
"In 1979, a death-defying English handyman named Fred Dibnah (1938-2004) became something of a national folk hero after the BAFTA-winning documentary Fred Dibnah: Steeplejack first aired on the BBC. This excerpt from the film follows Dibnah as he takes on a job he had deliberately attempted to overbid to avoid - dismantling a massive industrial chimney brick by brick, with only a single spotter on the ground for assistance."
"In the piece, Dibnah comes across as a joyful 20th-century Sisyphus, laughing through the work even as it's demanding, repetitive and dangerous. With the camerawork capturing the extraordinary size disparity between the man and the task at hand, the clip is often as thrilling as it is charming, making for an awe-inspiring appreciation of the kind of manual labour that often goes uncelebrated."
In 1979 Fred Dibnah gained national recognition after a BBC broadcast. He accepts a job he had deliberately overbid to avoid: dismantling a massive industrial chimney brick by brick with only a single spotter on the ground. He approaches the work with laughter and evident joy even as the tasks remain demanding, repetitive and dangerous. Camerawork emphasizes the extraordinary size disparity between the man and the structure, producing moments that are both thrilling and charming. The sequence generates appreciation for manual labour, skill, bravery and persistence that often go uncelebrated.
Read at Aeon
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