Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Understanding What the Documentary Films Really Is

September 14, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Documentary Films

Documentary films, as the name implies, are films produced with the intention of being an audio-visual documentation of a concept or event. A documentary film is intended to be much more like a piece of journalism than a piece of entertainment or expressive art. There is typically a voice-over narrative going on throughout a documentary film with the narrator describing what’s being seen in a businesslike way without any dramatic reading.

Documentary films are often made to more deeply explore a current event or history subject that has remained shrouded in mystery, been controversial, or in the opinion of the film maker misunderstood or underexposed. Documentaries have also been made simply to record an event of personal interest to the film maker.

Biographies, sports and music events, a compilation film of collected footage from government sources, and so on and so forth all may be subjects for a documentary film.

Documentary film makers are typically the writers, directors, and producers. Often they may act as cameramen as well.

Documentary films are most often made for TV but in more recent times there have been more of them made as direct-to-video, made-for-video, straight-to-video, or straight-to-DVD formats in which they were never first played on TV or in the theaters but were simply distributed for home-viewing.

Some major motion pictures when released in DVD format also come with bonus DVDs that act as documentary films of the making of the movie.

Documentaries also often feature re-enactments of events that could not or were not originally documented on film such as historical events from the year 1776.

There have also been “mockumentaries” made, in which a piece of comedy fiction is made but is done up in the same dry and straightforward format of an actual documentary. “This Is Spinal Tap” and “The Gods Must Be Crazy” are two of the most successful mockumentaries ever made.

To put together a quality documentary film, the filmmaker first begins by doing research, even if he knows the subject matter well already.

The Main point of a documentary film is to relay facts and information from all angles.

Quality documentaries usually include interviews at some point. This is a technique for lending authoritativeness to the film’s producer by getting people to speak from first-hand knowledge about the subject matter or an aspect of it.

A documentary film also has to be well organized in an interesting and logical format.

Unlike with many fictional movie stories, a documentary should never deliberately confuse, mislead, or leave something mysterious.

Multiple perspectives or opinions can be highly effective at giving a documentary film depth.

Joseph Vautour runs
www.tv-film-production-international.com
A website dedicated to helping people making their TV or Film project.

Related posts:

  1. 3d animation, motion graphics and CGI for documentary films Animation and CGI in Documentary filmsThings have come a long...
  2. Documentary Films in a Short Overview A Documentary film is a great way of exploiting cinema’s...
  3. Documentary Film History Direct Cinema is proved as influential strength along the history...
  4. Arts/Film making: The Best College For Documentary Film Are you interested in making ‘Documentaries’ which reflect the true...
  5. Presenting? Your Reality TV Show or Documentary Film Concept! Ok, so you’ve poured yourself over the monthly and weekly...

Speak Your Mind

Tell us what you're thinking...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!