Stuart Legg
Stuart Legg (August 31, 1910 – July 23, 1988) was a pioneering English documentary filmmaker best known for his groundbreaking work with the National Film Board of Canada. His most notable achievement came at the 14th Academy Awards in 1941, when his film Churchill's Island won the Oscar for Best Documentary, making it the first documentary to ever win the prestigious award. Legg's Warclouds in the Pacific was also nominated for Best Documentary that year, further cementing his reputation as a key figure in the documentary film world. Throughout his career, Legg played a significant role in shaping documentary filmmaking, particularly in the areas of war and political themes.

Humphrey Jennings: The Man Who Listened to Britain
Air Outpost

Night Mail
Pett and Pott: A Fairy Story of the Suburbs

Atoms at Work
Spotlight on the Colonies
Pett and Pott: A Fairy Story of the Suburbs

Inside France

Inside France

Operation Hurricane
Unseen Enemies
Food or Famine
Song of the Clouds
Tomorrow's Citizens
The Coming of the Dial
Warclouds in the Pacific

BBC: The Voice of Britain
Cable Ship
Monkey Into Man

BBC: The Voice of Britain

BBC: The Voice of Britain

BBC: The Voice of Britain
Zero Hour

The War for Men's Minds

The War for Men's Minds
Zero Hour

The Windjammer

Coal Face

Coal Face
A Light in Nature
Warclouds in the Pacific
Warclouds in the Pacific

The Duchy of Cornwall
Dollars and Sense
Front of Steel

Churchill's Island

Under Stress
Forward a Century

Atlantic Patrol
Forward a Century
On the Fishing Banks of Skye

Behind the Scenes
The Case of Charlie Gordon

Inside Fighting China
Powered Flight: The Story of the Century
Varsity
The New Generation
The Gates of Italy
Global Air Routes

Churchill's Island
Eagles of the Fleet

Today We Live
Now—The Peace

Eastern Valley

From the Ground Up
Food: Secret of the Peace
John Bull's Own Island
The Stanlow Story

Inside Fighting China
