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The Fall

Directed by Peter Whitehead

Nothing To Do With Me

Directed by Anthony Sterne
  • The Fall

    Directed by Peter Whitehead.
    UK, 1969, digital video, color, 120 min.

Considered by Whitehead to be his most important film, The Fall is an extraordinary piece of filmmaking, an extremely personal statement on violence, revolution and the turbulence within late sixties America. Filmed entirely in and around New York between October 1967 and June 1968, it features Robert Kennedy, The Bread and Puppet Theater, Paul Auster (fresh-faced as a Columbia student), Tom Hayden, Mark Rudd, Stokely Carmichael, H. Rap Brown, Arthur Miller, Robert Lowell, Robert Rauschenberg and The Deconstructivists. Richard Roud, co-director of the New York Film Festival wrote of the film, “…an attempt to come to grips with today, both in terms of its content as well as of its form.”

  • Nothing To Do With Me

    Directed by Anthony Sterne.
    UK, 1968, digital video, black & white, 30 min.

Several months after returning from the United States, where he had just completed shooting his film The Fall, Whitehead philosophizes to the camera in this remarkable autobiographical document.

Part of film series

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The Word and the Image: The Films of Peter Whitehead

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Alain Kassanda,
2026 McMillan-Stewart Fellow