Thursday, 10 January 2013

Evaluation


There are many elements to the film I believe worked very well, first and foremost is the constant visual style we managed to achieve throughout. During our research stage we took great inspiration from Sean Dunne’s documentary work, primarily The Archive. Dunne’s made a series of short films and what initially grabbed my attention about them was his striking cinematography. He uses a good balance of strong dialogue and strong images to tell the various stories and it was this method that I feel we successfully adopted. Due to the subject matter, it was more poignant we represented the Castle Market visually, rather than relying too heavily on the stories of the people who work there. Considering this, we did a good job in capturing the feel of the market. Part of this success was utilizing camera movement, through this we were able to both create a varied pace as well as better immersing the audience in the hustle and bustle of the market.

 Through capturing a lot of strong footage of the market we were able to rely on this when it came to cutting up the contributors, too much dialogue and the audience begin to get weighed down by all the importation. We took the approach of stripping down any talking heads thus giving the piece as much ‘space’ as we felt possible. During the rough edit stage there were times where we worried that potentially there was too much space and that audiences may start to get bored of the repetition of similar images. However, as the edit progressed and we layered on atmos and occasionally music tracks, images that once seemed dull came to life. Throughout the editing process what we found to be most difficult was selecting what dialogue to include in the film then once that was decided what order to put it so as we achieved somewhat of a narrative arch. I’m pleased with the end result however and I now believe this aspect to be a big strength of the film. I’ve come to this conclusion from the fact that when the film is shown to an audience, a majority of them admit to forming some level of an emotional attachment with the contributors. From the outset this was our ambition however we knew that in a film of less than ten minutes it would be a challenge, no doubt some of the credit is due to our four contributors however I’d like to take some of the credit due to the sheer amount of time we sent revising the edit, picking out and chopping up dialogue in order for it to fit the our intended purpose.

A third element that I feel adds strength to the film is the time we spent ensuring the theme of the fifties came through in the documentary. Due to this being its heyday, we thought it would be a nice touch to include elements of the era and also make the fact it’s soon to close more poignant. The archive photographs at the beginning work really well to set the scene, introducing both the subject matter and enforcing a sense of the historic side of the market, suggesting there’s more to the place aside commercialism. One criticism of the still images is that despite using key frames to give them movement, essentially the film opens with images that don’t give rise to as much excitement or intrigue that perhaps one of the busy tracking shots do. This being said however, due to the shortness of the film I feel I can justify using them at the beginning by way of introducing the subject however, if the piece was longer I would have liked to include them later on once the film has been better established. The second and final elements that went towards establishing the fifties theme were the titles and music, both work really well within the film and help to give it life and pace.              
  
The process of production of the film has been a steep learning curve. Firstly, I’ve learnt how hard it is to edit a short documentary; given the amount of material we collected the hardest part of the whole process was getting it in a manageable order so that we could produce the film we set out to. By this I mean using the content in such a way that resulted in a film similar to the ones we’d looked at for inspiration. The edit process in general has opened my eyes to how much a documentary can be shaped during post. I now realise there’s is as much skill required in terms of one’s editing ability as there is in one’s ability to technically record image and sound.

People skills are also a crucial element what it comes to making the sort of film we did. Before I began making the film I had some hesitations when it came to the idea of spending a lot of time in Castle Market alongside a large amount of film equipment. I was pleasantly surprised however; a few strange looks and questions aside the people of Castle market were overwhelmingly friendly. Having the confidence to talk to someone you’ve never met, especially when the subject is quite personal was something I had to become comfortable with very quickly. Not to mention simultaneously correctly setting up equipment, trying to be as professional as possible and general multi-tasking while under the pressure of trying to be as inconspicuous as possible was something else I had to learn and get good at very quickly.

This was the first time I was in sole control of a DSLR too, being that I was working in a pair, my partner was on sound and I was on camera. I soon became very technically competent with the camera. In this sense I also learned how useful it is to know what you’re doing in terms of setting up a shot, especially with documentary as your subject doesn’t always wait for you to say you’re ready. To be slow with your shooting, setting exposure, composing the shot, pulling focus etc. has the potential to put you at a great disadvantage.

Lastly, before producing this documentary I had always over looked the importance of sound within documentaries. This I found out the hard way as the deadline rapidly approached and I was desperately battling to balance atmos with dialogue and music.

            As I’ve previously mentioned for this project I was working in a partnership. This had its advantages and its disadvantages. Personally I much prefer working in small groups, there’s less chance for disagreement and generally I’ve found that no matter how many people are in your crew it tends to be just one or two that do the majority of the work. The major drawback is the fact that rather than being able to split up the roles you both end up having to do everything. In the case of this project, this way of working was absolutely fine. I picked my partner on the basis that I knew we worked well together, as well as actually living with him, this made the whole process much easier as any discussion about the project could and would occur at any hour we were home at the same time.

            I’ve said already that we did everything together rather than strictly splitting up the roles. In terms of the production I was essentially cinematographer, my partner being in charge of sound recording. In post production we were both equally involved, always being in the edit suite simultaneously, working off the same mac, bouncing ideas betweens up in order to come up with the best possible edit structure. Once the rough cut was formulated, my partner, being much better skilled on Photoshop produced the titles while I worked on Soundtrack Pro creating the soundtrack for the film.

            We never encountered any problems in terms of working as a team, other than sometimes feeling the stress of having to a lot between us. If I were to produce a similar film again I would have no problem working in much the same way. I feel that next time around we’d know what to expect and already have the basic skills down required making another film of a similar quality. In this way despite being low in terms of numbers, it would be easier due to our growing experience of both working on this kind of project and each other’s physical working habits.      

            In order to complete an evaluation of my work I must compare and place it within a theoretical context. For this I must look at two people whose contribution toward the discussion of documentary as a genre is greatly esteemed, Bill Nichols and Stella Bruzzi. From researching Nichols’s published works, Representing Reality and An Introduction of Documentary, it is understood that there are potentially six discernible ‘modes’ of documentary, poetic, expository, observational, participatory, reflexive and performative. The problem with these six definitions, as Bruzzi points out, is that “all types of documentary have existed at different times and have often mixed styles” (Bruzzi, 2000). Essentially, the work I’ve produced has breached a number of conventions laid out by Nichols, hence made it impossible to simply label it as one of the six modes. It has elements of observatory; many of the cutaways are fly-on-the-wall, discreetly recording the uninterrupted day to day activities of the traders. On the other hand there contains aspects of expository film making, moments where the documentary speaks directly to the audience, done not through Nichols’s conventional ‘voice of god’ narration, but through set up interviews.

            The visual style of the film was approached as being poetic. Due to our initial brief being to produce a two minute poetic film on the same subject, we felt it would benefit the final film to incorporate elements of this initial approach. The main reasoning behind this was down to the subject matter. The cinematic potential of the Castle Market was such that we knew it was as important in getting our story across to an audience through impressive imagery as it was through the actual stories of those we would interview. After looking at Sea Change, a short poetic documentary by Rosie Pedlow and Joe King we were inspired to make use of a track to better represent the space in which we would be documenting. We felt that in order for the film to be a success, the building its self needed to be treated as a separate character, not to be over looked and disregarded once we had more ‘human’ material. A convention of poetic documentation is to create a pace, a metaphoric rhythm of a written poem. We attempted this through the use of the track, using intermittent camera movement to break up the film, creating space and implementing our effort at changing pacing.

             One element of expository documentary that we knew we wanted to avoid was the use of a narrator. We wanted the film to be the story of those people we were interviewing and it was felt that to use an outside source to carry the narrative would take away from the microcosm aesthetic we wanted to achieve. This had to be considered when partaking in the interviews; we knew that all the content needed to seem contributor generated rather than a series of obvious responses to questions being asked off screen. In this sense we were sure about not wanting to produce a participatory documentary, going back to the idea that we wanted to represent the market as a small world within a world, the use of a presenter would distract from this. The length of the film was also taken into consideration, we felt that in under ten minutes there is little need for a Theroux character for the audience to look for to inspire a vibrancy or drive the narrative.         





Bibliography:
Bruzzi, S. (2000). New Documentary. (1st ed.). Oxon, Uk: Routledge Ltd.
Burton, A. (2007, November 16). Documentary form. Retrieved from
         
Nichols, B. (2010). Introduction to Documentary. (2nd ed.). Indiana, USA: Indiana University Press.
Sea Change, 2005. Film. Directed by Rosie PEDLOW & Joe KING. UK: Folk Projects.    

           

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