The Rogosin's “On the Bowery”, fitted within the great tradition of documentary films as represented by Robert Flaherty, Mark Donskoi, Humphrey Jennings, Vladimir I. Pudovkin and Alexander Dovshenko. Documentary Film Making The proponents of documentary film making have existed before including Basil Wright whose Song of Ceylon was regarded and mooted to be one of the high points of that characterizes the British documentary film movement. The defence for documentary film making made the proponents like Basil Wright to be respected.
However, the question that worth an answer is as to whether a film of staged scenes, as in the case “On the Bowery (1956)", and the restaged films as in the case of “Nanook of the North” should be designated as a documentary film. In an attempt to understand and give a clear answer to this claim, it is important to trace the historical significance of documentary film creation. In this view, the most innovative and dominant figures in the history of documentary film were Dziga Vertov and Robert Flaherty.
These two views stood out to oppose each other, as can be seen, which todate complicates the subject of documentary film creation. In deed the American view of documentary film enables people, todate, to trace a particular tradition in documentary film. As noted, the historical view of documentary film creation was to preserve traditions. Nonetheless this paper posit that creativity, experimentalism, and innovativeness, as in the Russian view, cannot make staged or restaged films not fit for documentary record.
In fact, innovation and creativity are just approches that make audience be more engauged even though the reality side of the film may not be obvious to the eye. Taking a position on documentary film in the past was viewed as untenable and quite clear, but what is still fascinating about it is its theorising on realism in relation to film. Therefore, this paper further entails a closer look into realism and film and the historical theories that soround them. Even though Rogosin’s view about “On the Bowery” supports its suitability to be in the documentary films, as opposed to the “Nanook of the North”, theories can still challenge Rogosin’s position.
A closer look at the generally accepted formulation of the baisc guidelines and principles that characterizes the documentary of a film, as put forward by John Grierson, it becomes clear that there is misapprehension on the structure and constituents of documentary film in “On the Bowery”. Presumably the most generally acknowledged meaning of documentary film was defined by Grierson: documentary as 'the creative treatment of actuality'. Going by Grierson’s defination, this paper supports the view that staging scenes can be included in the documentary as a creative way of presenting the original traditions, as claimed in the historic view of American on documentary films.
Grierson hypothesized three standards of documentary film. The first is that narrative film ought to catch or pass on the essence of a living story or living scene. Second is the utilization of non-professional characters in their "natural" surroundings to offer a superior plausibility for the film documentarist to exhibit a perplexing interpretation of this present reality. Third is that the materials or stories illuminating the structure of narrative film ought to be raw and taken from genuine other than from acted circles.
In the view of this paper, “On the Bowery” is more suitable for documentary film creation given its rich features in the three aspcts as put forward by Grierson. The “Nanook of the North” seems to have documentary film from raw and real life as well as from acted circles. The materials from acted circles can be noted from the fact that “Nanook of the North” is a restaged film, implying it was reconstructed so to speak. A deeper sense of supporting staged or restaged scenes in documentary films can be deduced in the interpretation of reality into exciting and meaningful constructs.
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