Building Sites Bite is a 1978 British short public information film produced by the Central Office of Information for the Health and Safety Executive and the Mighty Movie Company for British schools to warn children about the dangers of playing on building sites. It was written and directed by David Hughes and produced by Maggie Evans.[1][2] The film is 28 minutes in duration.

Building Sites Bite
Directed byDavid Hughes
Produced byMaggie Evans
StarringStephanie Coles
Nigel Rhodes
David Mckail
CinematographyBahram Manocheri
Edited byDavid Woodward
Production
company
Mighty Movie Company
Release date
  • 1978 (1978)
Running time
28 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Building Sites Bite was filmed as party of a national campaign responding to the deaths of more than 20 children in 1977 in building-site accidents.[3] Most of the actors are children.[4] Because of the style of filming and grim subject matter, Building Sites Bite is often compared to the earlier films Apaches (1975) [5] and The Finishing Line (1975).[6]

Plot

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The film focuses entirely on the perspective of Ronald, a young boy who aspires to become a builder or surveyor when he grows up. His cousins Paul and Jane decide to test Ronald's know-it-all attitude by teleporting him to a building site, where he must avoid several hazards and obstacles without getting hurt. In each test Ronald disobeys various warning signs and ignores the dangers, resulting in him getting killed in each one.

Each time Ronald is about to die a heartbeat sound is played. In order, Ronald's deaths are displayed as him being buried alive in a trench collapse, electrocuted in a condemned building, run over by an earthmoving vehicle, breaking his skull against a metal retaining wall, crushed to death by a pile of bricks and finally drowning in a disused quarry.

Back in the real world, Ronald announces he intends to abandon his ambitions, and goes outside to play with Paul and Jane. Over the closing shot of the film, Paul reads out real-life stories of children who were killed in similar ways to those seen in the film.

Cast

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Reception

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In 2020 Bob Fischer write in Fortean Times: "Sensible Paul and Jane are visited by posh-but-dim cousin Ronald. 'I reckon he's a twit...' muses Paul, and employs comprehensively grim methods to prove it. Imagining himself and his sister as silver-suited cosmic overlords, he inflicts multiple imaginary deaths on his cravat-sporting nemesis by transporting him (via a garden shed TARDIS) to a succession of deserted building sites. Here, exposed electrical cables and collapsing walls repeatedly nudge Ronald from an increasingly thankless mortal coil."[5]

Home media

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Building Sites Bite was released by the BFI on the DVD COI Collection Vol 4: Stop! Look! Listen!, which also included other contemporary public information films such as Apaches. The film was also later re-released in a similar compilation, The Best Of COL. Five Decades of Public Information Films (2020).[5]

Reference

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  1. ^ "Building Sites Bite". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 23 August 2024.
  2. ^ "Building Sites Bite". BFI Film and TV Database. Archived from the original on 9 February 2009. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
  3. ^ "Poet Pam Ayers launches safety verse". Evening Standard: 7. 20 April 1978 – via ProQuest.
  4. ^ Films and Filming. Hansom Books. 1977. p. 47.
  5. ^ a b c Fischer, Bob (August 2020). "The Haunted Generation". Fortean Times. p. 63. ProQuest 2427317560. Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  6. ^ Visual Education. National Committee for Audio-Visual Aids in Education. 1978. p. 9.