Enough to Eat? (1936)
Edgar Anstey and Arthur Elton’s sponsored documentary on Britain’s malnutrition crisis, blending expert testimony (Julian Huxley, J. B. Orr, A. V. Hill/Gowland Hopkins) with school-meal scenes and simple charts to link low income to poor diets and argue for “protective” foods and public provision. Commissioned by the gas industry, it plays like a brisk scientific lecture-film that helped push nutrition into public debate.
Directors: Edgar Anstey, Arthur Elton.
![]() |
Gowland Hopkins as Himself |
![]() |
Julian Huxley as Himself |
![]() |
Herbert Morrison as Himself |
![]() |
John Orr as Himself |
| Directing | Edgar Anstey | Director |
| Crew | Walter Blakeley | Cinematography |
| Crew | A. L. Fisher | Cinematography |
| Directing | Frank Sainsbury | Assistant Director |
| Sound | Charles Poulton | Sound |
| Directing | Arthur Elton | Director |