Raymond Egerton Harry Watt (18 October 1906 – 2 April 1987) was a Scottish documentary and feature film director, who began his career working for John Grierson and Robert Flaherty. His 1959 film The Siege of Pinchgut was entered into the 9th Berlin International Film Festival. He was born in Edinburgh, the son of the Scottish Liberal MP Harry Watt. He studied at Edinburgh University but failed to complete his degree. He enlisted in the Merchant Navy and worked in a number of industrial jobs.
Eureka Stockade
(Director)
The Overlanders
(Director)
The Overlanders
(Writer)
Night Mail
(Director)
For Those in Peril
(Screenplay)
Target for Tonight
(Director)
Vidunderhunden Bara
(Director)
Vidunderhunden Bara
(Writer)
The Siege of Pinchgut
(Director)
North Sea
(Director)
London Can Take It!
(Director)
Fiddlers Three
(Director)
Squadron 992
(Director)
Where No Vultures Fly
(Director)
Where No Vultures Fly
(Story)
The Front Line
(Director)
6.30 Collection
(Editor)
West of Zanzibar
(Director)
6.30 Collection
(Director)
Nine Men
(Director)
The First Days
(Director)
Britain at Bay
(Director)
Big Money
(Director)
The Saving of Bill Blewitt
(Director)
War and Order
(Script)
Coal Face
(Additional Photography)
Save Your Shillings and Smile
(Director)
West of Zanzibar
(Story)
Christmas Under Fire
(Director)
Health in War
(Producer)
North Sea
(Writer)
Jamaica Inn
(Special Effects)
The Boy Who Loved Horses
(Director)
Eureka Stockade
(Screenplay)
The Boy Who Loved Horses
(Writer)
The Siege of Pinchgut
(Adaptation)
The Siege of Pinchgut
(Screenplay)
Droitwich: The World's Most Modern Long Wave Transmitter
(Director)
Droitwich: The World's Most Modern Long Wave Transmitter
(Additional Photography)
Droitwich: The World's Most Modern Long Wave Transmitter
(Editor)
The Story of an Air Communiqué
(Producer)