Gold Dust is not just a film of Iain Sinclair reading from his book 
Ghost Milk, beautifully accompanied by Bill Parry-Davies on Saxophone. 
In this 7 minute film Sinclair calls time on London’s Grand Olympic 
Project. He reveals another side to the Olympic landscape, one 
crisscrossed by trains carrying nuclear waste, siroccos of toxic dust, 
and other details the authorities would rather we didn’t know.

The story begins in 1901 when Marie Curie discovers radium, and the 
nuclear age is born. In the 63 years following, before someone decides 
the disposal of radioactive materials must be restrained - in those 
years of science, industry, and war, Britain develops nuclear power and 
The Bomb, while other industries are routinely using radioactive 
materials. Also between those years, in an industrial backwater and 
dumping ground in the East of London, radioactive wastes are buried.

Decades later in that same burial ground, an oubliette imprisoning waste 
of the early nuclear age, the Olympic gold rush begins. The 5 ringed 
tomb robbers have no time to lose, and show no mercy to a repository of 
mysterious elemental forces. Amid the poisons of industrial 
exploitation, the prospectors, the architects of dust, their thousand 
mechanical excavators, churn every inch of this sacred earth.

 From their retirement bungalow high on the rocky flanks of Mount 
Olympus the 12 Greek gods whose home this is, cannot look away as the 
mortals tear asunder protective layers, their eager snouts pressed into 
the 2012 trough. In an unlikely alliance of brooding spirits, the ghost 
of Marie Curie, and the Viking god Thor, from whom the radioactive metal 
Thorium takes its name, are disturbed.

Have the gold diggers awoken what should have been left to sleep?

http://vimeo.com/28065136
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