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  1. One Pair Of Eyes is a British current affairs documentary programme, which was first broadcast on the 5 May 1967 on BBC Two. The episodes were broadcast sporadically, usually once a month, with each episode presented by a different person, and focused on a subject that they care about.

  2. A monthly series of highly personal documentary films in which individuals are given a platform to discuss issues close to their heart. Stars. James Cameron. Anthony Howard. Marty Feldman. See production info at IMDbPro. Add to Watchlist. Episodes 80. Top-rated. Sat, Mar 11, 1972. S1.E57. Reyner Banham: Reyner Banham Loves Los Angeles.

  3. An evocation of great British journalist James Cameron's love affair with Nehru's India thirty years after it's birth. The film inaugurates important BBC series, ONE PAIR OF EYES, and has been repeated many times since, including the night 30 years of BBC2 was celebrated. Rate.

  4. A series of highly personal films offering individuals a platform to discuss issues close to their heart. Historians, athletes, academics, politicians, journalists, doctors, aristocrats, artists, and more are all given space to explore and critique the modern world - as they see it.

  5. All Seasons. Season 1967. S1967E01 James Cameron: Temporary Person Passing Through. May 6, 1967. BBC Two. The first of a new monthly series of highly personal films. James Cameron so often returns to India. 'Of all the places I have lived and worked in, the one that made the strongest drag at the emotions was India.

  6. Episode list. One Pair of Eyes. Top-rated. Sat, Mar 11, 1972. S1.E57. Reyner Banham: Reyner Banham Loves Los Angeles. A highly subjective visit to the home of absolutely nothing, The City of Angels, LA. 6.8/10. Rate. Top-rated. Mon, Sep 17, 1973. S1.E67. Alan Garner: All Systems Go! Add a plot. 6.3/10. Rate. Seasons Years Top-rated.

  7. A series of highly personal films offering individuals a platform to discuss issues close to their heart. Historians, athletes, academics, politicians, journalists, doctors, aristocrats, artists, and more are all given space to explore and critique the modern world - as they see it.