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Expository Documentary

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Expository Documentary Expository documentary is a mode of documentary which focus s on social problems within the world. It emphasises rhetorical content. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Expository Documentary


1
Expository Documentary
  • Expository documentary is a mode of documentary
    which focuss on social problems within the
    world.
  • It emphasises rhetorical content.

2
  • It usually uses a voiceover (can be god like)
    which is used to drive the narrative.
  • This is a much more spoken in relation to poetic
    who leaves the audience to gather the information
    via visual interpretation.
  • Nichols described the editing in expository
    documentaries as evidentiary editing, a
    practice in which expositional images
    ...illustrate, illuminate, evoke, or act in
    counterpoint to what is saidwe take our cue
    from the commentary and understand the images as
    evidence or demonstration (Nichols 2001)

3
Example of Expository
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vwnjx6KETmi4 The
    inconvenient truth.

4
Observational
5
  • Unlike the content of poetic documentary, or the
    rhetoricalness of expositional documentary,
    observational documentaries tend to simply
    observe, allowing viewers to reach there own
    conclusions.
  • The camera is unobtrusive. Allowing the events to
    occur naturally.
  • Pure observational documentarians proceeded under
    some bylaws no music, no interviews, no scene
    arrangement of any kind, and no narration.
  • The fly-on-the-wall perspective is championed,
    while editing processes utilize long takes and
    few cuts.

6
Example of Observational
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vzNNSJcGnRNw- Big
    brother

7
Poetic Documentary
  • Poetic documentaries typically show excessive
    amounts of creative camera work and experimental
    editing (montages) in order to connect or
    translate a mood or emotion onto the audience.
  • Poetic Documentaries often have a style of
    editing that offers discontinuity in graphic
    qualities, violations of the 180 degree rule, and
    the creation of impossible spatial matches.
  • This is Sergei Eisensteins theory of montage. He
    states that "A Dialectic Approach to Film Form"
    when he noted that montage is "the nerve of
    cinema", and that "to determine the nature of
    montage is to solve the specific problem of
    cinema".
  • Soviet montage theory shows an approach to
    understanding and creating cinema that relies
    heavily upon editing (montage is French for
    "putting together").
  • An example of this that is commonly used in
    filmic documentaries such as Robert Flahertys
    Nanook of the North, is juxapostional editing.
  • This style of editing is the process of showing
    one thing and another which are unrelated and
    through combining the two or making a sequence,
    creates a new meaning.

8
Expository Documentary
  • Documentary forefather John Grierson offers an
    explanation for the move away from poetic
    documentary, claiming filmmakers, got caught up
    in social propagandaWe got on to the social
    problems of the world, and we ourselves deviated
    from the poetic line. (Sussex 1972) The
    expositional mode diverges sharply from the
    poetic mode in terms of visual practice and
    story-telling devices, by virtue of its emphasis
    on rhetorical content, and its goals of
    information dissemination or persuasion.
  • Narration is a distinct innovation of the
    expositional mode of documentary. Initially
    manifesting as an omnipresent, omniscient, and
    objective voice intoned over footage, narration
    holds the weight of explaining and arguing a
    films rhetorical content. Where documentary in
    the poetic mode thrived on a filmmakers
    aesthetic and subjective visual interpretation of
    a subject, expositional mode collects footage
    that functions to strengthen the spoken
    narrative. This shift in visual tactics gives
    rise to what Nichols refers to as evidentiary
    editing, a practice in which expositional images
    ...illustrate, illuminate, evoke, or act in
    counterpoint to what is saidwe take our cue
    from the commentary and understand the images as
    evidence or demonstration (Nichols 2001) The
    engagement of rhetoric with supporting visual
    information founded in the expositional mode
    continues today and, indeed, makes up the bulk of
    documentary product. Film features, news stories,
    and various television programs lean heavily on
    its utility as a device for transferring
    information.

9
Poetic Documentary
  • Continuity editing is not used, which means that
    a sense of specific location is lost.
  • Emphasis of visual association, tone or rhythm -
    Images are juxtaposed to create meaning
    Kuloshov effect.
  • Descriptive passages are often used.
  • Actors often dont become full characters.
  • Demonstrates different possibilities in the
    transfer of knowledge.
  • However, there is a lack of specificity in poetic
    documentaries.
  • Examples of Poetic documentary makers Ivens,
    Bunuel and Dali, Fischinger, Menken, Flaherty.
  • Example Man of Aran (Flaherty, 1934)

10
Joris Ivens
Robert Flaherty
Man of Aran (Flaherty, 1934)
11
Interactive / Participatory Documentary
  • How it came to be When more mobile equipment was
    available, filmmakers could make their
    perspective more evident they become part of
    the events recorded.
  • This mode engages with individuals more directly
    whilst not using exposition interview styles.
  • Archive footage is often used to avoid
    re-enactments / staging and voice of God
    commentaries.
  • However, it relies a lot on history and can be
    too intrusive in it methods.
  • Examples of directors Rouch, de Antonio, Connie
    Field, Michael Moore, Broomfield.
  • Example Kurt and Courtney (Broomfield, 1988)

12
Connie Field
Michael Moore
Kurt and Courtney (Broomfield, 1988)
13
Reflective Documentary
  • Makers of Reflective documentaries consider the
    quality of the documentary, they consider its
    process and its implications on their audiences.
  • For example In Dziga Vertovs Man with a Movie
    Camera (1929,)
  • He has footage of his brother and wife
    shooting footage and editing, respectively. The
    goal of shooting these images was, to increase
    the audiences understanding of the process of how
    film is constructed.
  • Another example is Ruby Mitchells ...No
    Lies (1974,)
  • which was different to Dzigas man with a
    movie camera, as it questioned the
  • observational mode, Rubys no lies
    commented on observational techniques and their
    capacity for capturing authentic truths. In this
    way, the reflexive mode of documentary often
    functions as its own regulatory board, policing
    ethical and technical boundaries within
    Documentary film itself.

14
Reflective Mode
  • (Vertov, Godmilow, Raul Ruiz) 
  •   Reflective mode makes the convention
    representation more obvious and apparent, it also
    challenges the impression of reality which other
    three modes normally conveyed unproblematically. 
  •   Reflective mode is the most self-aware mode -
    its reflexivity helps audience acknowledge how
    other modes claim to construct "truth" through
    documentary practice.
  •   It uses many of devices of other modes but sets
    them on edge so viewer attends to device as well
    as the effect. 

15
Performance Mode
  • (Resnais, Julien, Riggs)
  • 1.Performance mode is like a Reflexive
    Documentary, it also raises questions about
    knowledge
  • 2. Performance mode emphasizes personal
    experience (in tradition of poetry, literature)
  • 3. Performance mode tries to show the
    audience how understanding such personal
    knowledge can help us understand more general
    processes of society
  • 4. performance mode mixes elements of
    different documentary modes to achieve a link
    between subjective knowledge/understanding of the
    world, and more general understandings, i.e.
    historical ones.
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