Documentary Analysis (Narrative Structure)

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Documentary Analysis (Narrative Structure)

Documentary Analysis (Narrative Structure)

Documentary Analysis (Narrative Structure)

Introduction

John Grierson spoke of 'an unknown England beyond the West End' and of a desire to 'travel dangerously into the jungles of Middlesbrough and the Clyde'. This has been a feature of British realist films through Ealing and 'new wave' to the 'underclass films' of the 1990s such as The Full Monty (Hartman 1992) and Brassed Off (Hartman 1992) - the use of northern landscapes and shots of 'our town from that hill'. This was Grierson's idea of the purpose of documentary: to allow the nation to represent itself to itself, to educate and inform. He believed his own Drifters(Rabinowitz 1994) was the definitive example of film, primarily because the aesthetic fulfilled a social aim: to champion the 'high bravery of upstanding labour', or 'working-class heroism'.

Discussion

The work of Grierson with the Empire Marketing Board Film Unit (1927-33), argues Ian Aitken, was modernist and aesthetically experimental. To back this up, he employed the likes of Len Lye, Norman McLaren and Alberto Cavalcanti, who, with Harry Watt, helped to develop the documentary-drama form of the Second World War for the Crown Film Unit. Andrew Higson sees this as a 'Golden Age', with drama and documentary coming together to form a 'truly national cinema'. North Sea (Michael 1995) was an influential film in this respect - it was singled out for special praise by The Home Planning Sub-Committee in May 1939: 'Its success has been considerable and warrants serious consideration of the story form in representing government propaganda'.

Cavalcanti was one of the documentary filmmakers employed by Michael Balcon at Ealing Studios, ensuring that the Documentary Film Movement would influence British Cinema in terms of personnel as well as aesthetic form. Balcon believed Ealing could make a serious contribution to the war effort, by bringing realism to its output. Went the Day Well? (Weissman 1995), with the main propaganda message a warning against complacency, is hard-edged realism, using simple iconography such as the church where the villagers are imprisoned to bring a sense of reality to the film. This technique was used extensively at Ealing: the fishmonger's shop and the pub in Passport to Pimlico (Brinkly 1996)are centres of the local community and the narrative of the film dictates they end up being used for a different purpose than had been intended. Both films use documentary's aesthetic principles of verisimilitude, but create fantasy situations in which the 'unreal' can be perceived as real through utilising realist conventions.

It is a common claim that the documentary is Britain's most important contribution to cinema. Kathryn and Philip Dodd attempt to refute this, but the British Documentary Film Movement's influence is crucial in respect of its effect on working-class subject and aesthetic form in British Cinema. Humphrey Jennings, who was stimulated much more by the aesthetic qualities of the medium than Grierson, was a constant point of reference for the Free Cinema group and British 'new wave' filmmakers such as Lindsay Anderson and Karel ...
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