Don McCullin: Looking for England, BBC Four, review.
Don McCullin, Early morning, West Hartlepool, 1963. Donald McCullin is an internationally known British photojournalist, particularly recognized for his war photography and images of urban strife.
He is the author of a number of books, including The Palestinians (with Jonathan Dimbleby, 1980), Beirut: A City in Crisis (1983) and Don McCullin in Africa (2005). His book, Shaped by War (2010) was published to accompany a retrospective exhibition at the Imperial War Museum North, Salford, England in 2010 and then at the Victoria Art Gallery, Bath and the Imperial War Museum, London.
The Photography of Don McCullin. Don McCullin (now 77 years old) is the UK’s most celebrated war photographer. The Bafta-nominated documentary, McCullin (2013), is a reflection on his work. The journalistic culture in which McCullin cut his teeth is presented in the film as one of fiercely committed, editorially self-governing reporters, among whom McCullin grew to be a keenly humane example.
The documentary lays bare McCullin’s disgust for the destruction of human life juxtaposed with the adrenalin rush of a life spent under enemy fire. AT Search the site.
Don McCullin is undoubtedly most famous as a photographer of war. A working-class boy from Finsbury Park, north London, who, having finished his national service, forked out his life savings on a.
McCullin is an unsparing, powerful documentary about the great photographer which also turns into a lament for professional photo-journalism, now dying thanks to the internet and cash-strapped.
MCCULLIN is a documentary about the work of the British photojournalist Donald McCullin. Disturbing images. There are frequent photographic images of wounded or dead soldiers and civilians. Some of the photographs are graphic, with close images of dead faces which have been cut open or disfigured. In addition to still photographs there is some archive material with moving footage in which dead.