I’m currently pondering the idea of animated ‘interjections’ in otherwise live action documentaries. I first started thinking about animated interjections a long time ago, probably when I was doing my PhD research around 2008, but definitely when I was working…
Documentary
Blogging the Animated Documentary
by Alys Scott-Hawkins • April 29, 2013 • 3 Comments
As a film-maker who has become further and further drawn into the world of animated documentary, what has enthralled and inspired me is the overt subjectivity of exploring the world through animation; free from the ‘baggage’ of objectivity implied in…
“To document differently”: random thoughts on a taxonomy of animated documentary
by Paul Ward • April 22, 2013 • 2 Comments
My local fish and chip shop has a sign in its window that says, in a large font: “CAT FISH – 75p” Just below, in a smaller font, it says “Fish for your cat” This sign always makes…
Who said that? The dispensability of original sound in animated documentary
by Samantha Moore • April 15, 2013 • 7 Comments
There came a point in The Beloved Ones, the film I made in 2007 for the UK Film Council, when it became clear that the indexical sound recorded in the field, in Uganda, was not going to be able to…
The Camera and “Structuring Reality”
by Sheila Sofian • April 8, 2013 • 14 Comments
Last night I attended a panel discussion on “Infotainment” in which New York Times Hollywood correspondent Michael Cieply discussed documentary filmmaking as compared to traditional journalism. He made the following statement: “The camera is a tool to structure reality, not…
Animated Memories
by Bella Honess Roe • April 1, 2013 • 4 Comments
Theorists of film and photography, from Barthes to Benjamin, have often drawn our attention to photographic media as a way of accessing history. However, animated documentaries such as Places Other People Have Lived (Yilmaz, 2011), Learned by Heart (Rimminen and…