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"Documentary feature films have historically existed on the margins of mainstream media. In the U.S., enterprising documentarians have spent most of the past 60 years struggling to find a larger, broader audience for their films. Often negatively associated with longform television journalism and tedious educational programming, documentaries have rarely escaped their perceived status as "cultural vegetables" - good for you, but relatively unappealing. Recently, this marginal status has shifted quite dramatically. Nearly unthinkable a decade ago, documentary films have become reliable earners at the U.S. box office. In 2018 alone, Won't You Be My Neighbor? made almost $23 million, They Shall Not Grow Old and Free Solo each earned almost $18 million, RBG netted $14 million, and Three Identical Strangers earned $12 million. In addition to their theatrical presence, documentary films are ubiquitous on cable channels and streaming video services, which have made documentary programming a key component of their offerings to subscribers. In 2019, Netflix paid the highest price for a documentary out of the Sundance Film Festival: $10 million for Knock Down the House about four working-class women, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, running for Congress in the 2018 midterm elections. Longtime documentary champion and former head of HBO Documentary Sheila Nevins said that Netflix was playing with "Monopoly money" by acquiring the documentary at such a high price, but she also granted that this was a trend across the board. Industry journalists took note. This surge in popularity had made documentaries nearly ubiquitous. In 2019, think-pieces from CBS News, NPR, Los Angeles Times, and The Ringer all simultaneously proclaimed a new Golden Age of Documentary. With broad public interest and robust investment in their production, documentary films are definitively more popular and prestigious than ever before"--
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Theorizing documentary is the first work to address a wide range of theoretical issues specific to the documentary form. Documentaries encompass a wide range of forms - educational TV, personality profiles, ethnography, cine-poems, polemic tracts, and autobiography. What unites these types of film is their common bond with the "historical real", the domain of lived experience. Today, as fictional and nonfictional forms are becoming increasingly hybrid (TV docu-drama, historically based feature films, virtual reality, tabloid television), the question "what is a documentary ?" is particularly compelling. This book offers original essays by leading critics and theorists, addressing key questions : How fictional is nonfiction ? What gets to count on film as history - and why ? To what extent are representational forms adequate substitutes for social-historical phenomena ? Can one culture (or subculture) ever be translated for another ? How have standards of documentary authenticity changed over time ?
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Le documentaire est un style à part, né loin des studios avec le développement des caméras légères. De Robert Flaherty à Raymond Depardon, les noms qui jalonnent son histoire témoignent de sa participation active à l'élaboration et au développement du langage cinématographique. Cet ouvrage est depuis longtemps la référence de l'étudiant comme du cinéphile. Du cinéma muet à l'image numérique, il retrace l'histoire de cet « autre cinéma » à travers les continents, en analysant son esthétique originale et sa confrontation au réel. À l'occasion de cette cinquième édition, les biographies et les filmographies de cinéastes majeurs ont été actualisées, et deux études ajoutées, consacrées aux récents National Gallery de Frederick Wiseman et À la recherche de Vivian Maier de John Maloof et Charlie Siskel.
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"This fluent and comprehensive field guide responds to increased interest, across the humanities, in the ways in which digital technologies can disrupt and open up new research and pedagogical avenues. It is designed to help scholars and students engage with their subjects using an audio-visual grammar, and to allow readers to efficiently gain the technical and theoretical skills necessary to create and disseminate their own trans-media projects. Documentary Making for Digital Humanists sets out the fundamentals of filmmaking, explores academic discourse on digital documentaries and online distribution, and considers the place of this discourse in the evolving academic landscape. The book walks its readers through the intellectual and practical processes of creating digital media and documentary projects. It is further equipped with video elements, supplementing specific chapters and providing brief and accessible introductions to the key components of the filmmaking process. This will be a valuable resource to humanist scholars and students seeking to embrace new media production and the digital landscape, and to those researchers interested in using means beyond the written word to disseminate their work. It constitutes a welcome contribution to the burgeoning field of digital humanities, as the first practical guide of its kind designed to facilitate humanist interactions with digital filmmaking, and to empower scholars and students alike to create and distribute new media audio-visual artefacts."
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