• ''
AIDS: Don't Die of Ignorance'': A major British information campaign in 1987 with a leaflet delivered to every household in the UK and short public information films 'Monolith' and 'Iceberg', with the doom-laden voice of
John Hurt. •
Amber Gambler: A film about the dangers of racing through amber
traffic lights before they turn to red. •
Apaches: A public information film shown in primary schools about the dangers of playing on farms. This PIF is notorious for being extremely graphic. •
Charley Says: An animated series of PIFs with a ginger cat called Charley (whose warning growls were voiced by
Kenny Everett) who advised children against various dangers they might encounter in their daily lives. •
Menace: a 1970 short film about the dangers of not locking your house at night time. The 30 second short film was narrated by
Peter Sallis. •
Children and Disused Fridges: a 1971 PIF about the dangers of children playing and
dying in discarded refrigerators. The film became well known due to its frightening message. •
Children and Ponds: a 1979 film warning parents about the dangers of garden ponds to small children. Voice-over by
Hywel Bennett. •
Clunk Click Every Trip: A series of films about the importance of seat belts, similar to the US
Crash Test Dummies PSAs. •
Cow: A 2008 public information film made by
BBC Cymru and
Tredegar Comprehensive School about the consequences of
texting and
driving. The story is about 17-year-old Cassie "Cow" Cowan who causes a car crash due to texting and driving, and causes four deaths, including her two friends riding as her passengers. Cassie herself nearly dies but is revived. In the aftermath of the crash, Cassie's family ended up being ostracised by the local community and ultimately Cassie was sentenced to seven years in prison for
death by dangerous driving. •
Drinking and Driving Wrecks Lives: A series of 1980s–1990s PIFs targeting
drink-driving offenders. An equally well-known and successful road safety campaign was
Clunk Click Every Trip, fronted initially by
Shaw Taylor and later by
Jimmy Savile. •
Green Cross Code: A character played by
David Prowse who advised children about crossing the road safely. An earlier road safety campaign targeted at children featured the animated squirrel "Tufty", and a Tufty Club for young children was later founded. •
Joe and Petunia: A series of animated PIFs about a couple whose amazing stupidity caused dangerous problems for everyone around them. They appeared in only four PIFs ("Coastguard", "Water Safety – Flags", "Country Code" and "Worn Tyres"). They were "resurrected" when "Coastguard" was remade in 2007 with updated references: Petunia is reading
Hello! and listening to an
iPod; Joe wears a
Burberry cap and phones the desktop-PC-using coastguard on his mobile phone. •
Julie: A film about the importance of rear seat belts, which ran for 5 years between 1998 and 2003 with a return in 2007, and was so successful it was adapted for broadcast in France. It was updated with the THINK! logo in 2001. •
Knock-off Nigel: A 2007 copyright infringement campaign of videos about "Nigel", a
cheapskate who buys
bootleg DVDs, and is ostracized by his peers. •
Lonely Water: A 1973 film warning children of the dangers of foolhardy behaviour around lakes and ponds. The film was shot in horror movie style with a menacing black-robed figure, featuring a memorably chilling voiceover from
Donald Pleasence. •
Play Safe: An Electricity safety film from 1978. It shows two main animated characters; a robin (voiced by
Bernard Cribbins) and an owl (voiced by
Brian Wilde). The robin is looking for a place to perch and lands on the wires of a pylon. The owl who is perching on a tree nearby, berates him for doing something so dangerous, and the robin flies over and perches next to him, promising that he'll play safe in future. This begins their discussion of the golden rule "Play Safe", showing clips of the dangers of being around electricity and ignoring the warning signs, including touching over head power lines, flying kites and other toys around pylons, trespassing in substations and fooling around with electricity itself. The owl concludes "When you have time to kill, make sure time doesn't kill you," with both him and the robin ending with, "Have fun. But keep safe and play safe." •
Powerful Stuff: An Electricity safety film from 1988, based on the same principles as
Play Safe. •
Protect and Survive: A series of films (never shown) advising the British public on what to do in the event of a nuclear attack. They would have been shown constantly on all television channels in the build up to a war. Voiced by
Patrick Allen. •
Reginald Molehusband: A man (Ian Gardiner) who demonstrated the correct way to park safely. His reverse parking was "a public danger", bets were laid on his performance and people came from all round to watch, until the day he got it right – "Well done! Reginald Molehusband, the safest parker in town." This film is now classified as missing and is not in the archives of either the COI or the private company, which now owns most of its archive footage, although an audio recording still exists. However, a remake was done in 2006, with Gardiner reprising the title role. •
Right to Buy: A 1984 PIF about council tenants who were offered the right to buy their homes at discounted rates. •
Robbie: A film based around a child losing his legs after being struck by a train. A modern equivalent,
Killing Time, was shown in secondary schools during the 1990s but was later replaced for, apparently, being too graphic.
Robbie replaced the notorious and extremely graphic
The Finishing Line. However,
Robbie and
The Finishing Line are arguably not strictly PIFs, being produced by
British Transport Films. •
Stop Look Listen Live: A series of animated PIFs created by copywriter Jack Stephens, about two hedgehogs crossing the road while singing road-safety themed covers of songs like "
King of the Road", "
Stayin' Alive" and "
Ain't Got No Home". ==DVD release==