Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Truth in documentary making

In my previous post I discussed the idea of creating objective images and dimissed it as impossible. I think all photograhs or films however much they claim to show the truth will always contain bias. However some documentaries are more truthful than others and it is the responsibility of a good documentary maker to try their hardest to be as unbiased as possible. I found this video on youtube. It is a funny video but I think it highlights the immense power a documentary maker has to portray situations as they want, and the responsibility a serious documentary maker has to try an make there films as unbiased as possible.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

New Objectivity

The question raised in my mind about documentary form is how a documentary depicts reality. How the different forms show different variations of truth. Observational documentary attempting to show something in its truest form whilst expository documentary has a strong bias and agenda a point of view presentd to the viewer. The question I have been researching is can any documentary or image show truth, a perfect depiction of reality. I have drawn my attention to an art movement called New Objectivity which arose in Germany in the early 1920s as an outgrowth of, and in opposition to, expressionism. From this art movement combined with advances in photographic techology came new objectivist photographers.

"'Deutsche Fotographische Austellung' in Frankfurt, all formulated the claims of the new aesthetic positivism. A similar perspective was evident in the new photographic literature: Werner Graff's 'Er Kommt der neue Fotograf!' (1929), Karl Blossfeldt's 'Urformen der Kunst' (1928), and of course Renger Patzch's 'Die Welt ist Schon'. These books and shows set out to establish a new truth relation between the new photographic technology and the everyday that exceeded both 'art' photography and previous reportial work. Photography's extended powers of realism were held to have inscribed themselves in the very texture of things, hence the repeated call to photographers to direct their attentions to the intricacies and secrets of nature. Indeed advances in technology were seen to confirm photography as a branch of the empirical sciences." (The art of interuption. Realism, photography and the everyday. John Roberts 1998)

Because of advances in photographic technology pioneered by Leica with the introduction of 35mm film and very sharp focus these photographers believed they could capture truth, "Indeed advances in technology were seen to confirm photography as a branch of the empirical sciences." They believed an image could depict a scene in complete accuracy.

In my opinion this is not true. There is no way an image can be objective, showing a truthful representation of reality. I appreciate that if you take images using using the optimum amount of focus and colour balance and do not crop an image ( something new objectivists never did) an image becomes as unbiased as possible. But i do not believe as new objectivists did that an image can show the truth. The lenghthy photographic process starting with choice of camera, film, aperture, processing and finally printing are all stages at which a photographer controls the capture of reality and chooses according to how they wish to portray the world. These are all subjective decisions. A photograph shows what the photograoher wanted to show.

I do not think many people still believe truth can be captured through any form of visual technology. With the increase in technology such as video I think it is becoming increasingly harder to be objective when capturing images. New technology gives people more and more opportunity to show their opinions through their work. Choices such as editing, photoshop, different ways of showing footage and images such as the internet all giving the creator more opportunities to add their own biases as much as they may think they are not. I believe every choice made by a photographer or film maker about the way the final image looks adds more of their own bias to it.

Friday, November 16, 2007

Documentary Form

Documentaries can be split into six different forms. The following has been inspired by Bill Nichols books Introduction to Documentary (2001) and Representing Reality (1991). and taken from (http://www.girishshambu.com/blog/2006/12/six-types-of-documentary.html)

1. Poetic documentaries, which first appeared in the 1920’s, were a sort of reaction against both the content and the rapidly crystallizing grammar of the early fiction film. The poetic mode moved away from continuity editing and instead organized images of the material world by means of associations and patterns, both in terms of time and space. Well-rounded characters—'life-like people'—were absent; instead, people appeared in these films as entities, just like any other, that are found in the material world. The films were fragmentary, impressionistic, lyrical. Their disruption of the coherence of time and space—a coherence favored by the fiction films of the day—can also be seen as an element of the modernist counter-model of cinematic narrative. The ‘real world’—Nichols calls it the “historical world”—was broken up into fragments and aesthetically reconstituted using film form.

Examples: Joris Ivens’ Rain (1928), whose subject is a passing summer shower over Amsterdam; Laszlo Moholy-Nagy’s Play of Light: Black, White, Grey (1930), in which he films one of his own kinetic sculptures, emphasizing not the sculpture itself but the play of light around it; Oskar Fischinger’s abstract animated films; Francis Thompson’s N.Y., N.Y. (1957), a city symphony film; Chris Marker’s Sans Soleil (1982).

2. Expository documentaries speak directly to the viewer, often in the form of an authoritative commentary employing voiceover or titles, proposing a strong argument and point of view. These films are rhetorical, and try to persuade the viewer. (They may use a rich and sonorous male voice.) The (voice-of-God) commentary often sounds ‘objective’ and omniscient. Images are often not paramount; they exist to advance the argument. The rhetoric insistently presses upon us to read the images in a certain fashion. Historical documentaries in this mode deliver an unproblematic and ‘objective’ account and interpretation of past events.

Examples: TV shows and films like A&E Biography; America’s Most Wanted; many science and nature documentaries; Ken Burns’ The Civil War (1990); Robert Hughes’ The Shock of the New (1980); John Berger’s Ways Of Seeing (1974). Also, Frank Capra’s wartime Why We Fight series; Pare Lorentz’s The Plow That Broke The Plains (1936).

3. Observational documentaries attempt to simply and spontaneously observe lived life with a minimum of intervention. Filmmakers who worked in this sub-genre often saw the poetic mode as too abstract and the expository mode as too didactic. The first observational docs date back to the 1960’s; the technological developments which made them possible include mobile lighweight cameras and portable sound recording equipment for synchronized sound. Often, this mode of film eschewed voice-over commentary, post-synchronized dialogue and music, or re-enactments. The films aimed for immediacy, intimacy, and revelation of individual human character in ordinary life situations.

Examples: Frederick Wiseman’s films, e.g. High School (1968); Gilles Groulx and Michel Brault’s Les Racquetteurs (1958); Albert & David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin's Gimme Shelter (1970); D.A. Pennebaker's Don’t Look Back (1967), about Dylan’s tour of England; and parts (not all) of Jean Rouch and Edgar Morin's Chronicle Of A Summer (1960), which interviews several Parisians about their lives. An ironic example of this mode is Leni Riefenstahl’s Triumph Of The Will (1934), which ostensibly records the pageantry and ritual at the Nazi party’s 1934 Nuremberg rally, although it is well-known that these events were often staged for the purpose of the camera and would not have occurred without it. This would be anathema to most of the filmmakers associated with this mode, like Wiseman, Pennebaker, Richard Leacock and Robert Drew, who believed that the filmmaker should be a “fly-on-the-wall” who observes but tries to not influence or alter the events being filmed.

4. Participatory documentaries believe that it is impossible for the act of filmmaking to not influence or alter the events being filmed. What these films do is emulate the approach of the anthropologist: participant-observation. Not only is the filmmaker part of the film, we also get a sense of how situations in the film are affected or altered by her presence. Nichols: “The filmmaker steps out from behind the cloak of voice-over commentary, steps away from poetic meditation, steps down from a fly-on-the-wall perch, and becomes a social actor (almost) like any other. (Almost like any other because the filmmaker retains the camera, and with it, a certain degree of potential power and control over events.)” The encounter between filmmaker and subject becomes a critical element of the film. Rouch and Morin named the approach cinéma vérité, translating Dziga Vertov’s kinopravda into French; the “truth” refers to the truth of the encounter rather than some absolute truth.

Examples: Vertov’s The Man with a Movie Camera (1929); Rouch and Morin’s Chronicle of a Summer (1960); Ross McElwee’s Sherman’s March (1985); Nick Broomfield’s films. I suspect Michael Moore’s films would also belong here, although they have a strong ‘expository’ bent as well.

5. Reflexive documentaries don’t see themselves as a transparent window on the world; instead they draw attention to their own constructedness, and the fact that they are representations. How does the world get represented by documentary films? This question is central to this sub-genre of films. They prompt us to “question the authenticity of documentary in general.” It is the most self-conscious of all the modes, and is highly skeptical of ‘realism.’ It may use Brechtian alienation strategies to jar us, in order to ‘defamiliarize’ what we are seeing and how we are seeing it.

Examples: (Again) Vertov’s The Man with a Movie Camera (1929); Buñuel's Land Without Bread; Trinh T. Minh-ha’s Surname Viet Given Name Nam (1989); Jim McBride & L.M. Kit Carson's David Holzman’s Diary (1968); David & Judith MacDougall’s Wedding Camels (1980).

6. Performative documentaries stress subjective experience and emotional response to the world. They are strongly personal, unconventional, perhaps poetic and/or experimental, and might include hypothetical enactments of events designed to make us experience what it might be like for us to possess a certain specific perspective on the world that is not our own, e.g. that of black, gay men in Marlon Riggs’s Tongues Untied (1989) or Jenny Livingston’s Paris Is Burning (1991). This sub-genre might also lend itself to certain groups (e.g. women, ethnic minorities, gays and lesbians, etc) to ‘speak about themselves.’ Often, a battery of techniques, many borrowed from fiction or avant-garde films, are used. Performative docs often link up personal accounts or experiences with larger political or historical realities.

Examples: Alain Resnais’ Night And Fog (1955), with a commentary by Holocaust survivior Jean Cayrol, is not a historical account of the Holocaust but instead a subjective account of it; it’s a film about memory. Also, Peter Forgacs’ Free Fall (1988) and Danube Exodus (1999); and Robert Gardner’s Forest of Bliss (1985), a film about India that I’ve long heard about and look forward to seeing.

I can use these different forms of documentary to analyse my own documentary technique. What I find particularly interesting is the role truth plays in documentaries and how the different forms presented here show facts in very different ways.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Mood Music

I set about creating a track with mood in mind. I intended this track to be sombre but it matured into something quite dark. My intention from now is to create music with it's usefulness as a soundtrack to film in mind, this is my first attempt.

Click to hear music file

I started making this track today and it is not finished, I was messing around recording incomprehensible sounds over pad noises and ended up making it into this short track. I think this track has a lot of potential and hopefully I will find time to record the vocals properly in uni (i used a webcam mic) and turn it into a full song. I have added it to my blog because I like it so much, I think the track has character which is what I feel the majority of my other music lacks.

Click to hear music file

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Music Production

Click to hear music file

I have been creating music on my computer for about four years as a hobby and have decided to start including some of this work on my blog as I feel it is more relevant to my course this year. I created the sound for all of the videos on my blog I have made this year and intent to continue to help make sound for video. I often try and produce different styles of music and have begun experimenting in creating different moods through sound that could be used in films. I am especially interested in sound scaping and the use of pads and sound effects to create sound for a film that could not be described as a song but more a soundtrack. I intend to keep posting new music i make on my blog all year as i am usually always working on a new track. The track linked above is the full version of the track in the video below. I liked this tracks potential for video because of its extremely dark mood and definate contrasts between loud and quiet. I create the music using Fruityloops mainly as well as Soundforge and audacity for recording and editing samples and ableton live for live music creation and playing and effect controls.

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Adobe Premiere experiment



As adobe premiere is the software I will be using most this year I decided to try and learn as much about it as i could by creating a video that took advantage of as many of its functions as possible. I created the red line that runs across the screen throughout the video using the green screen Chroma Key effect, this taught me how to layer up video and about oppacity and green screen. I also used a lot of automated controls using the key frames in the effects, this allowed me to make the video effects work intime with the music. I also experimented with a lot of other effects including strobing, contrast, colour manipulation. For the vocals at the end of the track I recorded the screaming for the video to the original track played at twice the speed, then slowed it back down to match the original soundtrack to create a strange feeling of slow motion to the video for the screaming. Althouhgh this does mean that the lip synching is not very good. I created the music myself using FruityLoops and Soundforge. I used this track because I pictured the wub noises of the bassline as colour coming from the dark which allowed me to take advantage of automated effects using keyframes and also layering the video upon the black background. This video is unfinished at the moment. I intend to finish it at somepoint but I will completely remake it, in the same style, possibly including a simple narrative.

Underwater Filming

In the script 'holding pattern' for the task working inside out one scene is shot underwater. We decided to tackle this problem practically as we knew we did not have access to real underwater filming equipment. The solution we came up with was to use a fish tank weighted with a brick as a kind of boat for the camera to float in. Although the camera could not go deep underwater it was still below the surface and we had a nice amount of control simply by pointing the fish tank where we wanted. This technique worked very well and the camera we used is still dry and operational. This is the section from the film.



I created the sound for this scene using the music from the dancing scene. I put lots of filters such as flange and reverb to give the music an underwater feel and faded this up and down between a sample of bubbles. The bubble sample was very difficult to find. Not being at all sure how to record the sound of bubbles underwater i wanted to find one royalty free or available to buy from the internet, this took me quite a while to find a good sample but i ended up using www.freesound.iua.upf.edu/index.php again. This is definatley a credit to this website and what an excellent resource it is, this also highlighted to me the price of high quality samples and the difficulty of obtaining them. Whilst browsing for underwater sounds I came across a CD of bubble sounds retailing at £50.00!

15 Second Horror clip



As groups we were given the task of creating a 15 second clip that could be distinguishable as a certain genre through the mise en scene, and use of sound and vision. I think this clip has succeeded as it is quite obviously in the horror genre. The mottled colours on the walls as the camera moves through the basement with an awkward jerky movement giving the beginning of the clip a horror style as well as creating suspense as the viewer tries to work out what they are seeing. Then the use of blackness timed with the sound just before the end makes the final part much more surprising creating a reaction in the viewer. My task in this project was to create the sound, i used lots of automated filters to create the sense of building up towards the end. I also used some free samples i obtained from www.freesound.iua.upf.edu/index.php this is a website dedicated to the collection of royalty free samples where users are invited to upload there own sounds in return for use of all other royalty free samples from the website. I downloaded from here the violin sound that can be heard in the first part of the film. I think this violin sound holds the most connotations towards the horror genre and helps make it obvious the genre of the clip is horror. I think one of the best parts of this film is at the end where the silence in the soundtrack corresponds with the blackness of the video just before the witch with a meat cleaver jumps out at the camera, this close linking of sound and video using the contrast of light and dark with loud and quiet creating the shocking ending to the film.