Documentary Film
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Transcript Documentary Film
Documentary Film
SPELLBOUND
What is a Documentary?
Films that
tell stories about real
events and real people using, for
the most part, actual images and
objects.
What is a Documentary?
They record what is currently
happening in the world or explore what
has taken place.
They introduce viewers to ideas,
people, and experiences that otherwise
might not have encountered or
challenge them to question what they
already know.
What is a Documentary?
Like fiction films, documentaries can be
funny, moving, disturbing, thoughtprovoking, or entertaining.
1st Documentaries
1895 – French Inventor Louis Lumiere
developed a lightweight, hand-cranked
camera that allowed him to tape daily
occurences.
Ex: Feeding the Baby, Leaving the Factory,
and Arrival of a Train at the Station.
These filmings are known as “actualities.”
Lumiere’s early works lead to modern cinema.
1st Documentaries
Actualities
were extremely popular,
new, and thrilling to audiences in the
1890’s.
Watching Arrival of a Train at the
Station made spectators scream and
dodge as the film train moved from long
shot to close-up, looking as if it would
burst through the screen.
Distinguishing a
Documentary’s Approach
Objective Documentaries
- Known as “Direct Cinema”
- Attempt to record events objectively w/o
manipulation or direction.
- The camera records life as it unfolds in
real time.
- Questions are not posed on screen, usually
there is no narration, and often subjects do
not know of the filmmaker’s presence
Distinguishing a
Documentary’s Approach
Subjective Documentaries
- Also known as opinionated documentaries
- A distinct point of view is presented by the
filmmaker.
- Often the filmmaker narrates and
participates either as a voice behind the
camera or appearing as a character in front
of the camera.
Distinguishing a
Documentary’s Approach
Some documentaries use a combination of both
objective and subjective approaches.
Structure of a Documentary
A documentary can be arranged
chronologically OR it can move back and
forth in time, if doing so is the best way to
make a point or illustrate a theme.
REAL vs. STAGED
Though documentaries are intended to be “real,”
filmmakers have been known to fake scenes when
real footage was not compelling or did not exist.
Ex: Documentary – Nanook of the North – was
the first full length documentary about a group of
Inuts living on the coast of the Hudson Bay near
the Arctic Circle.
Much of the documentary was restaged traditional
activities of the Inut people, like whale hunting.
Documentary Categories
Political
Dramatize issues and their
implications for society; contribute
to political debate
Political documentaries walk a fine
line between advocacy and
propaganda
Ex: Fahrenheit 9/11;
The Collector of Bedford Street
Documentary Categories
Historical
Explore a past event or period of time or
the life of someone who lived in the past
Archival photos, letters, and face-to-face
interviews with historians and scholars
are some of the sources historical
documentarians draw on.
Ex: 4 Little Girls
Documentary Category
Situational/Cultural/Natural World
Help audience understand the world they
live in.
Ex: Discovery Channel, Travel Channel,
Spellbound
What categories do the documentaries
you’ve seen fit?
Making a Documentary
Documentaries employ many of the same
devices as fiction films to hold attention.
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Story
Point of view
Structure
Cinematography
Editing
Music
Making a Documentary
All documentaries require a strong story
and must have structure.
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Beginning
Middle
End
Compelling characters
Emotional impact
Not always a happy ending
Making a Documentary
Narration – off-camera commentary- is used
to voice letters and other written material
To join together visual images and
interviews
To provide transitions between scenes or to
set the stage for a scene
To indicate re-enactments
Narration is generally written after the film
is completed to ensure the words and
pictures work together.