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Now booking ºÚÁÏÉç Film

Stop Strip Searching

30 July 2025 at 18.30–20.30

Anne Crilly and the Derry Film and Video Workshop, Stop Strip Searching 1986. Courtesy the filmmakers.

1980s feminist films about women’s bodies and domestic policies

Stop Strip Searching presents works by women filmmakers who were active in 1980s film collectives. The works look at the effects of British policies on women from different racial or religious backgrounds. Lai Ngan Walsh’s Who Takes the Rap explores how housing and labour laws kept working-class, Black, Asian and Irish immigrants in low-paid jobs and poor living conditions. The film features rapper Lorna Gee (AKA Sutara Gayle), who helps tell this story. It combines montage and archival images with footage of contemporary demonstrations and first-person accounts, brought together with a rapped soundtrack.

Anne Crilly’s Stop Strip Searching documents the strip-searching of women in prisons in the north of Ireland in the early 1980s. The work includes interviews with women, legal experts, psychologists, church leaders and activists. Both films were screened around the UK and used as campaign films for equal rights. Stop Strip Searching was Crilly's first work for the Derry Film and Video Workshop, a women-led group who explored the political situation in the north of Ireland including women’s issues, supported by Channel 4.

After the screening, Anne Crilly, Lai Ngan Walsh and Dr Isobel Harbison will discuss these films and their impact today.

This screening is supported by Culture Ireland

  • Lai Ngan Walsh, Who Takes the Rap - Immigration 1986. Video, colour, sound, 34 mins
  • Anne Crilly, Stop Strip Searching 1984. Video, colour, sound, 52 mins

Lai Ngan Walsh

Lai Ngan Walsh is a London-based filmmaker, sound recordist and script consultant who has worked in film and television production. She was a contributor to Black Women and Representation at Four Corners during the 1980s. As a member of the Women and The Law Collective she made films addressing racial and gender discrimination in British law. Her work was included in the group exhibition Women in Revolt at Tate Britain (2024).

Anne Crilly

Anne Crilly is an artist and filmmaker from Derry, based in Donegal. She was a founding member of the Derry Film and Video Workshop (DFVW) in 1983, a women-led group who explored the women’s movement and how it coincided with ‘the national question’ in the north of Ireland. These films included themes of colonialism, and social and gender equality. After Stop Strip Searching, Crilly went on to make Mother Ireland which was recognised internationally for its representation of the Irish women’s movement. In 2024, DFVW had an exhibition with Sara Greavu and Ciara Phillips at the Irish Museum of Modern Art (We Realised the Power of It).

Dr Isobel Harbison

Dr Isobel Harbison is an Irish art historian and writer, and Senior Lecturer at Goldsmiths, University of London. Her first book, Performing Image, was published by the MIT Press in 2019. Her second book, a history of the world’s most famous sign, in situ and in circulation, is forthcoming with Manchester University Press. From 2025 - 2026, Harbison is Research Associate at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, working with Ulster Museum and the Public Records Office of Northern Ireland to deliver Recording History, an oral history of artist and independent filmmakers active in the north of Ireland from 1968 – 1990.

This event will be BSL interpreted.

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Starr Cinema

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
ºÚÁÏÉç

Date & Time

30 July 2025 at 18.30–20.30

Pricing

£10 / £7 for Members

£7 Concessions

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