Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On 17 Sep 99, Johnny Deadman wrote, at least in part: > 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. Only problem I have with re-enacting something, Johnny, is when it is presented as the real thing. You and others on this list have the ability to ferret out the staged from the real, and that's good, but the overwhelming bulk of the public doesn't! And, the industry knows that, and it was still presented as real. Real because it was not stated to be not real. The public has the right to believe until given reason not to believe. At least that's the way I would wish. If that's a naive point of view, so be it. Even today, with what we think is an image hip public, I bet that the staged aspect wouldn't be noted by the viewers. I believe that the viewing public would have accepted, with equanimity, the purpose of the WWI staged footage IF it was bannered with something like, "The following footage is presented as close to the actual conditions as possible, but is staged. The actual scene could not be photographed since the photographer's life would have been severely threatened". They did accept it, only to learn later that it was staged. Damn, I hate having to be on my toes every moment of my life, and, that's what it is coming to. Make a place for another one, Barnum, here I come! - -- Roger mailto:roger@beamon.org Thought for the day: The hardness of butter is proportional to the softness of the bread.