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  • Tên sách : The Technique of Documentary Film Production
  • Tác giả : W. Hugh Baddeley
  • Dịch giả :
  • Ngôn ngữ : Anh
  • Số trang : 259
  • Nhà xuất bản : Focal Press
  • Năm xuất bản : 1963
  • Phân loại : Sách tiếng Anh-English
  • MCB : 1210000005538
  • OPAC :
  • Tóm tắt :

The Technique of Documentary Film Production

by W. HUGH BADDELEY, F.R.P.S., M.B.K.S

with a preface by PAUL ROTHA

Second Revised Edition

CONTENTS

PREFACE by Paul Rotha               7

INTRODUCTION                          9

  1. PREPARATION OF THE SCRIPT 13

The Film Treatment             13

Subject Research                 15

The Shooting Script            16

Script Terminology             17

Scripting the Unpredictable 20

  1. THE BREAKDOWN SCRIPT 29
  2. BUDGETING A DOCUMENTARY FILM 32

Cost of Materials                 35

Travelling Expenses            37

Music Royalties                   38

Hire of Equipment and Facilities  38

Insurance                             39

Production Time                  40

Overheads                           41

Margin of Profit                  42

Submitting the Quotation    42

Checking the Cost               43

A Typical Budget                43

  1. PLANNING A DOCUMENTARY 46

Colour or Monochrome       48

Lighting                               48

Personnel                             50

Obtaining Outside Services 53

Hiring Actors                      54

Costume                              55

Wigs, Beards and Moustaches      55

Make-up                              56

Studios, Sets, Furniture and Props   56

Hiring Commentators          57

Library Material                  58

The Shooting Schedule        59

  1. CHOICE OF CAMERA EQUIPMENT AND FILMSTOCK 62

35 mm. or 16 mm.               62

Choice of Filmstock            64

Negative or Reversal?         64

Choice of Camera                66

The Continuous Reflex Camera    66

Cameras for Use in the Field         70

Choice of Lenses                 71

Focal Lengths                      72

Aperture                              73

Selecting Filters                   75

Filters for Colour                76

Filters for Black-and-White 79

Polaroid Filters                    81

Exposure Meters                 82

Tripods                               84

The “Spider”                       87

Reflectors Other Accessories        87

  1. SHOOTING

Rules and Conventions of Film Assembly       89

Division of Subject-Matter into Separate Shots   90

Sequence of Shots                         92

Planning Camera Angles               95

Continuity Between Shots            97

Condensing Time                          98

Directing People                            99

Liaison During Production          101

Conventions of Movement          102

Overlapping Action                    103

The “Cut-Away”                         104

Breaking the Rules                      106

Dope Sheets                                108

Exposing the Film                       110

Choice of Lens                            111

Camera Angle and Viewpoint     111

Use of the Tripod                        112

Camera Jams                              113

  1. SHOOTING A DOCUMENTARY OVERSEAS 114

Production Hazards to be Considered  115

Customs Requirements                         117

Health Considerations                          118

Dispatching Rushes                              118

Safeguards Against Tropical Conditions 119

Problems of Extreme Humidity            120

Budgeting a Film Overseas                   121

  1. LIGHTING ON LOCATION 123

Four Types of Lighting               123

Lighting Contrast                        126

Use of Reflectors                         127

Light Units and Their Use           127

Overrun Photographic Lamps    129

Tungsten-halogen Lamps            129

The Problems of Mixed Light     129

Filming with Very Limited Light 131

Working on Remote Locations   132

Achieving Colour Balance with Artificial Lighting  133

  1. SOUND RECORDING 135

Development of Sound-Recording Methods  136

Magnetic Sound Recording                            137

Problems of Synchronizing Magnetic Tape    137

Perforated Magnetic Film                               140

Mixing Sound Tracks                                     140

Recording on Location                                   142

“Wild” Recordings                                         143

The Problems of Extraneous Sounds             144

Placing the Microphone for Synchronous Shooting 145

Problems with Acoustics on Location            146

Assessing Acoustic Qualities                         148

When Acceptable Results are Impossible to Obtain 149

Choice of Microphone                                    149

Retarding speech                                            151

Recording Music                                            152

Single-Microphone and Multi-Microphone Techniques

Methods of Synchronizing Sound

Recorded at the Same Time as Picture      154

Recording Synchronous Sound with an

Independent Recorder                               156

  1. ARTWORK AND ANIMATION 157

Titles                                                              157

Filming Titles                                                 158

Superimposing Titles                                     158

Adding Fades and Dissolves                          160

Stop Action and Animation                           160

Cartoon-style Animation                               161

Simple Animation                                          164

Stop Action                                                    166

Filming Stills, Drawings and Paintings          167

Camera Movement as a Substitute for Animation   169

  1. EDITING 171

Obtaining a Work-Print                                 171

Footage Numbers                                           172

First Assembly                                               174

Screening the Rough Assembly                      175

Assembling Picture and Synchronous Sound 176

Marking Up the Work-Print                           179

Marking Up for Opticals                                180

Master Matching                                            181

Preparing the Master for Opticals                  183

A and B Roll Assembly                                 183

“Chequer-Board” Printing                              186

Cueing for Release Printing                            187

Leaders                                                           188

Marking Up for Printing                                189

  1. THE SOUND TRACK 190

The Commentary Script                                 190

Writing Commentary to Picture                     191

Basic Rules of Commentary Writing              192

Style in Commentary Writing                        193

Blending Commentary with Visuals              194

Integrating the Commentary and Visuals       197

Recording the Commentary to Picture           197

Cueing the Commentator                               198

Cueing the Work-Print                                   199

Cueing by Footage                                         200

Placing of Commentary in Relation to Picture 201

Avoiding Paper Rustle Dealing with “Fluffs” 203

The Commentator’s Style                              203

Need for Rehearsal                                         205

Handling the Recorded Commentary Track   206

Post-Synchronous Recording of Dialogue to Picture 206

Recording to Picture Loops                            207

Laying the Commentary                                 207

Using the Synchronizer with Track Reader    209

Bringing the Commentary and Picture into

Precise Synchronism                                 210

Cutting in Retakes                                          211

Running Double-Headed                                212

The Music Track                                            212

Library Music                                                213

Laying Magnetic Music Tracks                      214

Mixing Music from Discs                               215

Music Royalties                                             217

Effects                                                            217

The Sound Effects Library                             219

Mixing the Various                                        219

Sound Tracks Sound Loops                           221

Simpler Methods of Mixing                           221

Checking Synchronism During Mixing          222

Producing the Optical Track                          223

Characteristics of Optical Tracks                   224

Cueing for Printing                                         225

Blooping Joins in Optical Tracks                   226

Checking Track Quality in the Print               227

  1. OBTAINING PRINTS 228

Checking the Grading

Checking Colour Quality                               229

Joins in Release Prints                                   231

Sound Quality                                                232

Obtaining Release Prints                                233

Printing from Dupe Negatives                        233

35 mm. Colour Release Prints                        235

16 mm. Colour Release Prints                        236

Comparative Costs of Different Methods      237

Fragile Emulsions                                          238

Release Prints on Both 35 mm. and 16 mm.  239

Magnetic Sound Prints                                   240

8 mm. Sound Prints                                       241

Spooling Up                                                   241

  1. DISTRIBUTION 243

Cinema Distribution                                       243

Selling Films to Television                             244

The Non-Theatrical Market                            247

Distributing the Sponsored Film                    247

Setting Up the Sponsor’s Own Library         248

The Sponsored Film in Education                  249

  1. CONCLUSION 250

GLOSSARY OF TERMS                     252

INDEX                                                 259

 

PREFACE

Having just finished making a feature film, it seems odd to be writing a piece to preface a manual of documentary film production. Yet on reflection the two genres of cinema have much in common: it is wholly the matter of approach, and even this can have common interests. Some years back I drew the close parallels between Flaherty’s magnificent documentary Louisiana Story and De Sica’s equally fine so-called fiction film Bicycle Thieves. What has happened since then to make cinema really alive and exciting again is that the most perceptive of makers of feature films have learned ever more deeply from documentary cinema in the pursuit of the “creative interpretation of reality”.

Mr. Baddeley’s manual, and he makes this most clear, is not concerned with the aesthetics and/or social approach to the documentary film. He does not deal with the poetic, the humanistic or the sociological attitude of the documentary film-maker. His is a book—and to my mind a most useful and valuable one—about what we may call the craft offilm-making, if you can apply that term to a highly-industrialized and mechanized medium. I find his work all embracing and, lam sure, most accurate.

In the past year or two, some European, British and American film­makers of what is pretentiously called the nouvelle vague have, it would seem, cast aside the technical niceties and skills of our medium in an effort to become more “free”. They have rebelled, as the Italian neorealists and British documentary movement did before them, against the confined restrictions of the studio-made film. They have let their cameras and micro­phones roam the streets and houses of today’s life and, aided by recent technical improvements of film stock, light portable movie-cameras and magnetic sound-recording, have given some exciting work far closer to pure cinema than anything from the conservative commercial entertainers.

Personally I much welcome and applaud this freedom—it has a fine freshness to it—but at the same time it has often shown a disrespect for the craft of film-making about which I am not happy. Somewhere between the two must lie a middleway in which freedom of technical means can be equated with the skill of fine craftsmanship. Out-of-focus shots, a wavering hand-held camera and sound-recording in which the dialogue is inaudible are the privilege of the rank amateur. Film-making is a professional task.

In commercial cinema, on the other hand, due I fancy mainly to the frustration of being compelled to make worthless subjects dictated by the industry’s ideas of ”entertainment”, many talented film-makers have become fascinated by the perfections of the technique per se, thus film after film is a hollow shell of glittering technique. Such striving after per­fectionism is, however, very expensive and is one reason—but not by any means the only one—for the high cost of commercial film production today in England and America.

To those of us who started in thirty odd years ago with the documentary world, Mr. Baddeley’s book is obviously alarming. In those days, mainly due to the sheer lack of money with which to obtain good technical facilities, we had to make do with the most primitive equipment, a minimum allowance of film-stock and public transport was the rule for travel. Imagination and improvization were our saviours.

But I am not one of those people who believe that an artist must triumph over the poorest of tools and materials, especially in a medium like the film which depends so greatly on mechanical instruments, but I do believe that an over-abundance of technical aids can confuse the film artist’s direction of purpose. I once recall watching a distinguished documentary director, who had been given an elaborate camera-velocilator to use for the first time, spending all morning in deciding how to shoot a simple “insert” of a map pinned to a wall. Without the many variations made possible by this intriguing piece of equipment, I am sure this director would have shot the map perfectly adequately in five minutes. The results would have been just as good.

Nevertheless, in spite of my reservations, all kinds of film production have become infinitely more complicated—and more expensive—since the war years. Thus it becomes more and more important for the film-maker— whatever his particular talent as a director, cameraman, editor or so on— to know and master the tools of his craft before he can afford to take risks and discard them. To this end, Mr. Baddeley’s book will be a tremendous help, and it may lead its readers perhaps on to a more specialized study of works devoted to the various branches of production.

At the same time, I must record that I still believe that knowledge is best gained by the hard way of trial and error in practical experience: but even here this book can have its place of reference.

February, 1963                                 PAUL ROTHA

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