Sunday, 11 July 2010

Useful Websites

Useful Websites
For research and to see different styles and techniques the internet has been very useful for watching documentaries.

Channel4.com
This website has over 541 documentaries on it. You can watch most of them online and leave comments. There are documentaries on historical, biographical, health, science, nature, environmental, music and more topics.
I have found it very useful and have watched a few documentaries on it. So far these have been..
Supersize vs Superskinny
A show about extreme eating habits - over eating and under eating. Includes facts, statistics and advice.
The Family Series 1
This program had cameras in an average every day household, wasn't very interesting just showed alot of arguments, there were no camera-men just stationary cameras around the house.
My Big Fat Gypsy Wedding
A documentary about a few girls who were gypsys about to get married. It explained how gypsys get married young and all about how different their weddings are from different cultures. Was quite interesting as I didn't know gypsy weddings were any different.



Documentary makers: Nick Broomfield


Who is Nick Broomfield?
Nick Broomfield is an English documentary film-maker. He is known for his distrinctive style of documentary. He only films with him and two other camera men present. His love for film and camera work branched from a photography hobbie he developed on a trip to france.

Nick has made 27 documentaries in total the most recent being in 2009.

Who cares? - 1971
'Who cares?' was Nick Broomfield's first documentary.

Documentary makers: Michael Moore


Who is Michael Moore?
Michael Moore is an American filmmaker, author and liberal political commentator. He is the director of four of the top documentaries of all time. He began his career as a journalist after dropping out of college. From journalism he turned to film making, his first film made him one of America's well known and most controversial documentary makers.



Michael Moore has made 11 documentaries as well as books and TV shows such as 'Michael Moore live'. He has been nominated and won many awards such as an oscar.

He is most well known for giving his opinion in public, his opinion is on topics such as politics or conspiracy theories and they are very strong opinions. Those who agree with his views respect him for having such courage, but those that disagree find he has challenged them and some people are very rude about him.

Sicko - 2007
This documentary by Michael Moore is very famous. In Sicko he compares the highly profitable American health care industry to other nations. He travelled to countries such as Canada and Great Britain in order to get a greater understanding of their health care. Many pharmecutical companies refused to take part in the interviews including GlaxoSmithKline. He showed their hospitals, staff - including doctors and even the patients. The shocking revellation drawn from this documentary was finding that in the USA prisoners have better medical treatment than people living in the USA. The film was the subject of some controversy when it became known that Moore went to Cuba with chronically ill September 11th rescue workers to shoot parts of the film. The United States is looking into whether this violates the trade embargo. The film is currently ranked the third highest grossing documentary of all time and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary Feature.


Documentary makers: Louis Theroux

Who is Louis Theroux?
Louis Theroux is an American-English broadcaster. He is famous for his documentaries and has been nominated and won awards such as the British Academy Television awards. He began his career as a journalist but after working for Michael Moore turned to documentary making.




He has made 36 documentaries in total. Some of which were made for his own series' called 'Weird Weekends' and 'When Louis met..'.



Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends
Mr Theroux was signed on by the BBC to do his own series of documentaries. He went on to do three series' over two years. The program took the audience into the lives of people with extremist beleifs, stereotyped cultures, jobs people don't know much about and more.









Series 1 - Episode 3 - Porn Stars
This episode shows the pros and cons to the porn star industry. The male and female porn stars explain problems they experience under the pressure of the set and how it is hard to find work that suits their sexual preference. It is interesting that Louis Theroux did a documentary on a subject that people don't know much about and don't ask about as it is not an every day normal job in most societies.

Series 2 - Episode 2 - Swingers
Not all Louis Theroux's documentaries are to do with porn and sex but he has done a few on these subjects just to let the world have an insight to them and understand them more, even if the audience doesn't agree with them. This episode shows Louis meeting a couple who hold swingers parties in california, america, and have been for many years. He attends one of the parties and interviews them and other couples asking them the questions people would normally wonder such as why they do it, and how they feel they are okay with swapping partners. This programme also offers a brief look into other kinds of swinging through an organisation that has a database of members that are rated on a scale of 1 to 10. Under this system, people rated highly are invited to exclusive parties intended to keep out unattractive, socially awkward, or otherwise undesirable people.

Series 3 - Episode 2 - Indian Gurus
In this episode Louis goes to India, he witnesses Westerners seeking enlightenment. In the city of Goa he finds a 57 year old man named Deepak who studies meditation. He meets more people including someone who claims spiritual powers through hugging people. He joined this person along with 400 others on their tour of india for three months on a pilgrimage.


You can watch some of Louis Theroux's weird weekends online, here is a link to some episodes from series 3:
Click Here

Observational Documentaries

Observational documentaries are made to just observe. The audience comes to their own conclusions. The camera moves with the people and stays unintrusive to the scene so it simply films events as they unfold. They can involve no narration, no music, no interviews and no scene arrangement.
Michael Moore is one documentary maker who has become famous using the Observational style of documentary. I will research him and his work further.
Another form of observational documentary is Fly On the Wall which I will also find out more information on.

Reflexive Documentaries

A reflexive documentary is one where the maker is present and part of the narrative. The audience is interested in what the documentary is about but also how it is made. Louis Theroux and Nick Broomfield are examples of reflexive documentary makers. I will do more research on them and their work. Reflexive documentaries can be called more engaging as the audience sees what the documentary maker goes through to make the film, although they are also very good at swaying peoples opinions. They are usually truthful and focus on 'realism' but as the documentary maker is narrating and addressing the audience they are able to sway their views.

An explanation of Expository Documentaries: my powerpoint

Below is a Powerpoint Presentation I made using Microsoft Powerpoint, it has a brief explination of Expository documentaries. The information provided in the Powerpoint is brief but gives you a better understanding of this documentary genre.