But lack of voice-over, handheld camera, natural light, and on-location recording are common traits in such films, traits that led to a growing desire to narrate the lives of the deprived, the politicians, famous people the rising counterculture– the filmic counterpart of Henri Cartier-Bresson’s decisive moment(the best bunch of Cartier-Bresson’s photo- works, with their eerie sense of timing, accuracy and profound perceptions on human emotion and character ). Editing the huge raw footage also needed a shared commitment to the situation so that fundamental truth is finally passed on to the audience and it is this commitment to a “basic truth” that explains the pass on the quality of Direct Cinema.
Which is very close to the cinema verite of Jean Rouch that Dave Sanders. Details in his book, Direct Cinema: Observational Documentary and The Politics of The Sixties (2007). Looking at the key films belonging to the genre of Direct Cinema, within the context of the I within the context of the chaos in America during the decade. Saunders intensely depicts how such films contained a visual that seized the hustle of the sixties with the same accuracy as the New Journalism of, say people like Norman Mailer and others, meaning those who together with newer technologies developed a new style.
The technological progress of the day also gave Jean Rouch the scope to use frisky sound tools and a special wide-angle camera made by associate cinematographer Michel Brault, through this new technology Rouch attained a sense of nearness lacking earlier. Despite the type of people interviewed (mostly Morin's friends) and the ruthless (twenty-five hours of recording to the ninety films), Chronicle of a summer (Chronique dun été, 1960) was praised as the new realism, or cinéma vérité (Sanders, 2007, Hill, 2007).
Rouch, of course, used the term Direct Cineman Cinema not in the way it was used in North America. He used the term cinéma direct to free himself from the implied sense of the French term, cinéma-vérité. During the 1960s, filmmakers started to record events in a totally new way. For Rouch, technological advances like lightweight cameras and synchronous sound meant that the contact between filmmaker and his/her subject would now be in a more friendly way giving scope to get closer to his subjects, having more ‘direct’ touch with the people he was filming; drawing together the impersonal and the personal sides of documentary filmmaking.
But, for American documentary filmmakers, the tern stood for a way to ‘disappear.’ Direct Cinema in the States was known for its attempt to document reality while reducing the influence of the filmmaker's authority (Glossary of, maitres-fous.net, Brennan, All Movie Guide, Hill, 2007, Stoller, 1997).For Rouch, cinema verite had a different implication. The term developed in Russian filmmaker Dziga Vertov's Kino-Pravda (meaning, "cinema of truth" and "truth of the cinema"), a documentary series of the 1920s.
While Vertov's declared aim was using film as a way of reaching at "hidden" truth by fusing images. Rouch wanted to stir up Vertov’s wish to depict the dense reality through the exclusivity of cinema. He said: "For me, however, kinopravda. designates not 'pure truth' but the particular truth of the recorded images and sounds - a filmic truth" (Ciné-Ethnography, 99). And, in an interview (published here) with Enrico Fulchignoni, Rouch stated: "With the ciné-eye and the ciné-ear, we recorded in sound and image a ciné-vérité, Vertov's kinopravda.
This does not mean the cinema of truth, but the truth of cinema."(Ciné-Ethnography, 167).Cinéma-vérité offered Rouch a break to make a specific kind of cinematic truth, describing a totally new vision of ‘reality.’ But as there was a chance to be misread - the 'truth' of cinéma-vérité often faked a claim about the film’s detachment and thereby pretending to be close to the Direct Cinema (Feld, introduction to Ciné-Ethnography, 12-16).
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