Screened as part of NZIFF 2021

Mothers of the Revolution 2021

Directed by Briar March Mobilise

Mothers of the Revolution tells the story of one of the longest protests in history, when between 1981 and 2000, thousands of women from around the world came together at Greenham Common to take a committed stand against nuclear proliferation.

Nov 20

Embassy Theatre

Nov 21

Penthouse Cinema

Sold Out

Reading Cinemas Porirua

102 minutes DCP

Rent

Director

Narrator

Glenda Jackson

Producers

Matthew Metcalfe
,
Leela Menon

Screenplay

Briar March
,
Matthew Metcalfe

Cinematography

María Inés Manchego

Editors

Margot Francis
,
Simon Coldrick
,
John Gilbert
,
Tim Woodhouse

Sound designer

Bruno Barrett-Gariner

Music

Lachlan Anderson

Festivals

London 2021

Elsewhere

Aotearoa New Zealand films at NZIFF 2022 are proudly supported by

Resene

In 1981, as their children played around the kitchen table, four mothers shared their fears about the prospect of nuclear war. Terrified for their children’s future, they organised a 120-mile march from Cardiff to Berkshire to protest the impending arrival of US nuclear missiles at RAF Greenham Common.

UK media, preoccupied by a royal wedding, failed to take notice. Long before social media could launch global protests with the click of a button, the women’s call for support inadvertently started one of the biggest and longest-running direct-action protests the world has seen.

Some 17,000 people answered their initial call and the Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp was established. During its 19 years, they reached thousands; we see their attempts to connect with the Moscow Group for Trust across the Iron Curtain, and show the impact Greenham women had in the Pacific. Their achievements changed the world – and the lives of those involved – with the roots of future global actions, like the Women’s Marches of recent years, birthed in their success.

This extraordinary story shows how traditional ideas about mothering and womanhood were subverted as women faced down hostile Berkshire locals, police, military, media and, ultimately, global superpowers to take their protest worldwide. In this absorbing documentary, narrated by Glenda Jackson and commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Greenham Common Women's March and Peace Camp, acclaimed New Zealand filmmaker Briar March (Allie Eagle and Me NZIFF 2004, There Once Was an Island NZIFF 2010, The Coffin Club NZIFF 2017) uses interviews, historical footage and recreations of events to tell their extraordinary and moving story. — Dionne Christian