Getting Lear: How To Show And Not Tell

"All documentaries must invoke, as best they can, the spirit rather than the letter of the truth - and they are exciting because of this. A documentary's authenticity ultimately lies in its organizing vision rather than any mechanical fidelity to life." - Michael Rabiger



Saturday, July 17, 2010

Do you mind if we shoot you?

It’s a question that actually should happen before the cameral rolls, but I find that a camera needs to be rolling all the time, so the question gets worked into the scene – usually mid-conversation.

It becomes a question sewn into the fabric of the interview – as if to inform the future viewer that this moment is real, of the moment, and unedited.

Again, most doc makers wouldn’t want this. It seems amateur, unprepared, unorganized, and clumsy.

By why not use the question?

Michael Arth is running for political office. He approaches people as a part of his campaign and I tag along with a camera.

The people he approaches are random, regular folks who are not suspecting a political candidate to cross their paths nor a documentary crew.

The question becomes a cue of sorts to let me know that Michael thinks the conversation is usable, meaningful, and worthy to be used in the documentary.

Of course, if he didn't ask, I would pull these folks aside after each approach and ask them for permission.

I guess I’m waiting for that “No, I do not want to be filmed” moment.

When that happens I want to get consent after (all is said and done), but up until consent, I want the raw distrust of media caught on tape.

It almost happened the other day with a minister, or at least I sensed it was going down that path.

And for some reason, I spoke up; breaking the “Teller” (Penn & Teller) character I play while shooting and said “I’m a FOX employee.”

And that reassured the irate preacherman that I was cool.

He agreed to sign the release, and I lost a real moment.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Shooting the whole day down.

Is there a method, process, or format to follow when making a political campaign doc?

There should be, or at least a general set of rules to follow.

My current project -- albeit a typical political trail story -- has presented me with new lessons, new ideas, and a far more chaotic style of run-and-gun shooting that immediately threw me out of my comfort zone. How do you shoot a parade?

And as much as I am numb, dumb, and not interested in the particulars of the politics here – I’m here to tell a story—I have learned that the political is really the personal.

For the first time ever, I must deal in the currency of trust.

No longer is it enough for me to have trust in my team, trust in myself, or most importantly trust in my subject, but I must be trusted.

How did the makers of JESUS CAMP do what they did? And did they lie in order to tell what they thought was a bigger truth?

Already I notice when shooting my politician I do all that I can to stay unnoticed in a crowd, or across the street, waiting for permission to be asked as I shoot away.


Sunday, June 27, 2010


Be sure to catch me on this month's episode of Indie Cinema Showcase!

Tune in to: Vision TV on Brighthouse Channel 198, Brighthouse On Demand Channel 319, and Comcast Channel 98.

Sundays - 2am and 3pm
Tuesdays - 10am
Thursdays - 6pm
Fridays - 10pm

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Facebooking

Find me on facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/profile.php?id=693131719&v=info

Florida Governor Film



Very busy this month with the FLORIDA GOVERNOR doc.

Doing my best to keep myself FAR removed from the politics, and focus on the shots.

So far, it is hard to know what exactly I have here.

Stay tuned.

chris