Camber Sands, with its wide bay and large dune system, has been used in a variety of creative media.
Films The beach was used in the 1958 film
Dunkirk starring
John Mills to recreate
Operation Dynamo. They were used again as Normandy beaches during
D-Day in the 1962 film
The Longest Day.
Follow That Camel was shot here during the early months of 1967, with Camber Sands representing the
Sahara Desert, although filming had to be stopped several times because the dunes were covered in snow.
The Invisible Woman (filmed in 2012, released in 2013), a period drama about the life of
Nelly Ternan, has several scenes on the sand. Scenes from
The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner were filmed here in early 1962. The film's main character (the runner), Colin Smith, portrayed by actor
Tom Courtenay, and his friend take their girlfriends to
Skegness for a weekend, and some scenes were filmed on this beach and in the dunes.
TV Shows The Inbetweeners - season one episode five. The boys go to the 'Camber Sands' caravan club meetup.
Music Camber Sands is mentioned in various songs such as "
Pulling Mussels (From the Shell)" by
Squeeze (also covered by
Head Automatica), "Diamonds and Pearls" by
The Holloways, "
Heavyweight Champion of the World" by
Reverend and The Makers and "Caravan" by
Nick Heyward. It was also used as a title to
Fatboy Slim's EP single
Camber Sands.
Feeder's 2003 video for "
Forget About Tomorrow", was partially shot on the beach. Nine years later, Feeder referenced Camber Sands in "Oh My", the opening track of their
Generation Freakshow album. The 2007 song "Heavyweight Champion of the World" by
Reverend & The Makers mentions that the closest the protagonist got to China was a "week in Camber Sands". The song "On Camber Sands" appears on
Gordon Giltrap's album
Troubadour. The cover of the 1980 LP record
Beat Boys In The Jet Age by mod revival band,
The Lambrettas, was photographed on Camber Sands. The cover of the
Bucks Fizz album
I Hear Talk, was photographed at Camber Sands. The cover of
Dream Theater's 1997 album
Falling Into Infinity was photographed at Camber Sands by English graphic designer
Storm Thorgerson.
Visual art Artists the
Boyle Family made some of their first casts using resin and fibreglass on the beach at Camber Sands in 1966. These initial studies – some of which were unsuccessful – culminated in the Tidal Series of 1969 in which 14 separate casts were made of the same area of beach. ==References==