Saturday, September 13, 2008

Steal from the best!

Okay, don't STEAL...but definitely learn from and apply techniques that the best documentaries use to tell their stories. Now that you have a topic and are well into the preproduction phase, take some time to review some of the best documentaries in the same genre/style/approach as the one that you're trying to make. Watch and watch again documentaries that cover similar territory or take a similar approach. As we discussed in class, watch with careful attention to everything from the broad scope, e.g. story development and the dramatic arc, to the specific details, e.g. how long the director holds a reaction shot. Learn from the best and try to replicate the things that make them successful.

For the Bishop Castle team, find documentaries that tell the stories of a quirky individuals e.g., Fast, Cheap and Out of Control and Gates of Heaven by Errol Morris, or Grizzly Man by Werner Herzog. Also consider docs about people who find themselves up against insurmountable odds, e.g., Hoop Dreams, a story about two teens' struggle to become pro basketball players, or Burden of Dreams by Les Blank, or Hearts of Darkness, the story of Francis Ford Coppola's struggle to make Apocalypse Now. A quick search of YouTube for Bishop Castle will yield numerous amateur videos and interviews with Jim. Also, listen to the NPR radio documentary short Jim Bishop: Castle Builder.

For the Swing Vote team, check out any number of great political docs such as Primary by Robert Drew and War Room by Hegedus and Pennebaker. By the way, a new doc, The Return of the War Room (by Actual Reality Pictures) will premiere on the Sundance channel next month (Oct 13th). I haven't seen the recently released Swing Vote, starring Kevin Costner, but it may be worth a look to see if this fiction film effectively raises any issues that may be worth exploring in your doc. Also, a search of IMDb indicates there is a 2008 doc by the name of Swing State, but that's about all I know about it.

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