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Developing A Documentary Project

Baldwin Park, Orlando           photo by jrm
Baldwin Park, Orlando photo by JRM

It’s not difficult to come up with an idea for a documentary project. There are non-fiction stories around us all the time. Taking that idea and deciding how or if you want to tell the story takes some effort. There are a number of questions to ask yourself. For example is this a story worth telling, will anyone be interested in the subject? This doesn’t preclude working on a project to inform others of an issue or topic that needs to looked at. We’re talking about how broad the subject or idea is and what the best way to document it might be.

The best way to focus your idea and find the story is to come up with a Concept. After you have a Concept you can work on a Treatment.  A Concept is a sentence or two that focuses your  idea. For example we came up with a Concept for The Baldwin Park Story, that reads:

CONCEPT:

Explore the community of Baldwin Park in Orlando Florida from its birth, beginning with the closing of the Naval Training Center (the site on which the development is built) to what it has become today.

Once we knew what the Concept was we could start developing how we wanted to tell this story; this is done by writing a Treatment which is a narrative description of how you envision telling the story and the who, what, when, where, and why of it.  This process requires researching your idea and concept, which may lead to a number of discoveries.  In the case of The Baldwin Park Story it led us to a number of issues concerning Planned and Green Communities, New Urbanism and other Social realities.

J R Martin

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Point-of-View

Every Documentary Film, Video or Photograph has a Point-of-View (POV). It is important for the creators of the documentation to consider what that POV may be.

J R Martin

POV 1

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History and Evolution of Documentary Filmmaking

I think there is an important reason and need to offer an explanation of the history and evolution of the concept of documentary filmmaking.

To this end it is necessary to look at many other issues that deal with the telling or reporting of non-fiction realities via the many methods of conveying such realities in books, magazines, newspapers, television and the internet. These issues have to do with the expectations of the public and ourselves as to how information is reported and disseminated in our culture, how it’s perceived and how subjectively the information is presented .

All of this to help us decide how a documentary filmmaker or non-fiction story teller may approach his or her story telling, both technically and ethically, of subjects both mundane and controversial, with some hope of realizing some measure of objective reality.

An excellent book that looks at the history documentary is “The History of Non-fiction Film” by Erik Barnouw. 2nd Edition

J R Martin

The First Documentary To Be Screened To The Public By Louis Lumiere
The First Documentary To Be Screened To The Public By Louis Lumiere

 

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ACTUALITY

The word “Actuality” when used to describe the material used in in documentary or non-fiction project, whether it’s film, video, or a photograph means that it was recorded “actually” happening and was not staged or manipulated in anyway.

Newgrange prehistoric mound in Ireland
Newgrange prehistoric mound in Ireland - © JRM

 

In a pure sense a documentary film is a story that uses actuality sources to create a non-fiction documentation of some reality. Actuality meaning something that “actually’ happened and was in some way recorded on film, video, still photographs, audio, or other medium. It’s a non-fiction reality, somehow witnessed and recorded. A documentary does not employ actors to recreate a reality of which we have knowledge in some way. As soon as we employ actors, or script what is going to happen, even if it is based on a true story or event, we have created a fictional story.

Interestingly the prehistoric mound pictured here documents the Winter Solstice every year as the sun rises and shines through the window above the passage way on to the back wall of the interior. So doesn’t the construction act as an actuality recoding device however temporary the recording?

A documentary or non-fiction story explores actual events and presents them in a nonfiction context.
The term “Reality TV” does not live up to the “actuality” definition as the program is staged, individuals employed to participate in a fictional “reality” created by the producers of the show.

Traditional documentary format relies on collecting spontaneous coverage of events, unrehearsed interviewing of individuals and working in a non-fiction context. Over the last few years a format termed “Hybrid Documentary” has emerged which basically creates an event and then documents it. One example of this format is American Shopper which documents an event in a Columbus Missouri supermarket and then documents the reaction and participation of the residents. The difference between this approach and a “Reality TV” format is the filmmakers don’t interfere as much. In many ways Super Size Me was a Hybrid since the story was essentially invented.

J R Martin

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Making Documentaries

Baldwin Park
Photograph © JRM

DOCUMENTARY STORY TELLING

Documentary story telling is as old as human life, older then cave paintings, older then Neolithic nomads passing on hunting skills and survival stories. It is perhaps one of our most important ways of handing down information and exploring reality.

Think about it for a moment and it becomes obvious that even early folklore and fiction were metaphors for human experience and intellect that reflected or tried to understand non-fiction realities. When there was no written language, documentary stories were told orally. Someone actually experienced being chased by a tiger and was able to survive and pass on the account from his or her own point-of-view (POV). Perhaps they traced the route or location of the attack in the earth as they told the story so everyone knew where the tiger might be lurking and even drew a picture of the tiger leaping from a rock somewhere. This story would be passed down to the next generation or to the neighbors or other families in the vicinity until it became legend, embellished by each generation no doubt.

Today we might interview the person who encountered the tiger, then go to the location and show the route and perhaps even the tiger if he was still around. We have all sorts of methods of recording reality i.e. events that are actually happening with people being spontaneously interviewed, unrehearsed, not manipulated, the event itself not scripted, and no actors employed.

J R Martin

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One Approach

IMG_5416
Photo © JRM

Where do we start, what kind of logic can we apply to telling actuality based stories? It might be interesting to borrow some ideas from Science. It is said that “Science observes and measures the natural world.” Science accumulates information and uses that data to deduce empirical laws that govern biological and physical systems in our universe.
But in Science explanations must be tested and proved by applying observations and by coming up with other observations that might disprove the explanation. This requirement is called making predictions falsifiable.
This requirement rules out super natural explanations which cannot be proved or disproved. Imagine what Television News would be like if they used this system!

J R Martin

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