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257

Unprivileged Camera Style [1982]
In Transcultural Cinema. David MacDougall

Filmmaking can be a protracted process, with long delays between
shooting a film and editing it. Hence filmmakers are apt to make their discoveries at the
worst possible time: when the film isn't yet finished, but when it's too late to go back and
shoot it differently. Discoveries of this kind may explain why so many films seem like
uneasy compromises or reworkings of “found” material.
In 1968, after Judith MacDougall and I had finished shooting To Live
With Herds (1972) in Uganda, we made a discovery that was hardly novel but that
suggested some of the ideas I shall mention here. We had been filming in Jie
compounds, which were surrounded by heavy stockades of interwoven sticks. One
entered by crouching and passing through a low doorway. Inside, the area was like a
roofless room, with a clean-swept earthen floor. Having managed to enter with our
filming equipment we usually settled gratefully in one place. This we found also suited
our filming. It generally provided an adequate field of view and was acceptable to the
Jie, who also spent much of their time in fixed positions around their compounds.
[Figure 16.]
As we became more experienced, we began looking for the optimum
position in which to place ourselves. This was the point from which we would have an
unimpeded view of most social activities. We often remained there, but sometimes we
shifted to a second camera position, either because the center of social interaction had
shifted or for the quite different reason that we knew a second camera angle would be
useful when the time came to edit the film.
Often, for example, a conversation viewed from only one position was
unsatisfactory because certain persons were seen at the expense of others, whose backs
were to us. It was also difficult to record the steps of a process like millet beer-making
from one position, when each step seemed to require its own particular angle. Finally,
when little seemed to be happening and the camera ground on and on, we knew that later
258

we would be able to cut to a shot from another angle without awkwardness or a sense of
disjunction. At least that was what we thought.
These notions persisted through the synchronizing and viewing of our
rushes. We were pleased with the material and were confident we could use the best of it
in a film. It was only when we started editing that we began to have doubts. These
would start when we had used a long take of a conversation, had cut to a shot from a
second camera position, and had then returned to the first angle again. For some reason it
wasn't working, despite the fact that this pattern of intercutting dialogue was the mainstay
of most of the films we had seen in our lives.
Reluctantly, we abandoned this approach. For many sequences we ended
up discarding all of the footage from either one position or the other, although both
contained valuable material.
At first, when we asked ourselves what had happened, we blamed the
framing of our shots. Later we began to see that this wasn't the real problem. The
problem lay in a contradiction in premises: denying to the audience on the one hand what
we had been offering it on the other.
What we were trying to give was a sense of being present in a Jie
compound, a situation in which few of our viewers would ever find themselves. There
were several reasons for this—to counteract prevalent representations of “exotic” people,
to express the realities of fieldwork, to record informal aspects of culture, to allow
individuals to emerge rather than types—and a number of things made it possible: our
subjects’ acknowledgement of our presence, our long and static camera takes, and the
very low energy-level of much that we filmed. We were not singling out dramatic
subjects for attention so much as opening the film up to a kind of anti-subject-matter:
apparently inconsequential events that were more like what one would witness in
ordinary experience than choose as film subjects.
By intercutting shots from two or more camera positions we found we
were taking away that immediacy by invoking a style of fictional filmmaking
incompatible with the idea of real people sitting in a compound filming other real people.
259

We were aware that the conventions of fiction had considerably influenced documentary
films, but we had underestimated their significance and the extent to which we and other
film-makers had been taught to accept them as appropriate.

The term privileged camera angle was often used in discussions of
Hollywood films to describe a camera position that could not be occupied in everyday
life—a shot from a fireplace, looking through the flames, or a shot through a mirror or
wall, or perhaps a distorted or surrealistic effect, such as a shot from the lap of a fat man
looking up his nostrils. Such shots were common in thrillers and psychological dramas
of the l940s and reached back to German Expressionism. But privileged camera angles
are really the common coinage of fiction films and only become noticeable when they
strain the audience's credulity. Pressed a little further they become jokes, like the
opening of The Tin Drum (1979) in which we and little Oskar look down his mother's
birth canal toward a world he regards with horror.
Most shots in fiction films are privileged because there is no
acknowledged observer, and in any case one cannot imagine an unknown person being
given such access to other people's lives. These films posit an invisible observer with
special powers that merge the consciousness of the author and audience. The viewpoint
is rarely that of a character. Frame enlargements from fiction films make it evident that
most point-of-view shots are in fact only analogues of the viewpoint of a character. The
eyes of the actors rarely look directly into the camera as they would if it were substituted
for one of their interlocutors. Because of this, documentary films can adopt the shooting
style of fiction without the contradiction that the camera has actually “become” a
nonfictional person.
The editing of fiction films also takes liberties, but with time and space
rather than with conventions of privacy. It is understood that within dramatic sequences
no time need elapse at a cut, and this power is confirmed by the continuity of the
soundtrack. Thus the eye of the observer shifts instantaneously to new positions without
260

the necessity of traveling between them. Television directors now switch from one
camera to another, but the effect of instantaneous switching is a conceptual, not a
technological creation. Although multiple cameras have been used since the early days
of the cinema, the effect is usually achieved by a series of separate camera set-ups. The
idea is older than films, which simply matched images to an invention of fiction.
Fiction films are experiences of magical observation, defying ordinary
physical limits and forms of accountability. If they have often been called dreamlike, it is
because they give us a sense of untrammelled will.

When people began taking snapshots just before the turn of the century
they would say, “Look at the camera.” Later, responding to a new impulse, they began to
say, “Don't look at the camera. Go on with what you were doing.” They wanted
photographs of life, but as though photography had not occurred. ln producing this effect
they were led irrevocably into fiction.
Something similar happened in film. The directness of many of the
“primitive” films made between 1895 and l920 resulted from an acknowledgement of the
act of filming. They were often about the specific historical moment when a
cinematographer came to town. Later such scenes disappeared from the cinema,
banished by a professionalism that viewed any internal evidence of filmmaking as an
aesthetic error. “As you know,” Basil Wright once said, “in the old documentary days, as
soon as someone looked at the camera, you threw that shot out because the illusion of
reality had been lost” (1971: 41). Documentary films were supposed to be distillations of
truth, transcending the human agencies that produced them. Making them was a matter
of high seriousness and careful composition. Except when events were even more
dramatic than filmmaking itself, as in theaters of war, life stopped when the cameras
appeared. It had to be started up artificially when the cameras rolled, and so another
component of fiction was added: people became actors impersonating themselves.
261

Ved Mehta has described how television perpetuates a form of
fictionalized documentary—the intimate portrait—by relentlessly molding its subjects to
its needs. The film was Chachaji, My Poor Relation: A Memoir by Ved Mehta (1978)
about his second cousin Bahali Ram, a film for which Mehta was hired as the “writer.”
“Tell Daddy Chopra to push open the screen door and summon
Chacha and give him an errand,” Bill says. “Tell Chacha to keep on turning the
pages of the ledger until he's called.”
I tell Chopra and Chachaji what to do, and Bill shouts “Board!”
Chopra pushes open the screen door, as instructed, and calls out,
“Lalaji, come inside. Bring ledger.”
Before Chopra can finish his lines, Bill yells “Cut!” Chachaji
spoiled the shot by jumping up at the sound of Chopra opening the door, instead
of waiting for Chopra to call him.
And so the morning goes, until we think we finally have enough
good material to make a sequence of Chachaji being sent on an errand. (1980: 6364)
Implicit in a camera style is a theory of knowledge. British documentary
films of the l930s and 1940s were concerned with essences, and the camera was only one
of several tools for conveying what one already knew about life. Colin Young has
observed that there was an Art Director on Grierson's Drifters (1929); and in Night Mail
(1936) there was no contradiction seen in the use of studio techniques to get the shots of
letter-sorting en route to Edinburgh. A railway carriage was put up on blocks, lit, and
rocked rhythmically by stagehands.
One view is that the aims of documentary were ahead of its means, and it
wasn't prepared to wait. Synchronous sound recording outside the studio was an
adventure, attempted in only a few documentary films like Housing Problems (1935).
Documentaries had a hard time competing with direct experience or, more importantly
one suspects, with the concentrated energy of story films. Authenticity became a matter
of effect, as is made clear in The Technique of Film Editing, first published in 1953 and
262

“written and compiled by Karel Reisz with the guidance of [a] Committee appointed by
the British Film Academy”:
[The] need to obtain apt, incisive “raw stuff” before editing begins is
demonstrated most forcefully in the production of the simplest form of
documentary—the reportage film. ... The facts alone are of interest and the
director's task is to present them as authentically as possible.
At first sight nothing would appear to be simpler than to present an
exciting event in an exciting way. Actually, as we shall see, to achieve a
convincing impression of an actually observed scene, a most elaborate editing
process may have to be brought into operation. (Reisz and Millar 1968: 125-26)

If one were to look for a turning point in the domination of documentary
films by fiction, one would have to find the point at which filmmakers ceased merely to
exploit the persuasive powers of film and began to examine their ideological
implications. Dziga Vertov was one of the first to do so, but one would have to wait until
almost the 1960s to find very many others. The revolution of the British “Free Cinema”
movement and of Direct Cinema and cinéma vérité were directed against two kinds of
privilege: the privilege inherent in an aesthetic that resulted in the living people of films
being subordinated to an anonymous creator, and the privilege of studios, television
companies, equipment manufacturers, and exhibitors to institutionalize the styles and
intellectual assumptions of filmmaking. The light-weight sound cameras of Ricky
Leacock, Michel Brault and Albert Maysles were the first that could be used as personal
instruments, after years in which sound was either added to images in the cutting room or
resulted from the use of huge cameras requiring teams of technicians. After the first
flights of fancy—that cameras which could go anywhere could also record everything—
filmmakers began facing the implications of film as a personal form of record-making. It
would reflect more directly the interests and circumstances of the observer, and it would
be unable to claim the definitive authority of films of the past. It would resituate the
263

audience in relation to the subject, and this meant resituating the filmmaker in relation to
the audience.
The result was the notion of an unprivileged camera style: a style based
on the assumption that the appearance of a film should be an artifact of the social and
physical encounter between the filmmaker and the subject. To achieve this, some
filmmakers began to relinquish the formal privileges that sustained the Olympian
omniscience of story-tellers. Others saw it primarily as a matter of principle: that it was
unethical to present the lives of real people through the devices by which imaginary
characters were created. Living human beings were not merely the raw material for
stories or the illustration of concepts. They had their own existence in defiance of any
documentary film that might be made about them, and this demanded that they be treated
for what they were.
Of course, this fervor had its own ideological blindness. “Direct” cinema
shifted different powers into the hands of individual filmmakers, who could be equally
ruthless in other ways towards their subjects and audiences. There was also much room
for self-deception: for believing that the meaning of events was self-evident in images of
them, or that filming something made it interesting, or that people were no longer
influenced by being filmed, or that filmmaking was a mystical or philanthropic activity in
which creative ambition played no part.
Ethnographic film constituted a special case of documentary. Cinematic
conventions attracted particular attention both as an expression of culture (the
Worth-Adair Navajo experiments, for example i) and because of the debate over how film
could serve as evidence for anthropology, stimulated by Jean Rouch, Colin Young, Jay
Ruby, and others. The debate soon shifted to how film could become a medium of
anthopological inquiry. But awareness of the stylistic revolution occurring in
documentary film made its way only slowly into ethnographic films, even though two of
the leading innovators in documentary, Jean Rouch and John Marshall, were
ethnographers. Most films were cast in a lecture form that asserted the authority of the
commentator, not the footage. Others, ranging from “educational” films involving
264

anthropologists to television travelogues, continued to direct their actors rather than
observe them and employed the shooting and editing techniques of fiction.
Two films about hunters are characteristic, made more than fifty years
after Flaherty’s famous walrus-hunting scene, which André Bazin celebrated as an
alternative to staging and montage. In Cree Hunters of Mistassini (1974) and Pygmies of
the Rainforest (1977) the hunters are seen in shots just before the kill with their weapons
aimed in the general direction of the camera. Thus either we must accept that the hunters
allowed the film crew to get between themselves and their prey or that these shots were
made at another time, probably after the hunt was over.

ln the l950s John Marshall, equipped at first with only a spring-wound
camera and non-synchronous recorder, began filming passages of personal interaction
among the Ju’/hoansi of the Kalahari. He filmed as though their voices would be heard
and his lengthy shots would be seen intact—a curious approach at a time when
documentary films were mosaics of shots. Most cinematographers knew that even if they
filmed continuous events their shots would be cut up and the fragments edited into a new
synthesis. The original temporal and spatial relationships would be lost. In these
circumstances, almost everyone shot to get the fragments, not the continuity. But
Marshall was young and had been sent out to do a job of ethnographic documentation,
not to make documentary films. As so often happens at the beginnings of things, he
thought he was doing something quite ordinary, although what he was attempting
foreshadowed the wave of the future. His sequence-shots, with the sound laboriously
“scissor-synced” to the picture, can now be seen as early examples of an effort to put the
viewer into a relationship with the subject more like the filmmaker's own.
Sequence-shots restore to the audience something of the continuity of
perception of an individual observer. They are also probably the key feature of a camera
style that seeks to sever itself from the imagery of fiction and tie itself to the specific
historical act of filming. Other aspects of this style can be called “unprivileged” only in
265

contrast to styles that gain immunity by not subjecting themselves to the risks and
consequences of that act, for clearly anyone with a camera enjoys certain privileges as an
observer. Unprivileged camera style is a negative notion, a corrective. It is an assertion
of the obvious: that filmmakers are human, fallible, rooted in physical space and society,
governed by chance, limited in perception—and that films must be understood this way.
The renunciation of stylistic privilege is not a recipe for enlightenment but a point of
reference for communication. It attempts to narrow the distance between the person who
makes a film and the person who views it. There is no longer a compulsion to occupy an
advantageous camera position at any cost; a “bad” shot which nevertheless contains
useful information, and which would once have been removed as “unprofessional,” is
now preserved.

A film by Gary Kildea, Celso and Cora (1983), incorporates many of the
shifts I have been discussing. It concerns the lives of Cora and Celso, street-vendors in
Manila. Kildea began working entirely alone, a “one-man-band” of camera, microphone,
and tape recorder. He felt this approach was necessary to protect the obligations he had
assumed toward the family, but later he found it too difficult and completed the filming
with an assistant from the Philippines. He edited the film himself, and he refuses many
aspects of conventional film editing. The illusion of continuous time, except within
shots, is avoided—one might say, purposefully destroyed— by the interpolation of short
lengths of leader, like the blackouts or intertitles that once separated shots in silent films
and which reappeared (for reasons similar to Kildea’s) in a few ethnographic and
fictional films of the l960s and 1970s. ii This approach also frees Kildea from the
necessity of conventional editing transitions between shots. Thus Kildea draws our
attention to the fact that the film is composed of fragments taken out of the lives of his
subjects. One suspects such an approach would be anathema to most television
programmers.
266

At one point Kildea shot footage from the driver's window of one of the
trains that regularly pushes through Kahilom, the quarter in which the family lived. In
the end he felt unable to use any of this material because it was too alien to their
experience, a view of their quarter that they would never see.
Kildea is clearly a privileged observer—a white, middle-class filmmaker
in one of the innumerable microcosms of the Third World—but his camera style reaches
out to the subjects and to us in the audience in an attempt to make our analysis of what he
is doing less problematical. The film is composed of long sequence-shots. In one shot
made early on in the filming, Celso and Cora are looking at new lodgings they hope to
occupy. After examining the room in some detail Celso asks when the filming is going to
start. Upon discovering that the camera has been running all the time, he returns to his
examination of the room apparently unconcerned. The shot provides a crosscheck on his
reactions, and although it is not a definitive one it helps to delineate the relationship
Kildea has established with his subjects. [Figure 17.]
Later in the film a shot occurs which tells us more about this relationship
and also about Kildea's attitude towards the audience. Cora and Celso have had an
argument and have separated. On top of this, Celso has been told he can no longer sell
cigarettes in front of the Tower Hotel, where he had been scraping enough money to get
by. He has been up all night with his small daughter, Maricel, at a new selling point
down the street. It is now dawn and he has come to the foreshore of Manila Bay with
Maricel to give her, as he puts it, “some sun and sea breeze.” He is preoccupied with his
problems but starts telling Kildea about the strangers nearby. One woman, he says,
looking past the camera, is probably trying to cure her baby's cough with the sea air. One
guesses that Kildea is intent at this moment on watching Celso, but the camera comes
slowly around and looks at what Celso has described before once again returning to him.
Considering the difficulties of the shot it is very skilful, but the woman is far away and
the view of her cursory. Many filmmakers would have stayed with Celso and got a shot
of the woman later to use as an insert. Kildea prefers to show us his problem: the image
of Celso lost, the demands of the moment observed.
267

Not all the things we might wish to know about other people are
recognizable or even permissible subjects of inquiry to them. Often matters that touch
them the most deeply and that are most revealing of their concerns are the most closely
guarded. The mysteriousness of filmmaking once gave filmmakers special access to the
lives of their subjects, particularly in cultures where films were little understood. The
spread of communications is now putting an end to that privilege. People are becoming
increasingly aware of the risks and potential benefits of films about them, and filmmakers
must pay special attention to the hazards of exposing their subjects to official reprisals or
the ostracism of their neighbors.
This can force filmmakers in one of two directions: either to abandon
entire areas of human relations or develop new approaches with their subjects that allow
sensitive topics to be explored. For films to be properly interpreted, the nature of these
new “contracts” must be understood by the audience. Increasingly, filmmakers are
bringing their relationships with the subjects into the foreground of their films. These
encounters can develop into informal exchanges quite different from interviews. As the
filmmaker is drawn further into the subject area of the film, the audience is drawn into
the position the filmmaker originally occupied.
The process can be as much a feature of overall structure as of camera
style. Rouch’s and Morin's Chronique d'un été (1961) was posed explicitly as an
experiment in documentary filmmaking, with Rouch and Morin taking center stage.
Other films such as Chris Marker's “letters” to his audiences, Mike Rubbo's Waiting for
Fidel (1974), and James Blue's A Few Notes on Our Food Problem (1968) in their
various ways turn the filmmaker into an identifiable intermediary with the audience,
grappling with a subject. When we made To Live with Herds we were content to include
sequences in which our presence was occasionally acknowledged. By the time we made
The Wedding Camels (filmed 1973-74, released 1977), we were attempting quite
consciously to show through film what it is like to be an observer in the midst of a
268

complex event, trying to make sense of it. The film takes its structure from the inquiry.
It is clear that we miss a good deal. Much of the rest is filtered through the testimony of
participants, whose own vested interests must be taken into account. Any knowledge of
the event is finally provisional, and in this sense the film is about what one can and
cannot know. [Figure 18.]
269

Notes

This essay was first published in the Royal Anthropologial Institute newsletter R.A.I.N.
50: 8-10, June, 1982.

iFor

an account of this, see Sol Worth and John Adair’s Through Navajo Eyes.

ii

See, for example, Godard’s Vivre sa vie (1962), Timothy Asch’s The Ax Fight (1975),

and my film To Live with Herds (1972).

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Unprivileged Camera Style

  • 1. 257 Unprivileged Camera Style [1982] In Transcultural Cinema. David MacDougall Filmmaking can be a protracted process, with long delays between shooting a film and editing it. Hence filmmakers are apt to make their discoveries at the worst possible time: when the film isn't yet finished, but when it's too late to go back and shoot it differently. Discoveries of this kind may explain why so many films seem like uneasy compromises or reworkings of “found” material. In 1968, after Judith MacDougall and I had finished shooting To Live With Herds (1972) in Uganda, we made a discovery that was hardly novel but that suggested some of the ideas I shall mention here. We had been filming in Jie compounds, which were surrounded by heavy stockades of interwoven sticks. One entered by crouching and passing through a low doorway. Inside, the area was like a roofless room, with a clean-swept earthen floor. Having managed to enter with our filming equipment we usually settled gratefully in one place. This we found also suited our filming. It generally provided an adequate field of view and was acceptable to the Jie, who also spent much of their time in fixed positions around their compounds. [Figure 16.] As we became more experienced, we began looking for the optimum position in which to place ourselves. This was the point from which we would have an unimpeded view of most social activities. We often remained there, but sometimes we shifted to a second camera position, either because the center of social interaction had shifted or for the quite different reason that we knew a second camera angle would be useful when the time came to edit the film. Often, for example, a conversation viewed from only one position was unsatisfactory because certain persons were seen at the expense of others, whose backs were to us. It was also difficult to record the steps of a process like millet beer-making from one position, when each step seemed to require its own particular angle. Finally, when little seemed to be happening and the camera ground on and on, we knew that later
  • 2. 258 we would be able to cut to a shot from another angle without awkwardness or a sense of disjunction. At least that was what we thought. These notions persisted through the synchronizing and viewing of our rushes. We were pleased with the material and were confident we could use the best of it in a film. It was only when we started editing that we began to have doubts. These would start when we had used a long take of a conversation, had cut to a shot from a second camera position, and had then returned to the first angle again. For some reason it wasn't working, despite the fact that this pattern of intercutting dialogue was the mainstay of most of the films we had seen in our lives. Reluctantly, we abandoned this approach. For many sequences we ended up discarding all of the footage from either one position or the other, although both contained valuable material. At first, when we asked ourselves what had happened, we blamed the framing of our shots. Later we began to see that this wasn't the real problem. The problem lay in a contradiction in premises: denying to the audience on the one hand what we had been offering it on the other. What we were trying to give was a sense of being present in a Jie compound, a situation in which few of our viewers would ever find themselves. There were several reasons for this—to counteract prevalent representations of “exotic” people, to express the realities of fieldwork, to record informal aspects of culture, to allow individuals to emerge rather than types—and a number of things made it possible: our subjects’ acknowledgement of our presence, our long and static camera takes, and the very low energy-level of much that we filmed. We were not singling out dramatic subjects for attention so much as opening the film up to a kind of anti-subject-matter: apparently inconsequential events that were more like what one would witness in ordinary experience than choose as film subjects. By intercutting shots from two or more camera positions we found we were taking away that immediacy by invoking a style of fictional filmmaking incompatible with the idea of real people sitting in a compound filming other real people.
  • 3. 259 We were aware that the conventions of fiction had considerably influenced documentary films, but we had underestimated their significance and the extent to which we and other film-makers had been taught to accept them as appropriate. The term privileged camera angle was often used in discussions of Hollywood films to describe a camera position that could not be occupied in everyday life—a shot from a fireplace, looking through the flames, or a shot through a mirror or wall, or perhaps a distorted or surrealistic effect, such as a shot from the lap of a fat man looking up his nostrils. Such shots were common in thrillers and psychological dramas of the l940s and reached back to German Expressionism. But privileged camera angles are really the common coinage of fiction films and only become noticeable when they strain the audience's credulity. Pressed a little further they become jokes, like the opening of The Tin Drum (1979) in which we and little Oskar look down his mother's birth canal toward a world he regards with horror. Most shots in fiction films are privileged because there is no acknowledged observer, and in any case one cannot imagine an unknown person being given such access to other people's lives. These films posit an invisible observer with special powers that merge the consciousness of the author and audience. The viewpoint is rarely that of a character. Frame enlargements from fiction films make it evident that most point-of-view shots are in fact only analogues of the viewpoint of a character. The eyes of the actors rarely look directly into the camera as they would if it were substituted for one of their interlocutors. Because of this, documentary films can adopt the shooting style of fiction without the contradiction that the camera has actually “become” a nonfictional person. The editing of fiction films also takes liberties, but with time and space rather than with conventions of privacy. It is understood that within dramatic sequences no time need elapse at a cut, and this power is confirmed by the continuity of the soundtrack. Thus the eye of the observer shifts instantaneously to new positions without
  • 4. 260 the necessity of traveling between them. Television directors now switch from one camera to another, but the effect of instantaneous switching is a conceptual, not a technological creation. Although multiple cameras have been used since the early days of the cinema, the effect is usually achieved by a series of separate camera set-ups. The idea is older than films, which simply matched images to an invention of fiction. Fiction films are experiences of magical observation, defying ordinary physical limits and forms of accountability. If they have often been called dreamlike, it is because they give us a sense of untrammelled will. When people began taking snapshots just before the turn of the century they would say, “Look at the camera.” Later, responding to a new impulse, they began to say, “Don't look at the camera. Go on with what you were doing.” They wanted photographs of life, but as though photography had not occurred. ln producing this effect they were led irrevocably into fiction. Something similar happened in film. The directness of many of the “primitive” films made between 1895 and l920 resulted from an acknowledgement of the act of filming. They were often about the specific historical moment when a cinematographer came to town. Later such scenes disappeared from the cinema, banished by a professionalism that viewed any internal evidence of filmmaking as an aesthetic error. “As you know,” Basil Wright once said, “in the old documentary days, as soon as someone looked at the camera, you threw that shot out because the illusion of reality had been lost” (1971: 41). Documentary films were supposed to be distillations of truth, transcending the human agencies that produced them. Making them was a matter of high seriousness and careful composition. Except when events were even more dramatic than filmmaking itself, as in theaters of war, life stopped when the cameras appeared. It had to be started up artificially when the cameras rolled, and so another component of fiction was added: people became actors impersonating themselves.
  • 5. 261 Ved Mehta has described how television perpetuates a form of fictionalized documentary—the intimate portrait—by relentlessly molding its subjects to its needs. The film was Chachaji, My Poor Relation: A Memoir by Ved Mehta (1978) about his second cousin Bahali Ram, a film for which Mehta was hired as the “writer.” “Tell Daddy Chopra to push open the screen door and summon Chacha and give him an errand,” Bill says. “Tell Chacha to keep on turning the pages of the ledger until he's called.” I tell Chopra and Chachaji what to do, and Bill shouts “Board!” Chopra pushes open the screen door, as instructed, and calls out, “Lalaji, come inside. Bring ledger.” Before Chopra can finish his lines, Bill yells “Cut!” Chachaji spoiled the shot by jumping up at the sound of Chopra opening the door, instead of waiting for Chopra to call him. And so the morning goes, until we think we finally have enough good material to make a sequence of Chachaji being sent on an errand. (1980: 6364) Implicit in a camera style is a theory of knowledge. British documentary films of the l930s and 1940s were concerned with essences, and the camera was only one of several tools for conveying what one already knew about life. Colin Young has observed that there was an Art Director on Grierson's Drifters (1929); and in Night Mail (1936) there was no contradiction seen in the use of studio techniques to get the shots of letter-sorting en route to Edinburgh. A railway carriage was put up on blocks, lit, and rocked rhythmically by stagehands. One view is that the aims of documentary were ahead of its means, and it wasn't prepared to wait. Synchronous sound recording outside the studio was an adventure, attempted in only a few documentary films like Housing Problems (1935). Documentaries had a hard time competing with direct experience or, more importantly one suspects, with the concentrated energy of story films. Authenticity became a matter of effect, as is made clear in The Technique of Film Editing, first published in 1953 and
  • 6. 262 “written and compiled by Karel Reisz with the guidance of [a] Committee appointed by the British Film Academy”: [The] need to obtain apt, incisive “raw stuff” before editing begins is demonstrated most forcefully in the production of the simplest form of documentary—the reportage film. ... The facts alone are of interest and the director's task is to present them as authentically as possible. At first sight nothing would appear to be simpler than to present an exciting event in an exciting way. Actually, as we shall see, to achieve a convincing impression of an actually observed scene, a most elaborate editing process may have to be brought into operation. (Reisz and Millar 1968: 125-26) If one were to look for a turning point in the domination of documentary films by fiction, one would have to find the point at which filmmakers ceased merely to exploit the persuasive powers of film and began to examine their ideological implications. Dziga Vertov was one of the first to do so, but one would have to wait until almost the 1960s to find very many others. The revolution of the British “Free Cinema” movement and of Direct Cinema and cinéma vérité were directed against two kinds of privilege: the privilege inherent in an aesthetic that resulted in the living people of films being subordinated to an anonymous creator, and the privilege of studios, television companies, equipment manufacturers, and exhibitors to institutionalize the styles and intellectual assumptions of filmmaking. The light-weight sound cameras of Ricky Leacock, Michel Brault and Albert Maysles were the first that could be used as personal instruments, after years in which sound was either added to images in the cutting room or resulted from the use of huge cameras requiring teams of technicians. After the first flights of fancy—that cameras which could go anywhere could also record everything— filmmakers began facing the implications of film as a personal form of record-making. It would reflect more directly the interests and circumstances of the observer, and it would be unable to claim the definitive authority of films of the past. It would resituate the
  • 7. 263 audience in relation to the subject, and this meant resituating the filmmaker in relation to the audience. The result was the notion of an unprivileged camera style: a style based on the assumption that the appearance of a film should be an artifact of the social and physical encounter between the filmmaker and the subject. To achieve this, some filmmakers began to relinquish the formal privileges that sustained the Olympian omniscience of story-tellers. Others saw it primarily as a matter of principle: that it was unethical to present the lives of real people through the devices by which imaginary characters were created. Living human beings were not merely the raw material for stories or the illustration of concepts. They had their own existence in defiance of any documentary film that might be made about them, and this demanded that they be treated for what they were. Of course, this fervor had its own ideological blindness. “Direct” cinema shifted different powers into the hands of individual filmmakers, who could be equally ruthless in other ways towards their subjects and audiences. There was also much room for self-deception: for believing that the meaning of events was self-evident in images of them, or that filming something made it interesting, or that people were no longer influenced by being filmed, or that filmmaking was a mystical or philanthropic activity in which creative ambition played no part. Ethnographic film constituted a special case of documentary. Cinematic conventions attracted particular attention both as an expression of culture (the Worth-Adair Navajo experiments, for example i) and because of the debate over how film could serve as evidence for anthropology, stimulated by Jean Rouch, Colin Young, Jay Ruby, and others. The debate soon shifted to how film could become a medium of anthopological inquiry. But awareness of the stylistic revolution occurring in documentary film made its way only slowly into ethnographic films, even though two of the leading innovators in documentary, Jean Rouch and John Marshall, were ethnographers. Most films were cast in a lecture form that asserted the authority of the commentator, not the footage. Others, ranging from “educational” films involving
  • 8. 264 anthropologists to television travelogues, continued to direct their actors rather than observe them and employed the shooting and editing techniques of fiction. Two films about hunters are characteristic, made more than fifty years after Flaherty’s famous walrus-hunting scene, which André Bazin celebrated as an alternative to staging and montage. In Cree Hunters of Mistassini (1974) and Pygmies of the Rainforest (1977) the hunters are seen in shots just before the kill with their weapons aimed in the general direction of the camera. Thus either we must accept that the hunters allowed the film crew to get between themselves and their prey or that these shots were made at another time, probably after the hunt was over. ln the l950s John Marshall, equipped at first with only a spring-wound camera and non-synchronous recorder, began filming passages of personal interaction among the Ju’/hoansi of the Kalahari. He filmed as though their voices would be heard and his lengthy shots would be seen intact—a curious approach at a time when documentary films were mosaics of shots. Most cinematographers knew that even if they filmed continuous events their shots would be cut up and the fragments edited into a new synthesis. The original temporal and spatial relationships would be lost. In these circumstances, almost everyone shot to get the fragments, not the continuity. But Marshall was young and had been sent out to do a job of ethnographic documentation, not to make documentary films. As so often happens at the beginnings of things, he thought he was doing something quite ordinary, although what he was attempting foreshadowed the wave of the future. His sequence-shots, with the sound laboriously “scissor-synced” to the picture, can now be seen as early examples of an effort to put the viewer into a relationship with the subject more like the filmmaker's own. Sequence-shots restore to the audience something of the continuity of perception of an individual observer. They are also probably the key feature of a camera style that seeks to sever itself from the imagery of fiction and tie itself to the specific historical act of filming. Other aspects of this style can be called “unprivileged” only in
  • 9. 265 contrast to styles that gain immunity by not subjecting themselves to the risks and consequences of that act, for clearly anyone with a camera enjoys certain privileges as an observer. Unprivileged camera style is a negative notion, a corrective. It is an assertion of the obvious: that filmmakers are human, fallible, rooted in physical space and society, governed by chance, limited in perception—and that films must be understood this way. The renunciation of stylistic privilege is not a recipe for enlightenment but a point of reference for communication. It attempts to narrow the distance between the person who makes a film and the person who views it. There is no longer a compulsion to occupy an advantageous camera position at any cost; a “bad” shot which nevertheless contains useful information, and which would once have been removed as “unprofessional,” is now preserved. A film by Gary Kildea, Celso and Cora (1983), incorporates many of the shifts I have been discussing. It concerns the lives of Cora and Celso, street-vendors in Manila. Kildea began working entirely alone, a “one-man-band” of camera, microphone, and tape recorder. He felt this approach was necessary to protect the obligations he had assumed toward the family, but later he found it too difficult and completed the filming with an assistant from the Philippines. He edited the film himself, and he refuses many aspects of conventional film editing. The illusion of continuous time, except within shots, is avoided—one might say, purposefully destroyed— by the interpolation of short lengths of leader, like the blackouts or intertitles that once separated shots in silent films and which reappeared (for reasons similar to Kildea’s) in a few ethnographic and fictional films of the l960s and 1970s. ii This approach also frees Kildea from the necessity of conventional editing transitions between shots. Thus Kildea draws our attention to the fact that the film is composed of fragments taken out of the lives of his subjects. One suspects such an approach would be anathema to most television programmers.
  • 10. 266 At one point Kildea shot footage from the driver's window of one of the trains that regularly pushes through Kahilom, the quarter in which the family lived. In the end he felt unable to use any of this material because it was too alien to their experience, a view of their quarter that they would never see. Kildea is clearly a privileged observer—a white, middle-class filmmaker in one of the innumerable microcosms of the Third World—but his camera style reaches out to the subjects and to us in the audience in an attempt to make our analysis of what he is doing less problematical. The film is composed of long sequence-shots. In one shot made early on in the filming, Celso and Cora are looking at new lodgings they hope to occupy. After examining the room in some detail Celso asks when the filming is going to start. Upon discovering that the camera has been running all the time, he returns to his examination of the room apparently unconcerned. The shot provides a crosscheck on his reactions, and although it is not a definitive one it helps to delineate the relationship Kildea has established with his subjects. [Figure 17.] Later in the film a shot occurs which tells us more about this relationship and also about Kildea's attitude towards the audience. Cora and Celso have had an argument and have separated. On top of this, Celso has been told he can no longer sell cigarettes in front of the Tower Hotel, where he had been scraping enough money to get by. He has been up all night with his small daughter, Maricel, at a new selling point down the street. It is now dawn and he has come to the foreshore of Manila Bay with Maricel to give her, as he puts it, “some sun and sea breeze.” He is preoccupied with his problems but starts telling Kildea about the strangers nearby. One woman, he says, looking past the camera, is probably trying to cure her baby's cough with the sea air. One guesses that Kildea is intent at this moment on watching Celso, but the camera comes slowly around and looks at what Celso has described before once again returning to him. Considering the difficulties of the shot it is very skilful, but the woman is far away and the view of her cursory. Many filmmakers would have stayed with Celso and got a shot of the woman later to use as an insert. Kildea prefers to show us his problem: the image of Celso lost, the demands of the moment observed.
  • 11. 267 Not all the things we might wish to know about other people are recognizable or even permissible subjects of inquiry to them. Often matters that touch them the most deeply and that are most revealing of their concerns are the most closely guarded. The mysteriousness of filmmaking once gave filmmakers special access to the lives of their subjects, particularly in cultures where films were little understood. The spread of communications is now putting an end to that privilege. People are becoming increasingly aware of the risks and potential benefits of films about them, and filmmakers must pay special attention to the hazards of exposing their subjects to official reprisals or the ostracism of their neighbors. This can force filmmakers in one of two directions: either to abandon entire areas of human relations or develop new approaches with their subjects that allow sensitive topics to be explored. For films to be properly interpreted, the nature of these new “contracts” must be understood by the audience. Increasingly, filmmakers are bringing their relationships with the subjects into the foreground of their films. These encounters can develop into informal exchanges quite different from interviews. As the filmmaker is drawn further into the subject area of the film, the audience is drawn into the position the filmmaker originally occupied. The process can be as much a feature of overall structure as of camera style. Rouch’s and Morin's Chronique d'un été (1961) was posed explicitly as an experiment in documentary filmmaking, with Rouch and Morin taking center stage. Other films such as Chris Marker's “letters” to his audiences, Mike Rubbo's Waiting for Fidel (1974), and James Blue's A Few Notes on Our Food Problem (1968) in their various ways turn the filmmaker into an identifiable intermediary with the audience, grappling with a subject. When we made To Live with Herds we were content to include sequences in which our presence was occasionally acknowledged. By the time we made The Wedding Camels (filmed 1973-74, released 1977), we were attempting quite consciously to show through film what it is like to be an observer in the midst of a
  • 12. 268 complex event, trying to make sense of it. The film takes its structure from the inquiry. It is clear that we miss a good deal. Much of the rest is filtered through the testimony of participants, whose own vested interests must be taken into account. Any knowledge of the event is finally provisional, and in this sense the film is about what one can and cannot know. [Figure 18.]
  • 13. 269 Notes This essay was first published in the Royal Anthropologial Institute newsletter R.A.I.N. 50: 8-10, June, 1982. iFor an account of this, see Sol Worth and John Adair’s Through Navajo Eyes. ii See, for example, Godard’s Vivre sa vie (1962), Timothy Asch’s The Ax Fight (1975), and my film To Live with Herds (1972).