Of Time and the City

The film has Davies recalling his life growing up in Liverpool in the 1950s and 1960s, using newsreel and documentary footage supplemented by his own commentary voiceover and contemporaneous and classical music soundtracks.

[1] Time Out said "The one truly great movie to emerge so far (from Cannes)..... this film is as personal, as universal in its relevance, and as gloriously cinematic as anything he has done"[1] and The Guardian called it "a British masterpiece, a brilliant assemblage of images that illuminate our past.

Following the success of the film, in 2010 the website People’s Stories: Liverpool Lives was launched with Heritage Lottery funding, created for Of Time and the City by producer Sol Papadopoulos and transmedia creator Krishna Stott.

[12] It has been described as "a mesmerizing and eloquent essay" by Jonathan Rosenbaum of Chicago Reader,[13] "a warm and extremely thoughtful journey, with a deliberately bare-bones narrative" by Peter Hartlaub of the San Francisco Chronicle,[14] "a distinct pleasure to experience" by Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times,[15] "mesmerizing, visceral and heartfelt" by Geoff Pevere of the Toronto Star,[16] "a short, beautiful, characteristically sublime memory piece" by Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly,[17] "a wistful, funny, satirical, angry and forgiving portrait" by Sean Axmaker of Parallax View,[18] and "a visual poem" by Dennis Schwartz of Ozus' World Movie Reviews.

[5] With Heritage Lottery funding, the website was created for Of Time and the City producer Sol Papadopoulos by transmedia creator Krishna Stott.