History of film documentary
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Documentary film
Nonfictional motion picture
"Documentary" redirects here. For other uses, see Documentary (disambiguation).
A documentary film (often described simply as a documentary) is a non-fictional motion picture intended to "document reality, primarily for instruction, education or maintaining a historical record".[1] The American author and media analystBill Nichols has characterized the documentary in terms of "a filmmaking practice, a cinematic tradition, and mode of audience reception [that remains] a practice without clear boundaries".[2]
Research into information gathering, as a behavior, and the sharing of knowledge, as a concept, has noted how documentary movies were preceded by the notable practice of documentary photography. This has involved the use of singular photographs to detail the complex attributes of historical events and continues to a certain degree to this day, with an example being the conflict-related photography achiev
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The Story of Film: An Odyssey
documentary by Mark Cousins
The Story of Film: An Odyssey | |
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Film poster | |
Genre | Documentary |
Based on | The Story of Film by Mark Cousins |
Written by | Mark Cousins |
Directed by | Mark Cousins |
Narrated by | Mark Cousins |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 15 |
Producer | John Archer |
Editor | Timo Langer |
Running time | minutes |
Production company | Hopscotch Films |
Network | More4 |
Release | 3 September()– 10 December () |
The Story of Film: An Odyssey is a British documentary film about the history of film, presented on television in 15 one-hour chapters with a total length of over minutes. It was directed and narrated by Mark Cousins, a film critic from Northern Ireland, based on his book The Story of Film.[1][2]
The series was broadcast in September on More4, the digital television service of UK broadcaster Channel 4. The Story of Fi
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Authentic talking cinema: the history of documentary
Though scholars of early rulle have been much preoccupied with the emergence of storytelling and narrative, the dominant mode of early cinema – beginning with the first films of the Lumières in – was in fact the actuality, or what might be called documentary before documentary.
An instinct for what Siegfried Kracauer described as the “seizure of physical reality” produced a huge variety of images, which despite their brief and fragmentary character were not without ideological implications, since they generally reproduced social stereotypes unthinkingly and frequently projected and enhanced the iconic imagery of state power and authority.
Cinema was born in the ‘civilised’ countries of Europe and North amerika, and these early films also traded on exotic pictures from every corner of the world, which not surprisingly reflected the colonial ideology of the day. The French at this time used the term ‘documentaire’ for what