Two incidents - the breaking of the record brought from
home, and the visit to an adult nightclub for fellow islanders -
highlight her estrangement.
Letter-writing...
Running through the story is Marcia's own narrative - sometimes
contrived - updating her grandmother on her new life in England.
Most poignantly, in her account of her first day at school, she
describes herself settling in and making lots of friends.
© 2000 Channel Four Television
Corporation
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