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Definition
(Coordinator of Inter-America Affairs)
- attempt to protect Latin American countries from "foreign" political influence
- discourage rise of revolutionary national movements in Latin America
- Bolster political + economic relations among countries in Americas
- Initiated the "Good Neighbor Policy" |
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Argentina + Mexico during WWII |
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Definition
- Argentina: neutral
- US suspected Arg. of being buddies with fascists
- cut off supply of film stock & gave it to Mexico instead
- directly affected Arg. cinema's fall + Mexico's rise
- Mexico ultimately surpassed Arg. thanks to US |
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Definition
- both national and regional
- reflected cultural nationalism of Mexico
- primary source of for Spanish-language films in Americas
- production techniques of Hollywood + ideologies of Mexico |
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Mexico (1942)
- private central bank for film production
- state-run production and distribution company
- allowed tax reliefs
- emphasized popular production |
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Definition
"the great year" of Mexican cinema
- classics made and inte |
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Term
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Definition
unionization of all Mexican film industry workers |
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Term
Golden Age of Mexican Cinema |
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Definition
(1936-1956)
- Post WWII, Hollywood regained its dominance
- but Mexico was most dominant in Latin America |
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Term
Recurring "mythologies" of Mexican cinema |
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Definition
- Mexicanness (Cultural Nationalism): epic dramas, modernization of culture + politics, allegories
- focus on national history, all-things-mexican (i.e. dramatizing the Mexican Revolution)
- Rural Tradition (pre-modern idealized, innocent, noble) vs. Urban Strife (modern cities shown as corrupt, dangerous, poor)
- Melodrama (mode of emotional/stylistic excess)
- family + females
- Caberetara |
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Term
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Definition
cycle of films about prostitutes and showgirls
example: Aventurera (1955) |
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Example of Mexican nationalism film |
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Definition
Wild Flower (1943)
- heritage cinema
- set during Mexican Revolution
- melodrama, comedy, musical
- appealed to broad audience |
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Definition
Mexican comedic actor; Charlie Chaplin-esque |
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Definition
- Mexican actress
- came from Hollywood
- matronly
- purity and beauty |
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Definition
- Popular musician
- Leading actor of Golden Age
- Symbolized urban migrants + working class |
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Definition
- Mexican actress
- femme fatale (seductive/aggressive)
- refused Hollywood
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Definition
- Surrealist Spanish filmmakers
- Made Un Chien Andalou
- Worked in Mexican film industry for 20 years
- Brought prestige to Mexican cinema
- Los Olvidados: urban realist drama, bleak portrait |
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Definition
- Mussolini: film good for public + maintaining gov't support (controlled until post-WWII)
- Less organized than German's control on film
- built programs like Vencie Film Festival + Cincecitta Studios |
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Definition
(1932)
- world's first film festival
- elevated film to art status
- part of the nationalization of culture |
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Definition
Centralized film production in Italy and Rome |
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Italian Cinema during WWII |
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Definition
- mostly slick studio pictures: "white telephone films"
- mainly about upper class
- nationalistic heroic propaganda films produced (less popular) |
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Term
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Definition
- departed from fascist-era studio films
- gave birth to Neo-Realistic films |
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Term
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Definition
- influenced by French Poetic Realism but less stylized
- not necessarily popular, but brought prestige
- had a strong sense of morality
- focused on on devastating effects of Fascism + WWII
- focused on daily-ness of life (everyday people)
- narratives are strings of events, not necessarily causally linked
- REFUSED Hollywood narrative style: romance was there, but not central to the plot. featured open ended conclusions. |
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Term
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Definition
- location shooting
- natural light
- long takes + camera movement
- more medium and long shots (close-ups rare)
- non-professional actors
- post-dubbed sound |
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Term
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Definition
- methods of representation are always constructed
- reflects a desire for authenticity
- set of stylistic conventions/techniques that change over time
- critiques representations as distanced from real life |
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Term
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Definition
- vertically integrated studio system
- Hollywood + avant-garde Europe influenced
- German Expressionism influenced
- director + screenwriter = major control
- Hollywood films did not dominate in Japan
- Silent films coexisted in 1930s
- benshi |
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Term
Japanese Cinema during-WWII |
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Definition
- militaristic totalitarian government rises
- cinema becomes gov't controlled: 1939-1945
- most films supported national policies
- historical films banned |
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Japanese Cinema post-WWII |
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Definition
- comes to international prestige which has major cultural and historical significance
- began to be seen as art cinema
- did not adhere to to Hollywood or European studio conventions
- experimented with narrative structure (Rashomon), pacing (long takes), framing (Ozu + frontality) and editing
- Imported Japanese cinema = rare
- Reflected philosophy of mujo
- art cinema > popular cinema |
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Definition
philosophy of nothing lasts forever; everything born into this world changes and will ultimately disappear |
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Japanese Cinema: Contradicting Themes |
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Definition
1. Otherness vs. Assimilation into international culture
2. Long for understanding past vs. transitioning to modern
3. films as allegory/style vs. films as apolitical |
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Term
Japanese Cinema: Major Genres |
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Definition
1. House Drama
- deals with modern issues + family dynamics (i.e. Tokyo Story)
2. Swordfight film
- stages traditional image of Japan (i.e. Rashomon)
3. Historical film
- combines heritages/tradition with action (i.e. The Seven Samurai) |
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Definition
(director of Rashomon)
- dynamic editing
- widely popular and young
- accessible by Westerns |
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Definition
(director of Ugetsu)
- won international prize at Venice
- elaborate long takes
- dissolves
- distant framings
- developing compositions |
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Definition
(director of Tokyo Story)
- humorous
- low-angle framing
- cut-aways
- deviated from 180 degree rule: frontality
- family dramas
- generational conflict |
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Term
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Definition
- film increasingly being seen as art due to creation of feature lengths that departed from the Hollywood cinema expectations + film festivals
REASONS: - class mobility: desire to distinguish self from middle-class
- exoticness: interest in foreign cultures (specifically enemies from war) + foreign films dealt with sex |
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Term
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Definition
- result of Anti-Trust ruling and reduction of productions
- promoted film as art, but art isn't a cash cow
- struggled as a business -> many bankrupt independent studios
- Art Film Theatres had major success + repeat business, catered to niche audience + some showed foriegn films only |
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Term
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Definition
- came about after WWII
- was a metaphoric way of working through poltiical and social issues
- Science Fiction and Film Noir |
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Term
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Definition
- recurring themes of invasion + contagion
- danger to the american way of life
- threats from external forces (commies)
- loss of individuality
(i.e. Invasion of the Body Snatchers) |
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Term
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Definition
- post-WWII mode of crime/detective films
- influenced by German Expressionism + FPR
- reflects anxieites of threat to American way of life
- features protagonists who refuse to conform to the rules |
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Term
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Definition
- low key/chiarascuro lighting (half-lit/light dark lighting)
- rough characters (nihilistic attitudes)
- features flashbacks
- structures of regret
- femme fatale |
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Term
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Definition
(1949)
- "the Paramount Decision" = affected all major studios
- changed economic stability of the industry as a whole
- pre-Ruling = oligopoly
- post-Ruling:
- no more oligopoly or vertical integration
- exhibition no longer controlled
- marketing crucial now
- independent + foreign film market opens up
- fewer films made, but bigger films made
- market segmentation (adult films, kid films) |
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Term
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Definition
- TV becomes mass medium in 50s
- convienent + free entertainment
- a direct competitor with struggling Hollywood
HOLLYWOOD'S RESPONSE (conjunctive):
- studio's sold off rights to films to gain more revenue on older products
- studios began producing TV programs |
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Term
Television Effects: Hollywood's Disjunctive Response |
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Definition
1. Widescreen formats: making film a spectacle
2. Standardizing color: color saturation (brighter, bolder than real life)
3. 3D/Smell-O-Visions
4. Drive-Ins: suburbanization of films; marketing teens |
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Term
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Definition
language + size = self-contained for national audiences |
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Term
Sound in Latin America cinema |
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Definition
- was a major problem at first (dubbing technology not feasible)
- Hollywood hurt because silent films were dominant in L.A. market
- tried multi-lingual facilities, using different actors and filming multiple versions of films
- Spanish-speaking Hollywood films turned out to be not that successful (accents not right, bad actors
- rise of dubbing solved all of this |
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Term
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Definition
legislative assemblies in each province, a centralized gov't for the region; nationl elections; created infrastructure for later independent national gov't |
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Term
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Definition
leads to Indian independence |
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Term
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Definition
multi-everything; tensions between tranditional and modern; never a national indian culture before the Partition |
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Term
Indian Independence + Film |
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Definition
film gives them a nationalism; film and film-music became central to the project of creating a national culture after independence |
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Term
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Definition
- hybrid in strucutre and influence (Western culture)
- film provided most popular form to talk through past and present
- central to forming a sense of national collectivity
- created a romantic/melodramatic image of the nation (took everyday struggles, made it mythic) |
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Term
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Definition
- emerged in 1950s and reflected post-Partition cultures and desires
- mixed fantasies, was melodramatic/romantic/action
- musical spectacles
- formulaic
- a natioanlist allegory
- reflected multiculturalism of India
- traditional vs. modern |
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Term
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Definition
- 1926-1934: 4 major, veritically integrated studios (similar to Hollywood); no financial stability, but a lot of films produced; unsupported by gov't
- WWII = bankrupting studios, moratorium on non-essential buildings halted distribution
- 1950: studios collapse
- STILL: film recovers and emerges as central to nation-building and cultural cohesion
- Industry became very decentralized; many films made through independent finance capital investment (no studio model)
- Hindi cinema = de facto national cinema |
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Term
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Definition
- debuted in 1931
- silent was popular national medium
- linguistic differences prohibited a nationalized cinema
- Bombay emerges as center of popular film production |
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Term
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Definition
- Hindi (mixture of Hindi and Urdu)
- became dominant language for popular cinema (films still dubbed however)
- not language of Bombay, but most spoken in country
- Beauty of the World (1931) - "all talking, sing, dancing" first sound film |
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Term
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Definition
- film music = first national music India ever had
- not localized to a particular region or custom
- not "classical" or traditional Indian music
- a masala fusion
- became loved because music existed beyond the film (often more popular)
- songs recorded before shooting began
- films NOT musicals
- music created a structure of repeat viewing |
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Term
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Definition
(1935)
- songs recorded in a music studio separate from filming
- a vocalist performs the songs, not actor
- lipsyched later
- songs then released as popular recordings in their own right |
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Term
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Definition
- Bombay not only center of film production
- Alternative post-Partition cinema
- Art Cinema
- more emphasis on realism and influence from international art cinemas
- music was classical |
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Term
Studio Production in Classical Era |
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Definition
- synch-sound feature film
- continuity form
- narrative efficiency and clarity
- character motivation and romance
- conventional social and sexual mores
- rise of nationalist cinemas
- auteurs + art cinema emerge |
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Term
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Definition
- art film modes vs. popular modes
- experimental modes vs. narrative modes of form
- artisanal modes vs. sutdio modes of production
- government-sponsored vs. commercial modes |
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Term
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Definition
(1960)
- new forms emerge: french new wave, new italian cinema, cinema verité
- industry shifts after Hollywood crisis: loosening of production code, reduced production, no more star contracts |
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Term
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Definition
Bicycle Thieves
- epitomizes form, politics and sentiment of neorealism
- human struggle and morality
- poor man in impossible situation
- realtionship between father and son
- use of long take, tracking shots, loose sequential narrative
- released after first democratic election in Italy
- children: 2 moments in Italian history (bruno = during WWII, baby = new gov't) |
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Term
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Definition
- Post-WWII Japanese film
- camera movement navigates complex spaces (follows actor through crowd)
- deep space and long take
- framing within frame
- setting: 16th century, during civil
- stages struggles, delusions and losses of war
- allegory for recent events (but has fantasy elements)
- comment on greed during war |
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Term
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Definition
- elaborate narrative strucutre
- multiple temporalities
- extensive flashbacks
- conflicting testimonies
- ambiguity of truth
- different styles for different parts |
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Term
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Definition
- home drama
- generational difference
- family dynamics
- framing
- editing and spatial relations
- frontality |
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Term
Invasion of the Body Snatchers |
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Definition
- Film as allegory (Science Fiction)
- people look the same, but lose individuality
- pod people an invisible threat (look like everyone)
- echoes of anxieties about communists and homosexuals
- only be stopped by force + containment
- gov't intervention necessary |
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Term
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Definition
- film noir infused with post-war trauma (HUAC)
- the box = atomic weapon
- manhattan project
- fantasy of the unattached playboy in the nuclear family age
- LA in transition |
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Definition
- artisanal film
- found footage film
- experiment with creating an emotional narrative without plot/dialogue
- images of war + destruction |
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Definition
- women's film/melodrama
- insensitive children give their widowed mother a TV set to keep her company
- film denigrates TV culture
- gender associations: TV for women |
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Term
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Definition
- kapoor (director + star) = biggest star of era
- character adapted from Chaplin's tramp
- one of the first international hits
- flashback framing story
- allegory of tensions between the westernized ruling class + socially marginalized
- judge = gov't
- raj = people
- redemption |
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Definition
- impoverished family in post-Partition Bengali
- framing, deep space
- high contrast compositions
- classical music
- use of ambient + expressionist sound |
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Term
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Definition
- experimental film
- artisanal mode of production
- representation vs. abstract
- exploration of human body and sexuality
- exploration of vision and limits of perception
- exploration of limits of film as medium
- breaking down of production code |
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Term
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Definition
- cinèma verité (film truth)
- the new way to capture reality
- captures everyman
- aspired for greater truth
- desire to do more than Hollywood + more realisitic
- new documentary techniques:
- synch sound + mobile recording
- long take
- self-reflexivity
- moving cameras |
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