Slarek's Review of the year 2004
Part 1: The Documentaries



An Overview of the year

It has, without question, been a great year for the documentary feature, both in the cinema and on DVD. I have a special passion for documentary films that stems both from my belief in the documentary medium as a vital tool of enlightenment and understanding and a potentially powerful political weapon, one that has been recently democratised through the availability of relatively low cost of DV and DV-Cam equipment and affordable but professional level digital editing suites, and my time teaching documentary theory and practice to students who have, until they encounter the films in class, rarely even looked at the medium and its possibilities in any detail. For them, the recent popularisation of the form, as well as its determination to entertain as much as inform, has made it more accessible: they know the names of the films, they are discussing them with their friends, they are hiring out the DVDs - good lord, some of them are even seeing them at the cinema!

The rise in the use of digital video as a recording medium has been a boon for up-and-coming young documentary makers, but has inevitably prompted complaints in some quarters about below-par image quality when the films are screened in the cinema, but this seems to me to be completely missing the point. Although in our post-modern age many tend to cling to Marshall McLuhan's famous claim that "The medium is the message," in the case of documentary it most definitely is not - here, quite simply, the message is the message, and the means of delivery is ultimately irrelevant. DV camcorders have transformed the documentary medium precisely because they have taken it out of the hands of big corporations and established industry figures and placed it in those of anyone who wishes to question the validity or accuracy of the established viewpoint. In an age when western media is increasingly controlled by only a few large conglomerates, this technical revolution could not have been more perfectly timed.

But making your documentary is only half the battle, and despite the considerable work involved, this is often the easier part. The process of transferring the digital image to film remains a hugely expensive one, and one that would for many digital film-makers cost far more than the film itself. And even if you get that far, you still have to find a distributor in order to get the film into cinemas, though if you manage to reverse that process and get a distributor interested up front, at least they can pick up the transfer bill.

All this is changing, of course. Increasingly cinemas have both film and video projection facilities, and even a very small production company - Spanner Films in the UK are an excellent example - can put together a DVD package that will rival the quality of any major studio release (more of this later), though reaching a wide audience still generally requires the involvement of a distributor, or a fleet of bicycles, a lot of energy and as many co-operative cinema managers as you can find.

For the documentary feature, 2003 was an important year, because of the huge commercial success of just one film: Michael Moore's Bowling for Columbine. Costing $4 million to make, it earned over $21 million at the box office, a new record for a documentary feature. Suddenly distributors were interested - documentaries can make money! We have to get in on that! Disney, whose fortunes nowadays seem reliant almost solely on Pixar, had the original distribution rights to Moore's latest feature, the you-must-have-been-on-Mars-if-you-haven't-heard-of-it Fahrenheit 9/11, though their subsidiary company Miramax, but balked when they saw the finished film and refused to distribute it. I still to this day wonder just what they thought they would be getting, given Moore's previous films and books, but then Disneyland is in Florida, and Jeb Bush is the State Governor and...oh well, who knows. I would bet Disney's shareholders were pissed off, though, when the film won top prize at Cannes and went on to be the first documentary ever to earn more that $100 million at the box office.

Fahrenheit 9/11 may have made more money than Bowling, but it was, on the whole, less well received. That it prompted right-wing American commentators to spit blood is hardly surprising - it was meant to - but that a portion of the British liberal establish also got a bit sniffy about it was unexpected. This reaction was nicely summed up by Peter Bradshaw in The Guardian who pointed out that in part due due to his phenomenal success, Moore has simply become uncool, playing to the myth that once you get rich you can no longer really take a left-wing political stand on anything. But even its impending arrival was good news for documentary film-makers, as distributors looked to cash in on its inevitable success in some way, even if that be by trading on the increased publicity that the documentary genre in general received.

Whether more documentaries were made as a result is uncertain, but certainly more received high profile releases, and thus in 2004 we saw the arrival on UK cinema screens not just of Fahrenheit 9/11, but also Morgan Spurlock's Super Size Me, Jeffrey Blitz's Spellbound, Andrew Jarecki's Capturing the Friedmans, Errol Morris's The Fog of War, Jennifer Abbott and Mark Achbar's The Corporation, Jehane Noujaim's The Control Room, and Robert Greenwald's Outfoxed, amongst others, some of which arrived on DVD in feature-rich special editions, given the same status as mainstream fiction fare. All of which is good news, isn't it? Well, yes and no, for while I celebrate this upsurge in availability of contemporary documentary material, I am still bothered by one thing: all of the above are American movies dealing with primarily American issues told from a largely American viewpoint. Though the issues raised in Fahrenheit 9/11 and Super Size Me are ultimately global ones, we are still talking an American president, an American-led war and an American conglomerate.

Now I'm not knocking any of the above films - though I do believe The Fog of War was over praised - as they are very fine, often hugely entertaining examples of their craft, but where were the documentaries from Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Australia, India, South America.... well, anywhere else? Distributors may be excited about the money-making prospects of the documentary medium, but they are still playing it safe and sticking with what they know best - American movies make the biggest bucks, so let's stick with them. Though I can, to a degree, understand this with cinema releases, an expensive process at the best of times, there is little excuse when it comes to DVD, but most major distributors appear to need the seal of approval that comes with a TV screening or a cinema release before they'll commit themselves to an even half-hearted DVD release of a documentary. Thus the entertaining but ultimately shallow Long Way Round, in which actors Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman go biking around the world, gets a rapid DVD release from Virgin, but Spanner Films are still struggling to raise distributor interest in Franny Armstrong's excellent Drowned Out, which is about an Indian issue rather than an American (or even British) one, and isn't fronted by an enigmatic and magazine-friendly film or TV personality.

There were five notable exceptions to my sweeping categorisation above: Kevin Macdonald's Touching the Void, a British documentary about three English climbers and an extraordinary tale of survival against all odds, Thomas Riedelscheimer's Rivers and Tides, a spellbinding portrait of nature-based artist Andy Goldsworthy, Julio Medem's The Basque Ball: Skin Against Stone, a large collection of enlightening interviews about Spain and France's 'Basque issue', José Padilha's Bus 174, a compelling retelling of a bus hijacking in Rio de Janeiro, and Byambasuren Davaa and Luigi Falorni's The Story of the Weeping Camel, a captivatingly simple ethnological successor to Robert Flaherty's pioneering Nanook of the North. It has to be pointed out that Basque Ball was directed by a film-maker whose fictional features have earned him considerable international acclaim, and that Touching the Void was helmed by the Oscar-winning director of One Day in September and had a genuinely thrilling story and structure to recommend it. I still applaud the films and their release, and the opportunity to see them on a large cinema screen with a responsive audience.

It is a depressing reflection on the attitude to documentary of many people, though, that a local video store reported to me that the DVD of Touching the Void was frequently borrowed, but usually returned unwatched with the moan, "I didn't realise it was a documentary!" None of these potential viewers had even gave the film a chance, they just labeled it as a documentary and instantly dismissed the entire genre.

 


Documentary choices for 2004


I have selected the following documentaries as my favourites for 2004 and have refused to be constrained by the DVD format in my choices - if it isn't available yet, let's hope in will be in 2005. They are in no particular order, and brief details of why I have chosen them are included, plus links to DVD reviews where appropriate. My preference to see films in the cinema means that I have yet to catch up with a couple of films, including The Corporation, which is thus carried forward to next year for possible selection.

It has to be said that all of the films mentioned above are worthy of inclusion and the time of anyone interested in the documentary medium, but I have decided to limit myself here to the five works that impressed me the most.

 

Touching the Void (cinema/DVD)

An obvious choice, given my comments above, but Kevin Macdonald's riveting mix of interview and reconstruction managed to be both unflashy and nail-bitingly exciting at one and the same time. Joe Simpson, Simon Yates and Richard Hawking make for most engaging interviewees, and the reconstructions are done in a disarmingly matter-of-fact way and are never as intrusive as the very word 'reconstruction' makes them sound. The cinema is the place to see this film, to be overwhelmed by the landscape, to share the thrills with a large and appreciative audience, and to more completely appreciate Simpson's Herculean struggle for survival, but the DVD includes an excellent mini-documentary, The Return to Siula Grande, which gets uncomfortably close to Simpson's feelings about revisiting the scene of his near death.

Region 2 DVD review

 

Drowned Out (DVD)

A superb documentary which examines the fate of a group of Indian villagers whose home is due to be submerged by a huge dam building project, the film starts as a simple study of a way of life that could be lost to technological progress, but gradually expands its scope to very effectively illustrate the fate that thousands of families are now facing as a consequence and suggest widespread corruption at the highest level of the Indian government. It seems gobsmacking that a film of this quality has not been picked up by a mainstream distributor, or is receiving the press coverage it deserved, but despite this the small-scale Spanner Films have put together their own, excellent DVD package that includes a lively and informative commentary track, and a number of fascinating featurettes, including a sobering follow-up story. You can buy the DVD directly from Spanner Films, and if you at at all interested in the genre then I would urge you to do so - you'll not only get a fine DVD package, you'll help support the group in their next venture.

Region 0 DVD review

Buy the DVD from Spanner Films - follow the 'Shop' link at the top of the screen

 

Rivers and Tides (cinema/DVD)

Made in 2000, the same year that Kevin Macdonald won his gong for One Day in September, Thomas Riedelscheimer's intimate portrait of artist Andy Goldsworthy, who creates genuinely astonishing but short-lived works of ark exclusively from found natural objects, finally reached the UK at the end of 2003, but I've included it because I didn't get to see it until February and so it missed last year's selection. It's a beautifully constructed film that seems completely in tune with Goldsworthy's own approach, recording the painstaking and often surprising construction of a variety of works, engaging us to such a degree with the artist that when two of them threaten to collapse in mid-construction the entire audience could be seen chewing their nails with tension. Chances are that if you know and admire the work of Andy Goldsworthy then you'll already have sought this film out, or at least tried - it was not widely shown and as yet there is still no UK DVD release planned. Until recently, the German region 2 disk was the only way to go, but there is now a US region 0 disk available from documentary specialists Docurama, which features a non-anamorphic but otherwise strong 1.66:1 transfer and seven short films featuring other Goldsworthy works.

German region 2 DVD review

 

Jonathan Miller's Brief History of Disbelief (TV - BBC Four)

Jonathan Miller's three-part history of disbelief was a low key television milestone in that it was the first televisual study of atheism, and a prime example of how important the aspects of subject, research and presentation are to great documentary. Miller's approach was not remotely even handed, and why should it be? After years and years of documentary material outlining the history of various faiths, as well as promoting their supposed virtues, he charged himself with the task of presenting the opposing view, and did so with extraordinary detail and gentle passion. Of course, this is as likely to prompt a religious viewer to abandon their faith as Fahrenheit 9/11 is to persuade a hardened Republican to turn Democrat, but given that this is a subject that has in the past either been ignored or buried (and can still whip up a frightening fury in many countries, the US included), the programme would make fascinating viewing for believers and non-believers alike. And for us non-believers, this was a moment to savour, an intelligent, articulate voice of reason in a world that increasingly seems to have gone mad.

No sign of a DVD release as yet, but I live in hope. Having been screened on the digital channel BBC4, I have every expectation that the series will make it to one of BBC's terrestrial channels (BBC2 is my bet) in 2005, and a DVD release may then be on the cards.

 

Aileen (Region 2 DVD)

Not loaded with extras, nor sporting dazzling transfers, I have nevertheless included this DVD release from Optimum because it includes, on a single disk, both of veteran documentary film-maker Nick Broomfield's films on serial killer Aileen Wuornos, Aileen: The Selling of a Serial Killer and Aileen Wuornos: Life and Death of a Serial Killer. Both feature Broomfield's trademark style of showing the process of obtaining the information as well as the information itself, both are somewhat ramshackle in structure, and both are utterly compelling, at times jaw-dropping movies, not least for Broomfield's extraordinary interviews with Wuornos herself and the behind-the-scenes exploitation of her story that just about everyone seems to have been involved in. Given the attention that has been piled on Patty Jenkins' Monster, a partly fictionalised and often overly melodramatic account of Wuornos's life, the opportunity to revisit the facts behind the Hollywood take on the story is more than welcome.

Aileen: The Selling of a Serial Killer region 2 DVD review

Aileen Wuornos: The Life and Death of a Serial Killer region 2 DVD review

Monster region 1 DVD review


The films and DVDs that didn't make this year's top 5


Fahrenheit 9/11
Michael Moore's anti-Bush polemic became the financially successful documentary of all time, and if it wasn't quite as on the nose as Bowling for Columbine (in part because most of its message was familiar stuff to the more politicised of us) it was still an extremely well made and sometimes priceless work, and fine tonic for the anti-Bush troops. A decent 2-disk DVD is available on region 2.


Capturing the Friedmans
Andrew Jarecki's compelling look at an ordinary, middle class family torn apart by allegations of child abuse very effectively details a family in self-destruction and plants some intriguing doubts about the safeness of the convictions, utilising the Friedman's own home movie footage. A very good movie and presented on an excellent 2-disk DVD from Tartan, which includes an exclusive (and excellent) interview with the director.


The Basque Ball: Skin Against Stone
Julio Medem's information-packed look at the Basque separatist issue can prove a little baffling for those not familiar with the background and politics of the situation, but the number of interviews included and extensive ground covered should prompt anyone in this situation to immediate get researching. The region 2 disk includes a commentary from Spanish cinema expert Robert Stone and journalist Paddy Woodworth.


Super Size Me
Morgan Spurlock's examination of the harmful effects of junk food pretty much confirms what many of us have been saying for some years, but does so wittily and in tremendous detail. By making himself the central character - eating only from McDonald's for one month - he follows in the footsteps of Nick Broomfield and Michael Moore in engaging us not just with the facts, but in the process of discovering them. A very good region 1 disk with some fine extras is available, but hang on for the region 2 in a couple of weeks, which has an anamorphic transfer.


Outfoxed
Robert Greenwald's examination of the Rupert Murdock's horrible right-wing Fox News channel succeeds by letting the participants essentially hang themselves, and is both smart and informed in its exposure of the lie of Fox News's own credo: 'Fair and balanced'. The region 2 DVD features a behind-the-scenes featurette and extended interview footage.


The Control Room
Jehane Noujaim's look behind the scenes at the Al Jazeera TV coverage of the Iraq war is remarkably even-handed and fascinating for its insight into a TV station known only to most by reputation, and for walking a tightrope of balance to effectively. Not much on the region 2 DVD apart from the film, even less on the region 1.


The Story of the Weeping Camel
Munich Film School graduates Byambasuren Davaa and Luigi Falorni take their cue from the godfather of documentary film, Robert Flaherty, with this entrancing mixture of observed and arranged material. Moving at a leisurely pace with little dialogue or plot, it is nevertheless a fascinating and moving work. The region 2 DVD has an anamorphic transfer, 5.1 sound and a DVD-Rom feature containing camel facts!


Terror in Moscow
Dan Reed's compelling examination of the 2003 siege in a Moscow theatre by Chechen gunmen was one of the few television highlights of the year. If the events themselves, culminating in the horrifying consequences of the botched rescue attempt by the Russian military, supplied all the material Reed needed, his handling of the story and how it unfolded was exemplary. Unfortunately, no sign of a DVD release as yet - a real shame, given the extra material and news information that could be included.


War Feels Like War
Esteban Uyarra's film followed a group of non-embedded reporters and photographers during the Iraq war, and managed to capture the chaotic horror of the situation better than any other documentary on the subject all year. The film creates a very unsettling sense of 'being there', and by sharing car and room space with the journalists, we get to share their fears and frustrations, but also balk when their car stops so that they can take time to photograph a dead body from just the right angle. Compelling television that deserves, but will probably not get, a DVD release.