Tampilkan postingan dengan label Reality. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Reality. Tampilkan semua postingan

Kamis, 17 Oktober 2013

Reality Bites: The Fiction of Documentary Filmmaking’s New Golden Age

search-sugar

There’s been a recent revival of, if not documentary filmmaking, at least film writing about documentaries. Before leaving the A.V. Club, critic Scott Tobias made the (righteous) argument that documentaries have to be just as formally sharp as the most skilled narratives to merit serious discussion rather than getting rubber-stamped approval simply by offering up informative talking points. That premise differed markedly from two triumphal pieces on the allegedly rising commercial and critical status of the documentary. First, David Edelstein enthused that the form had become “incredibly sexy”; following his lead, Tom Shone said that “the recent renaissance of documentary film-making is a direct antibody response to the superhero steroids being pumped through multiplexes every weekend.”

You might remember a similar wave of trend pieces about ten years ago. Then, the success of seven titles — 2002's “Bowling For Columbine,” 2003's “Spellbound” and “Winged Migration,” 2004's “Super Size Me” and “Fahrenheit 9/11,” 2005's “March of the Penguins” and “Mad Hot Ballroom” — had entertainment writers cranking out pieces on how the documentary, after years of critical/commercial marginalization, was here to stay and take its rightful place alongside narrative films on the box-office charts. That optimism was a short-lived reiteration of equally gung-ho sentiments from the mid-’90s, when there was another much-noted (albeit lower-grossing) wave of documentaries, led by “Crumb,” “When We Were Kings” and the perpetually-revered “Hoop Dreams.”

The arguments made by Shone and Edelstein go back even further in time. Intentionally or not, both directly echo Pauline Kael, who concluded her 1969 essay “Trash, Art, And the Movies” by saying that “now, for example, I really want documentaries. [...] I am desperate to know something, desperate for facts, for information, for faces of non-actors and for knowledge of how people live—for revelations, not for the little bits of show-business detail worked up for us by show-business minds who got them from the same movies we’re tired of.” Kael’s “I” is Shone’s public, but the idea in both cases is effectively the same: reality (however tenuously defined) is craved when Hollywood’s fantasies seem increasingly threadbare and unrewarding. Likewise, when Edelstein says the word “documentary” “carries an implicit threat: ‘Time for class, children,’” he’s following Kael’s lead when she observed that as kids, “there are categories of films we don’t like — documentaries generally (they’re too much like education).”

I’d argue (politely!) that both Shone and Edelstein are wrong about the documentary’s rising status and what the public generally wants from them, and that the reasons they’re wrong are germane to why mainstream discussion about the “documentary” form is wrong and unhelpful. The term “documentary” is increasingly untenable, seeing as it’s come to have connotations untampered reality: “non-fiction film” is more to the mark, implying a basis in at least some degree of unconstructed/unmediated footage without firm quotas on the ratio of truth to fiction. That said, Edelstein’s article includes a plausible breakdown of the documentary into 17 different sub-genres. Some seem unquestionable (“Ken Burns [...] Photos, archival footage, talking heads”), others tenuous (“Arty/Collage”?), but it’s a reasonably thorough stab at current taxonomy, with room for hybrids and undefinable outliers.

Justin_Bieber_Never_Say_Never_34542

Now let’s take a look at the movies dating back over the last decade that could (charitably) be called “non-fiction” which actually cracked the domestic top 100 for each year:

2012: “2016: Obama’s America” (#95 — one slot below “Monster’s Inc. 3D”)
2011: “Justin Bieber: Never Say Never” (#50)
2010: “Jackass 3-D” (#23); “Hubble 3D” (#82)
2009: “Michael Jackson’s This Is It” (#46); “Bruno” (#55); “Earth” (#88); “Under The Sea 3D” (#92)
2008: “Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert Tour” (#48)
2007: “Sea Monsters: A Prehistoric Adventure (IMAX)” (#100)
2006: “Borat” (#16); “Jackass: Number Two” (#33);
2005: “March Of The Penguins” (#27)
2004: “Fahrenheit 9/11? (#17)
2003: none (!)
2002: “Space Station 3D (IMAX)” (#30); “The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course” (#92)

None of these have very much to do with “reality” in the sense of “look, learn and challenge your reality.” “Borat” and the “Jackass” films are borderline “documentaries” (they record basically unfaked realities provoked into existence, so I’m including them), while “Fahrenheit 9/11? and 2016: “Obama’s America” are political polemics with built-in, pre-ordained audiences. That leaves us with IMAX spectacles, cute animals/kids, political self-righteousness, and close-ups of celebrities and musicians on stage and “behind the scenes.” These movies are hardly representatives of tough, unvarnished reality, and their narrative approaches are likewise comfortingly familiar.

Box Office Mojo’s list of the highest-grossing documentaries since 1980 excludes IMAX, concert movies and reality TV shows (though it oddly includes “hybrids” like Bieber’s “Never Say Never”), an indication of the term’s connotational slipperiness. Examining the top 20, most entries are political preaching to the choir, concert movies that snuck in anyway (Bieber, “Katy Perry: Pieces Of Me” and “Madonna: Truth Or Dare”) or nature docs. Those aside, we’re left with “Super Size Me” (which managed to jump-start a public health trend rather than latching onto a built-in, food-worried audience) and “Hoop Dreams,” the only classical verite doc in the upper commercial bracket. Things get more interesting as you travel down the list, but the overall balance is clearly in favor of basic pleasures and low on “reality.”

One reason historical or issues docs might be excluded here as a popular genre (except, again, for those with a built-in political audience) is that didactic streak Kael and Edelstein cite, which prompts the recollection of stultifying classroom hours staring at indifferently paced assemblages of still photos and droning voice-overs. For many casual viewers, this’ll be their only association with the genre. Such films are overtly intended to inform, insisting their content precludes any jazziness in approach; their virtue is, precisely, their truth-value, and nothing else. It’s clear viewers don’t feel tugged towards these titles when they exit the classroom and acquire box office purchasing power.

That brings us back to Tobias’ piece. Sticking to movies that actually got American distribution, however token, I can list quite a few as beautifully made as they were commercially marginal: e.g. ”Only The Young,” a deceptively blissed-out look at Christian Cali skater teens and “Whores’ Glory,” a horrific/gorgeously shot triptych on prostitution around the world. Both were scantily reviewed, and both sound quite awful in synoptic form; visual surprises lurk in every shot, but not in outline. Neither critics nor the public are used to talking about documentaries as beautiful/hypnotic/etc., leaving such titles in an awkward lurch. It’s foolish optimism to think hyper-formalist documentaries (where is where really interesting things are occurring now) will have any more commercial success than their strictly fictional components any time soon; right now they don’t even get that. Positing that information and reality are the documentary’s biggest selling points isn’t an argument for the genre: it’s an evaluative checklist ignoring developments in the field, doing both the genre and box-office prognostication an equally big disservice.

Categories: Features

Tags: Documentaries, Jackass, Justin bieber, Op-ed, Searching for sugar man

Sabtu, 05 Oktober 2013

We ARE Living in a Golden Age of Documentaries, but the Reality Is Hard to See

Only-the-young-3

This piece is a rebuttal to a Film.com article by Vadim Rizov called “Reality Bites: The Fiction of Documentary Filmmaking’s New Golden Age.”

Everyone is excited about documentaries. David Edelstein went to Miami and fell in love with Twenty Feet from Stardom. Tom Shone was blown away by some huge buys at Sundance, including Alex Gibney’s We Steal Secrets: The Story of Wikileaks and Sarah Polley’s revelatory Stories We Tell. Shone even framed these films against superhero blockbusters, making the argument that “reality” is making a comeback. Edelstein went so far as to call them “sexy.”

But are they? It’s a tough question. Edelstein and Shone have some blind spots, including their assumptions regarding what documentaries actually are. It’s also very easy to get carried away when it comes to heralding the arrival of a new “boom” in cinema. Film.com’s own Vadim Rizov took this euphoria to task in a piece entitled “Reality Bites: The Fiction of Documentary Filmmaking’s New Golden Age,” arguing that non-fiction films still make too little money for there to be any sort of renaissance. It’s a valuable critique of the rough patches in Edelstein and Shone’s optimism, but I’d like to respectfully reframe the entire discussion.

Addressing a supposed documentary boom with box office data misses the point entirely. There is absolutely no doubt that docs continue to be almost entirely excluded from the domestic gross Top 100, and I would be shocked if they penetrated it any time soon. Very few of them get a wide release, and most of them end up playing in just a few theaters in New York and Los Angeles. When Shone positioned docs against the unrealistic “superhero steroids” of the multiple-million-dollar gross, he introduced a red herring to the discussion. Rizov’s mathematical rebuttal is completely solid, but it also tries to answer the wrong question.

We are living through a major upswing in documentary cinema, but it isn’t happening in our multiplexes (and probably never will). Where and how do people watch documentaries? There may only be one doc on last year’s box office 100, but there are nine currently in iTunes’s top 100 rentals list. It’s near-impossible to get good data on Netflix and VOD, but the little evidence we have points to a much better reception for docs via streaming at home than in the theater.

Then there’s television. PBS, HBO and ESPN have put a great deal of time and money into documentary cinema over the last decade, and it’s paid off. ESPN’s 30 for 30 series has become quite the success, and the network has now produced well over the original target-number. The point could be made that these sports pieces are a different kind of doc than those bound for movie theaters, that TV non-fiction cinema has a different quality. Yet HBO Documentary Films and Independent Lens and POV over at PBS show how blurry that line really is. HBO’s newly-announced summer program includes Sundance hit Pussy Riot: A Punk Prayer, while PBS is bringing Detropia, The Invisible War, Last Train Home and even Only the Young. The public may not yet know how to react to “hyper-formalist” flicks like that last one, but a whole bunch of people will get the chance to figure it out on the evening of July 15th on PBS.

But wait, there’s more! Tugg.com has begun to bring smaller films to cities across the country with their Groupon-esque business model. They’ve already arranged sold-out screenings of docs like Free Angela and All Political Prisoners and The United States of Autism. There are also a whole lot more film festivals dedicated exclusively to documentary cinema than there used to be. SilverDocs, True/False, Big Sky, DocNyc and CPH:DOX all got their start within the last ten years. As far as I’m aware neither Tugg nor film festivals are factored into a film’s box office report, but they help documentaries get to audiences nonetheless.

So, does this make it a Golden Age of Documentary? Not yet, but I think it’s become obvious that we’re on the way. It’s easier to make them than it used to be, thanks to the proliferation of digital technology. There are more companies willing to fund them, TV-based or otherwise. The sheer number has gone up: Box Office Mojo has 132 of them on record for 2012, quite a jump from 28 in 2002. There’s even a doc “Oscars” of sorts in the Cinema Eye Honors, which kicked off in 2008.

Frankly, the biggest obstacle to declaring any sort of “Golden Age” has nothing to do with the often thrilling quality of the films themselves. It isn’t audiences either – people are watching documentaries, probably more than they ever have before (we could prove it if VOD providers would release data, but that’s another conversation entirely). The issue is one of perspective, coming from many critics’ odd approach to documentary cinema. First of all, another one of Rizov’s points is absolutely crucial: many of the best movies of the last few years should probably be called “non-fiction” rather than “documentary.” The D-word does seem to imply boredom and “learning,” as opposed to art. We need to get out of that trap.

Even if Edelstein’s taxonomy of documentary is a bit haphazard, the impulse to recognize that non-fiction cinema is a form, rather than a genre, is a huge deal. If the biggest obstacle really is that critics and the public think of all docs as dull and educational, the best way to break through it is to stop talking about them as a unified whole. We need better doc criticism. Scott Tobias is dead on when he says that “for critics, form should matter in documentaries just as it does in features.” Is he also right to complain that we are giving too much credit to bad films with important messages? Probably. But the great films Tobias wants to write about are already out there. We just need to start writing about them as they are, rather than matching them up against a pre-conceived notion of what a documentary should be.

The Golden Age is happening under the rug, and we won’t pull it out with financial analysis. And if we can just go back to talking about the films, rather than the criticism, everyone will be better off.

Categories: Features

Tags: Documentary, Only the Young, Rebuttal, Twenty feet from stardom

Selasa, 17 September 2013

DOSE OF REALITY (2013)

DOSE OF REALITY (2013)

Tanggal Rilis : 28 February 2013 (USA)
Jenis Film : Drama | Mystery | Thriller
Diperankan Oleh : Fairuza Balk, Rick Ravanello, Ryan Merriman

Ringkasan Cerita DOSE OF REALITY (2013) :

2AM, closing time: A cocky bar manager with a shady past and a young handsome bartender discover a beautiful woman bloodied and unconscious in the bathroom of a late night lounge. When she awakens, Tony, Matt and the mysterious Rose are plunged into a stirring evening of dangerous role playing in an ever-escalating game of cat and mouse that forces them to face the dark shadows of themselves. As we begin to piece together the elaborate puzzle, nothing is what it seems. However, one thing is for certain: this Rose is full of thorns.

[IMDb rating : 5.9/10]
[Awards : - ]
[Production Co : 6A Films, Destiny Pictures]
[IMDb link : http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1961279]

[Quality : WEB-DL 720p]
[File Size : 600 MB]
[Format : Matroska >> mkv]
[Resolution : 1280x720]
[Source : 720p.WEB-DL.X264-WEBiOS]
[Encoder : nItRo]

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Kamis, 07 Maret 2013

Exclusive Clip: ‘Reality’

One of the breakout hits at last year’s Cannes Film Festival, Matteo Garrone’s “Reality” is now — thanks to Oscilloscope – one of the most exciting films of the season (spring, late winter, whatever you want to call it). Following up his grim crime masterpiece “Gomorrah” with an ostensibly lighter story about a fishmonger who desperately wants to be on the Italian version of “Big Brother,” Garrone’s “Reality” is ultimately no less disturbing than any of our own.

After being invited to audition for the “Big Brother” producers at Cinecittá Studios in Rome, the affable Lucíano (Aniello Arena) quickly becomes consumed by his obsession with landing a spot on the show. Before long, Lucíano becomes convinced that every stranger he encounters is a stealth agent from the production, sent to spy on him in order to determine if he’s fit to be cast. What begins as an innocent gamble for a better life soon devolves into a rabbit hole of paranoia and broken dreams, Garrone twisting this potentially conventional story into a moving portrait of a society that has conferred fame as its new religion, no matter the cost.

Also check out: Our Cannes Review of “Reality”

Oscilloscope has provided us with this telling clip from the film, in which Lucíano thinks he’s receiving the big call that will change his life. But his life, we’ll soon learn, can be a little cruel.


“Reality” opens in NYC on March 15, LA on March 22, and will then expand across the country.

Categories: No Categories

Tags: Cannes, Exclusive Clip, Matteo Garrone, Oscilliscope, Reality

Senin, 24 Desember 2012

Reality vs. Movie: ‘The Impossible’

Director Juan Antonio Bayona’s “The Impossible” aims to tell one family’s story of struggle and survival after the disastrous Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004. The film’s surefire awards season sweetheart Naomi Watts has called the adaptation a “blow-by-blow” representation of her real-life counterpart’s journey.


Faithful though the film may be in portraying the heart and humanity of the experience, screenwriter Sergio G. Sánchez has admitted to at least “bringing the story down a few notches because there were some moments in the real story that were so incredible that it’s, like, ‘Nobody will believe this.’” We’re here to ferret out those absolute truths and the stretches presented in “The Impossible.”


1. The Family
The real-life Belon family — Maria, Enrique and their three sons Lucas, Tomas and Simon — are Spanish, but on-screen they are portrayed by British actors Naomi Watts, Ewan McGregor, Tom Holland, Samuel Joslin and Oaklee Pendergast. As a result, there are three name changes involved: Enrique to Henry, Tomas to Thomas and Belon to Bennett.


Maria Belon herself, who was charged by her family with ensuring protection of her family’s story during production, was not bothered by the fact the script was re-written in English — repeatedly justified by financing and audience concerns — nor that U.K. actors were cast. In fact, she recounted instructing Bayona, “[T]his is not about [an] English family, Swedish family, German family, Thailand family … [T]his is about human beings living a painful situation.”


Also worth mention is the fact that while Watts and Holland spent time meeting and repeatedly consulting their real-life counterparts for intricate detail preparation, McGregor did not personally encounter Enrique until the cameras were already rolling. Still, following the Toronto International Film Festival’s successful screening, where the Belon family made a surprise appearance before the crowd, the real-life father praised McGregor’s performance, saying “He’s got me, he’s got me. How did he ever know? He never met me.”


2. The Big Wave
On Dec. 26, 2004, the Belon family lounged by the pool at their Phuket, Thailand, holiday vacation resort as Maria casually read “The Shadow of the Wind” by Carlos Ruiz Zafon. Enrique played with Simon and Tomas in the pool, and Lucas played with a ball on the deck. As told by Maria, the group then “heard the sound of this monster coming” but couldn’t identify the source. “When I saw the big wall, the big black wall coming, I thought ‘Okay, that is coming for us.’” That wall, of course, was the enormous dark tidal wave that ripped the area apart and claimed nearly a quarter million lives across fourteen separate nations.


Production on “The Impossible” aimed to recreate this moment with precise attention to detail on-screen. “It was important because we were there where it really happened, and to the point that we were standing in the same positions around the same swimming pool where the families were standing that day,” said Ewan McGregor. “It was really real, and the director made all of our sets feel very real.” Although Maria Belon has said she didn’t recognize the looming threat of the noise as quickly as it appears in the movie moment, most of other details are considered spot-on for the critical scene.


3. The Hospital
For much of the film, as in reality, the badly injured Maria and her eldest son Lucas were separated from the other three members of their family as she recovered in a hospital. As with the resort scene, filmmakers used the original locations for production and even incorporated tsunami survivors as extras. “They were so proud that we were filming there,” said Belon of the hospital and its staff. “I think they are proud we are telling the story of what happened there, of the reality of what we saw in the hospital. The art department was doing such an amazing job that everybody thought ‘This is a deja vu, this has been here years ago.’”


4. The End
Obviously, the moment that defied all odds for the Belon family was when they found each other at long last, by chance. Cinematically, Bayona claims it played out just the same. “Totally coincidental,” he said of their reunion. “It really was at the entrance in the lobby. They embraced and remember it as the happiest moment of their lives.”


Maria’s harrowing firsthand account of the events can be listened to (in Spanish) here.

Categories: Features

Tags: ewan mcgregor, Juan Antonio Bayona, naomi watts, The Impossible, Naomi Watts, The Impossible, Ewan McGregor, Juan Antonio Bayona

Sabtu, 25 Juni 2011

Unsettling Questions Raised by the Alternate Reality in Cars

John Lasseter, the chief nerd-wizard at Pixar, recently gave an interview to Box Office Magazine wherein he explained some of the mysteries surrounding the universe in which the Cars movies are set. We appreciate the effort, but we still have many questions, each more unsettling than the last.

1) Were there ever human beings in this world, or is it an alternate reality where cars evolved instead of people?
We suspect it is the latter. Everything in this world appears to have been made specifically for the use of sentient automobiles, not (as the opposing theory holds) retrofitted by the newly sentient autos after the people all died out. There’s no indication that humans were ever here, no references to them as fossils, nothing. Moreover, the closing credits in Cars showed that the Cars world has its own versions of Pixar movies. This supports the “alternate reality” theory, as it is not plausible that the cars would coincidentally produce films that happened to be exactly like specific films produced by their human predecessors. They could have done it on purpose, we suppose, as homages, the way Gus Van Sant redid Psycho, but we don’t think so.

Cars 22) If this is indeed a world that has never been populated by anything other than motor vehicles, then why do the cars have doors and door handles?
The seats and steering wheels could be the equivalent of their internal organs, filling some function other than what we would use a car’s seat and steering wheel for. So what does that make the doors? Some kind of easy access for car doctors to get inside a patient? That’s weird, but we suppose we can buy it.

3) Where do the cars come from?
Cars 2 mentions that cars are made in factories, which means we do not have to contemplate the logistics of automobile procreation. Instead, we are faced with larger questions. Who makes these cars? Why are there different makes and models of such varying degrees of quality and reliability? With humans, it makes sense that you’d have a few “clunkers” here and there, what with genetics and natural selection and dumb people breeding and everything. That isn’t the case here. These cars are presumably being manufactured by other cars, each one created on purpose, not at random like so many people are. You’d think any lemon that came off the line would be scrapped and rebuilt.

4) At what point in the manufacturing process do the cars become living things?
Is it when the first two pieces of the frame are welded together? When it first becomes recognizable as a “car”? When it rolls down the ramp out of the factory for the first time?

5) Why is automobile racing the predominant sport in this universe?
The equivalent in our world is running, and nobody cares about that.

Cars 26) How does the caste system work?
Cars 2 establishes that vehicles such as boats, planes, and trains are also living things in this universe. What’s curious is that they’re all subservient to the cars. Perhaps that cargo ship is being paid a reasonable salary for his labors, hauling cars and their stuff across oceans. But think about it: He was built as a cargo ship. What else was he going to do for a living? He was destined to be a cargo ship from the moment he came out of the cargo ship factory. It’s disturbing to contemplate a society where your life’s path is pre-determined based on how you’re built.

7) Out of respect for the late Paul Newman, they left the character of Doc Hudson out of Cars 2. But George Carlin is just as dead, and all they did was get somebody else to voice his character. What’s up with that?
His name even had the word “car” in it, and we know for a fact that the Cars people love crap like that.