The publication headquarters for
Ahl al Naft was based in Beirut, with contributions from Arab writers from across the region. Meanwhile, the English-language version produced in central London made its way into the homes and offices of company employees living throughout Europe and the Middle East. Long features on national development programmes in Iraq as well as lighter essays on artistic or historical issues were typical of the content of both publications. Photo essays and articles about
modern architecture, art and everyday life in Baghdad were frequent from the earliest issues in 1951.
A strong relationship between the IPC public relations office and the Iraqi government was made explicit through the regular contributions of state ministers writing about topics from education policy to housing programmes. Close collaboration between the government and the company was further reflected in the reproduction of exact photographs and text from the IPC periodicals in publicity documents published by Iraq’s Directorate-General of Guidance and Broadcasting, such as the three-volume tome
Land of Two Rivers: Building a New Iraq. An internal report by the IPC public relations office emphasizes that IPC also made films with the cooperation of the Iraqi government, 'which welcomed the concept that films would publicise the country's historical traditions, plans for development and, generally speaking, arouse public interest, both inside and outside Iraq
.' IPC’s approach to making films was distinguished by the company’s objective to project a vision of modern Iraq for Iraqi audiences, as opposed to the precedent set by the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. Beginning in 1921, just 10 years after the completion of the first pipeline to Abadan, Anglo-Iranian used photography and film technologies chiefly to document company operations in oil-producing regions for company executives and stockholders in Britain. These silent reels were the earliest films to narrativize the discovery and development of the British oil industry in the Middle East
. In subsequent decades, Anglo-Iranian, Shell and ARAMCO sponsored prestige films that were intended to entertain and educate general audiences in order to bolster those companies’ reputations among potential consumers
.Traditionally, British and American oil company films were produced in English and translated into other languages for distribution in other markets. However, after the nationalist movement in Iran ousted Anglo-Iranian in 1951, the Iraq Petroleum Company newly established public relations office reconsidered the question of how film use could best serve the company. The result was a novel approach that prioritized the production of Arabic-language films and an emphasis on direct distribution to Iraqi audiences, in addition to the standard industry practice of sponsoring films made by British production companies in English that were later translated for regional distribution.
Midway through production of its first company film
The Third River, IPC’s film officer John Shearman began to recruit British filmmakers for a new Baghdad-based film unit. As Peter Kelly, the unit's director, has explained, the IPC film unit was distinct from its contemporaries because of its explicit concern with making films for 'the cinema-going Iraqi people' as opposed to stockholders or consumers in Britain
. Between 1953 and 1958, the unit shot, scripted and edited 13 episodes of the IPC cine-magazine
Beladuna in 35mm, each comprised of two or three short films about Iraq and its regional context. The films tended to focus on various aspects related to the modernization of Baghdad from its new bus system to its modern architecture and planning. At the same time, IPC continued sponsoring films produced by British production companies that examined similar themes in long form, such as
Ageless Iraq.
Released in 1954,
Ageless Iraq is a twenty-one-minute-long documentary that sets out to narrate the history of modern Iraq for general audiences. Sponsored by the Iraq Petroleum Company and produced by the Associated British Pathe in association with Film Centre. Practically, no records related to the production of
Ageless Iraq exist in public archives, and little is known about the reception of the film other than 1956
Film User and
To-day's Cinema catalogues that describe the film as educational and recommended for use in schools as a teaching aid on the Middle East.