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New Times film - The Art of Satire

Today – October 3rd – sees the first screening of a new short film documenting the work of political cartoonist Peter Brookes, which will run exclusively at the Cheltenham Literature Festival for the next two weeks before general release.

The Art of Satire is the next instalment in The Unquiet Film Series, a collection of films that launched in June of this year chronicling the untold stories of The Times and The Sunday Times. The films are the result of a selection of independent film-makers given access to the newspapers’ staff and 229 years of archive material.

In the latest addition, The Times’ political cartoonist Peter Brookes – who has been with the paper for over 20 years – gives a preview into the world of satirical news and artwork, working to a daily deadline and the importance of not being tied to any one party as “cartoonists are the permanent opposition”.

Commentary from broadcaster Jon Snow, The Guardian’s Martin Rowson, plus colleague and fellow cartoonist Morten Morland amongst others reveals Brookes as an integral part of the political conversation managing to tell a story and cause an “assassination without the blood” five days a week.

From director Liz Unna: “Peter Brookes has an exceptionally rare talent. Every day he filters all the stories, all the commotion from the world, into one beautifully drawn, single-cell image. An image that has something incisive to add to the political conversation, an image that makes us laugh and look at our leaders in a new light. This film explores the mind and the process behind his incredible artwork, and in so doing reveals the importance of the role of satire in Britain today.”

Brookes will be speaking at the Cheltenham Literature Festival, which runs from 3rd to 12th October and hosts the biggest names in fiction, politics, television, art, food and sport. The film will then open to all online after the festival at ForeverUnquiet.co.uk.