Did you see Brecon brothers Andrew and Phil Clark in a BBC documentary tracing Wales’ earliest amateur films?

The pair featured in the BBC One programme ’Wales’s Home Movies’ viewing pre-war footage of Brecon shot by their grandfather Jack Clark.

The programme, which was originally broadcast on Sunday evening, featured a special screening of Jack’s films for his grandsons at Brecon Coliseum cinema.

Showman and entrepreneur Jack, who established a town centre toy shop in 1905 that is still run by the family today, is considered a pioneering film-maker as he shot scenes of ordinary life in the market town in the 1920s.

A gardener’s son, Jack grew up to become a photographer and Punch-and-Judy man with a keen interest in new technology.

He invested in a cine camera when filming was still rare, and the films he shot from the 1920s onwards form a unique document of life in Brecon, including the annual carnival and the opening of Breconshire War Memorial Hospital.

Grandson Phil said: "He recorded the events of a small community and that give me a sense of pride, really."

You can see Wales’s Home Movies on the BBC iplayer by following this link https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b09b1zh5/waless-home-movies