Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Not a word about underwear in this post, I promise. All the talk about restaging & interference in accident scenes etc. prompts me to decloak and give you another perspective on this. For the last nine years I have been a documentary filmmaker (switched careers in April to writing), which I came to from documentary photography. There has been a lot of controversy in the UK over 'faked' documentaries in the last year... much of it involving people I know and respect and have worked with. Some of them lost their jobs. But it reflects a real dichotomy in attitudes to what is ethical, which I wanted to tell you about. As a doc photographer or photojournalist, I always took the view that I should NEVER fiddle with reality... to the extent that I found it hard to take portraits because I felt awkward about asking people to do particular things... I wanted to be that proverbial fly-on-the-wall (unless I was doing Bill Klein street shots and trying to provoke a reaction with a flash or something...yeah, I got hit once). However, when I moved over into filmmaking, I was astonished to find that almost exactly the opposite ethic prevailed. Most, if not all, cameramen I worked with (and they were the best in the business) felt no compunction at all about rearranging a scene to make it look better... those medical papers fluttering in the foreground of the demolished hospital, you know the kind of thing. Moreover, even in 'fly on the wall' documentaries, a HUGE proportion of the footage you see is restaged, if not entirely staged. I can say this now, because I'm not in the business any more, but if you ask anyone still in the business they will deny it completely. Yes, it is a conspiracy...of silence. Why do you think you never see fly-on-the-wall documentaries about the making of fly-on-the-wall documentaries? People have this idea all the time, but no-one ever gives them access. Why? No filmmaker would be stupid enough to open themselves up in this way. The reason for this elision of reality is very simple: time & money. You have to come back with a movie. If you need a particular sequence to make it work, you will get it. Until you have experienced the stress of being a producer/director, responsible for several hundred thousand dollars worth of investment, knowing you have to produce a rough cut for the exec producer in four weeks, you can have no idea of the pressures involved. "We didn't get it" is one of those phrases that you only utter once in your professional career, if you see what I mean. Ethically speaking, most people I know in documentary regard it as unproblematic to restage a scene which genuinely took place, or even stage a scene which usually would take place, or which is helpful for the narrative. You've seen this kind of thing over and over: the deputy gets on the radio to the medical examiner, or reports back to his boss, or discusses what to do next... often when it's bleeding obvious what should be done next. Before I get flamed to death here, let me point out probably the most obvious example of demonstrably faked footage in existence. This is the motion picture film of trench warfare in WWI. I have been through thousands of feet of this footage (obtained from the London Imperial War Museum) on an editing bench while making a number of historical films. Almost all of it - whether filmed by Brits, French or Germans - is faked. The dead giveaway is the camera position -- several feet ABOVE the trench parapet. These babies were handcranked. Just feet away from the camera position soldiers are 'dying' as bullets allegedly hit them. If you go through the footage frame by frame, it is obvious they are not being hit, but just falling down. Besides, in the time it took to get the camera into position and shout action, the operator would have been picked off by the opposition. In fact, historians have investigated the footage and their research shows that much of it was shot in trenches some way back from the front line, or not in the field of combat at all. Some of it was even shot in practise trenches in England, though I have to say this stuff is very unconvincing when you look at it with the slightest closeness. What little real combat footage there is from WWI has an entirely different quality from the 'going over the top' stuff you are probably familiar with. For a start, it is shot at ground level, with the lens just poking over the top of the trench. Half the frame is filled with mud, and it is almost unframed because the operator was cranking with his eye away from the finder to avoid getting his head blown off. The soldiers who are running into no-man's land are doing so in obvious terror and disorder. The whole thing is suffused with panic, quite rightly so. The quality is shitty as hell, all grain and chalk/soot tonality, because the light levels were so low (who'd attack in broad daylight?) and there is also very, very little of it for obvious reasons. (Similarly with the D-Day landings: the well-known ruined Capa shots have the same quality). In fact, the most authentic WWI footage comes not from the trenches but from the treatment stations several miles back from the front line, where the horribly wounded soldiers were taken back to be pieced together or die. There is lots of this footage, and not a frame of it I have seen is faked, except some cheerful stuff with officers. The rest of it is horrible and harrowing. You can see that some of the troops have gone mad with fear or pain or shock. Elsewhere, there are great crowds of troops staring blankly at the camera, numb with exhaustion. They look like lost souls. But were these cameramen who shot the images we now carry in our collective unconscious of, for example, the first day of the Somme in July 1916, 'faking'? Should they be condemned? I don't think so. Undoubtedly, they wished to convey pictorially what was happening before their eyes. Yet if they had filmed the real stuff, they would have been killed. What good would that have done? When you see the other stuff they shot, you realise they were good, honest documentarians (very often). They weren't trying to make it look 'nice'. They were just doing the only thing they could to make pictures that would transmit information to the folks in cinemas back home whose sons and fathers were being blown to bits for reasons that were becoming less and less clear as the war dragged on. My point: reportage is a dirty business but somebody's got to do it. Silence, or the visual equivalent, is not always an option -- nor should it be. Therefore, while I feel as betrayed as the next person when something with claims to authenticity turns out to be inauthentic, there is another point of view. Returning to the Iwo Jima/Capa soldier issue -- whatever the facts are, it would not surprise or particularly disturb me to learn that the Iwo Jima shot was staged, or restaged, or whatever you want to call it. We know that the flag was indeed raised and in any case this picture is so full of political content (the similarities to Soviet propaganda of the time are striking) that you can hardly see it without beginning to decode it. But if the Capa soldier were faked, that would disgust me. That picture clearly works because it claims to show the moment of death... if it doesn't, then it is a confidence trick, pure and simple. That's my gut opinion, anyway. I hope I have muddied the waters a little... in my opinion, anyone who pretends they aren't muddy hasn't drunk deep enough of them. - -- Johnny Deadman <--- pseudonym, by the way, if you hadn't guessed