Why Docudrama?: Fact-fiction on Film and TV

Couverture
Alan Rosenthal
SIU Press, 1999 - 387 pages

When the 1990 English docudrama Who Bombed Birmingham? cast serious doubt on the guilt of six men convicted of bombing two British pubs in 1974, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher declared that a "television program alters nothing." But, as Alan Rosenthal concludes, Thatcher was wrong. The film engendered a new inquiry that led to the release of the convicted men.

Rosenthal notes that docudrama wields more influence than the average documentary and that "reality-based stories taken from topical journalism are the most popular drama genre on U.S. and British television today." This three-part collection of diverse and provocative essays addresses the dominant questions and controversies the genre poses.

Defining and examining the rationale of docudrama, the nine essayists in the first part discuss the history and development of docudrama on TV and in film; they also consider the place of truth in docudrama, the main critiques of the form, and the audience's susceptibilities and expectations. In investigating the actual filmmaking process, the eight essays in the second part focus on how "docudrama as a 'commodity' is created in the United States and England." Part essay, part case study, and part interview, this section also explores how Hollywood and the commercial networks as well as producers and writers work and think. The final part presents an in-depth critique of a number of controversial docudramas that have helped form and shape public opinion, including Battleship Potemkin, Roots, Reds, JFK, Mississippi Burning, Schindler's List, and In the Name of the Father.

In addition to Rosenthal, the contributors are John Corner, George F. Custen, David Edgar, Leslie Fishbein, George MacDonald Fraser, Todd Gitlin, Douglas Gomery, Richard Grenier, Sumiko Higashi, Tom W. Hoffer, Jerry Kuehl, Steve Lipkin, Yosefa Loshitsky, Ian McBride, Richard Alan Nelson, Conor Cruise O'Brien, Derek Paget, Robert A. Rosenstone, Betsy Sharkey, Irene Shubik, Jeff Silverman, D. J. Wenden, Sita Williams, and Leslie Woodhead.

 

Table des matières

Part
1
Clio in Hollywood
19
Origins and Developments
35
Docudrama on American Television
64
Television Hollywood and the Evolution
78
Dramatized Documentary
101
Where Are We Going and How and Why?
111
Lies about Real People
119
Ernest Kinoy Michael Eaton
201
Tony Parker and the Documentary Play
221
Part Three
229
Film and Reality
236
Rule Britannia
260
Docudrama and the Interpretation of History
271
Reds as History
296
Patriot Games
311

Part
125
Hollywood and the Research Department
133
Making Bitter Harvest
146
Searching for Truth
160
Murder and Mayhem Stalk TV
167
A Dramatists Viewpoint
174
The Politics of Passion an Interview with
188
The Making of Hostages
324
Historical FactHistorical Film
333
Postmodernism Versus
340
Schindlers List as Docudrama
357
In the Name of the Father
370
List of Contributors
385
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (1999)

Alan Rosenthal, a professor emeritus of communications at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, is a documentary filmmaker with more than fifty films to his credit as writer, director, or producer. His books include Succeeding as a Documentary Filmmaker: A Guide to the Professional World and From "Chariots of Fire" to "The King's Speech" Writing Biopics and Docudramas. His docudrama The First Fagin, about the transportation of convicts to Australia in the nineteenth century, was invited for special feature presentation at the Melbourne International Film Festival in 2012.

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