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The Smoking Machine

Documentary warning children about the drawbacks of cigarettes – not least their addictiveness.

Documentary 1964 16 mins

Overview

Hacking coughs punctuate the soundtrack throughout, making the film’s propaganda purpose clear from the start. We follow a group of children trying to find out why the various adults in their lives smoke, and what the attractions are considering what to them are obvious drawbacks. Indiscriminate smoking β€œlooks funny to us now”, says the narrator, but The Smoking Machine’s own footage of people casually smoking in cinemas, cafΓ©s and on public transport must seem equally bizarre to today’s kids.

Although there had long been suspicions about links between smoking and cancer, it was the publication of a Royal College of Physicians report, Smoking and Health (1962) that gave the issue widespread publicity. The Ministry of Health responded by funding anti-smoking propaganda films, many aimed specifically at children in the vulnerable 11-16 range. The first, Smoking and You (1963) was much more graphic in its close-ups of blackened lungs and the side-effects of smoking-related illnesses, but was perhaps less accessible than The Smoking Machine’s focus on children’s natural curiosity.