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Old 24-10-2012, 11:49 PM #1
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Mrluvaluva Mrluvaluva is offline
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Mrluvaluva Mrluvaluva is offline
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Default High On Hope (The Blackburn Warehouse Parties)

A documentary film about the legendary Blackburn warehouse parties of 1989- 91.

This is Acid House in the disused mills and factories of Thatcher’s Britain - a story of northern idealism, communality, false imprisonment ending with the biggest mass arrest in British peacetime history at a warehouse in Leeds.

All set to a music track of the biggest warehouse tunes of the time.




In 1989 Britain was a bland, depressed country. However the nation’s youth, facing a future with no jobs or sense of community, used the derelict warehouses of Britain’s old industrial past in a new togetherness, one based around music and danced all night in these un-policed environments, free from the constraints of the corporate owned night clubs of the time.

By 1991 acid house became the latest underground youth cult to threaten the moral majority. Reacting to the right wing press inspired public outrage, the police, in full body armour, with battons, shields and dogs, put an end to the the warehouse parties using tactics recently perfected on striking miners and previously during the race riots that defined the Thatcher era. The story ends with the largest post war mass arrest in British history.



When Piers Sanderson started making this film he did not know how to make a documentary he just wanted to tell the story of a time and a movement that had changed him irrevocably. He started by tracking down the original organisers of the parties and they told him their incredible stories – how they broke in to the warehouses, organised thousands of people to get past the authorities and in to the parties, the methods they used to get the sound equipment in and out of the heavily policed industrial estates of Lancashire and how ultimately they all ended up giving their liberty for something they believed so strongly in.

He also found ‘Preston Bob’ whose parents, at the time of the parties, had a local corner shop. The shop had a video camera that they would rent out for weddings and Christenings and when this was not used Bob would borrow it to film the parties. He gave an old box of VHS tapes to Piers and this incredible footage brings these legendary parties back to life!

A 10-year labour of love, this film has been made in the same way as the parties themselves were put together – with passion, enthusiasm and innovation, using collaborations and a collective approach, to tell as story that hopes inspire us to come together more positively in the 21st Century, as this might just be what we all need most.


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It's been screened in London & Leeds amongst others, with Blackburn getting it's premiere on Friday. I'd love to go and see it. Just read about it today. Friday's event sounds interesting.

Last edited by Mrluvaluva; 25-10-2012 at 01:01 AM.
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