For All The World To See | |
---|---|
Directed by | Pat Fiske |
Produced by | Megan McMurchy |
Cinematography | Erika Addis |
Edited by | Denise Haslem |
Music by | Stephen Berry Davood Tabrizi |
Running time | 70 minutes |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
For All The World To See is a 1992 Australian documentary film, created by Pat Fiske, that follows Professor Fred Hollows on a trip to Eritrea and Nepal. [1] [2]
Dougal MacDonald of the Canberra Times gave it 4 stars. He finishes "I have said little in this review about Hollows's work, the restoration of sight in people living in poverty. The film admirably tells that story, delivering a superbly crafted coda which, without fanfare or hype, leaves no doubt about the esteem with which the people he has helped to help themselves regard him." [3] Neil Jillett in the Age says "This excellent documentary by US-born director Pat Fiske presents Hollows as a man whose folksy manner at times seems less than genuine, but whose nobility as a practical humanitarian is never in doubt." [4]
For All The World To See | |
---|---|
Directed by | Pat Fiske |
Produced by | Megan McMurchy |
Cinematography | Erika Addis |
Edited by | Denise Haslem |
Music by | Stephen Berry Davood Tabrizi |
Running time | 70 minutes |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
For All The World To See is a 1992 Australian documentary film, created by Pat Fiske, that follows Professor Fred Hollows on a trip to Eritrea and Nepal. [1] [2]
Dougal MacDonald of the Canberra Times gave it 4 stars. He finishes "I have said little in this review about Hollows's work, the restoration of sight in people living in poverty. The film admirably tells that story, delivering a superbly crafted coda which, without fanfare or hype, leaves no doubt about the esteem with which the people he has helped to help themselves regard him." [3] Neil Jillett in the Age says "This excellent documentary by US-born director Pat Fiske presents Hollows as a man whose folksy manner at times seems less than genuine, but whose nobility as a practical humanitarian is never in doubt." [4]