Breaking into Documentary Filmmaking
Do what you love. If you're making a documentary for money, it will only fail.
By William Gazecki
Editor's Note: Academy
Award-nominated and Emmy Award-winning documentary filmmaker William
Gazecki got his start in the entertainment industry by helping produce
albums for artists such as The Doors, Bette Midler, Joe Cocker and Leo
Sayer. He then went into television, where he won awards for his
production work on shows such as "St. Elsewhere," "Hill Street Blues," and
"thirtysomething," before finding his passion as a documentary/independent
filmmaker. Recently, besides his ongoing film projects, Gazecki has been
involved in starting a new production company called OpenEdge Media, based
in West Los Angeles. We asked William Gazecki what his advice would be to
young filmmakers who wanted to get into the documentary world, and he
responded with the following article. (DVFormat.com)
Documentary films are a
very attractive alternative to feature films. The stakes are not as high
because the money is not as large, so the opportunities are actually
easier to come by, and the risk is not so great. Thus, when you really get
down to making films, getting them funded, and produced, you're not
dealing with twenty to one hundred million dollars, you're dealing with
one thousand to half a million dollars. Getting into documentaries can be
viable and attractive for a variety of reasons. The nice thing about it is
that it's still filmmaking. It's still that craft. It doesn't carry with
it all of the extreme challenges that feature filmmaking brings.
I used to see people getting into documentaries because
they thought it was a stepping stone to feature films. I personally don't
like that because I think the documentary genre deserves people that are
there for the right reasons. They're there because they appreciate
reality; they appreciate the real things in life that are interesting and
fascinating. They want to share that; they want to create vehicles to
disseminate these facets of life in a film genre, in the film medium.
You have to educate yourself in the craft, but the craft is very
diverse. I chose to take a highly technical hands-on approach, but you
don't have to do that. You can be more of a financier-producer type. Once
you decide that documentary filmmaking is for you, for whatever reasons,
you have to educate yourself in the elements of the industry. And a lot of
that is just vocabulary to begin with. You have to know the terms: What is
a producer, a director, a distributor, a financier, an editor, a
cameraman, or a grip? You need to learn the technical terms and the
avocations; you need to educate yourself in what the job descriptions are
for each position and how they work together. From there you can make a
more intelligent choice as to what kind of role you want to play.
The story is the bottom line. Once you've made your choices and
once you've decided on what you want to do and where you're going, telling
the story is number one. You don't want to put your own personality too
far in front or too prominently in the mix. How you begin is extremely
important because the first moment is a thread to the next moment and so
on. You set a tone and you create a moment. Films are about a string of
moments.
Young
filmmakers can go wherever they think that they themselves can speak
through a medium. For example, if you really love sports, what athletes
and the sports business are about, and the dynamics within a team and
between teams, then you might become a sports documentarian. If you're
going to be a full-time filmmaker, you've got to find projects that you
feel are either relevant or appealing to some larger group, and that's a
personal choice. You have to pay attention and spend time considering what
would find a home in the marketplace; otherwise, it may be very difficult
for you to financially sustain yourself, unless you have independent
means. The other side of documentary filmmaking is to be supported by
foundations and the non-profit world, which is very common. This is a
personal process where you learn not to compromise yourself and not sell
out to the checkbook. But at the same time, you must make films that you
feel a personal relationship with, and a personal investment in.
I'm a cameraman; my specialty is handheld camerawork because I
like to capture the moment. I'm a fan of verite -- hand-held work is a
real intuitive gut-level thing, and that's what I'm good at. I'm a
director/cameraman which is what a lot of documentarians are. One of
things about documentaries is that you're often shooting with one camera.
Let's say you're shooting an interview with one camera. You're almost
always going to cut that interview down. And if you cut that interview
down, you're going to have jump cuts. And if you have jump cuts you have
to cover them with something. So when you're shooting you have it to think
coverage. You've got to think reverses, b-roll and graphics, something to
cut away to. How are you going to string this together when you're using
little bits and pieces later on? The thing about editing is that it's very
important, but it needs to appear as if nobody did anything. The best
films are films that you think essentially came out of the camera, and
that's what many people think. The key word in all of this is seamless.
The viewer should not be aware of any technique at all. And that is
something that is really a fine art of the craft. It's the sign of a
really accomplished filmmaker if you can look at a film and not see the
filmmaker.
Digital technology is completely in support of that, because
you can essentially now have all of your postproduction tools at your
fingertips in one room, which is unprecedented, something that's only been
true in the last three or four years. Digital technology affords low-cost
access to production, but it's really just a tool. The real meat is in the
idea, in the concept.
A lot of directors are technically
preoccupied, and they don't realize that the main part of a director's job
is dealing with people. You have to know how to deal with your subjects --
how to talk to them and how to get them to appear on camera without being
nervous, or afraid. Sometimes you have to work just to get them on camera.
This is especially true if you're doing controversial subjects where
you're going against an adversary, like the district attorneys in my film,
Reckless Indifference, who did not want to appear, so getting them
on tape was a complex process, and with my film, WACO: The Rules of
Engagement, where we couldn't get the FBI to appear so we had to find
a way to do the film without the FBI's cooperation. Learning how to deal
with those human logistics has nothing to do with technology, and it's a
very important part of the process.
My documentaries deal with
people and society -- human actions and histories and feelings, what makes
a human being do what they do, what makes a society go in the direction it
goes, and the evolution of culture.
I'm currently making three
theatrical documentaries: the first is Crop Circles: Quest for
Truth. I think that crop circles are one of the most unrecognized
significant unexplained phenomena in the world. I think there's something
going on there that's more than just a natural anomaly. It is
unprecedented and of major significance, and it deserves more attention.
Despite the occasional hoaxer, it's absolutely true and truly important to
humanity as a whole. I think it's that big.
The premise of the
second film, Into the Mystic, about the history of psychedelics, is
that for thousands of years, in pretty much every indigenous culture
throughout history, sacred psychotropic plants have been utilized to help
guide and manage society. To put that in contemporary terms, what a
psychedelic experience can offer to a properly prepared, properly educated
individual is an opportunity for innovative thinking or insight. And I
think that we're in a place in history, in terms of how the Western world
is leading the planet, that innovation is something that we really need to
start focusing on for the next hundred years.
The Orphans of
Duplessis, the third documentary I'm in production on, is very much
like my film WACO: The Rules of Engagement, in that it's the
unraveling of a major unknown injustice. It involves the Catholic Church
in a very fundamental way. It concerns the misapplication of many very
fundamental religious practices. It shows how power corrupts. Children
were involved and were severely abused. Those children are now grown
adults and their plight has gone unrecognized. They have had no closure,
or even an apology from either the Canadian government or the Catholic
Church. That's all they really want. The way we're approaching The
Orphans of Duplessis is to take the most compassionate, highest road.
What we're trying to do is a very empathetic piece to show where love went
wrong, and how much harm greed can cause. It's great drama -- a truly
dramatic story.
When I started down the road to become a
documentary filmmaker, I took a series of courses at the American Film
Institute called "Directors on Directing and Producers on Producing." All
of these guys came in one at a time, all very famous and very successful,
and they all said the same thing, "Do what you love." If you're making it
for money it will only fail, it always does. If you do what you love and
do it because you love it, your chances of success increases. Things that
are successful are always done because somebody behind it really wanted to
do it.
Don't become a filmmaker unless you're prepared for a lot
of sacrifice, a lot of risk, and putting up with your parents being on
your case for not making any money. Filmmakers don't really have
sophisticated social lives, and there are a lot of challenges. It's not
always a pretty picture, but in the end it is more than worth it.
For more information, please contact Larry Shulman, V.P.
Publicity, OpenEdge Media (310) 586-1800 or visit or website at http://www.openedge.org/ .
For more Interviews with William Gazecki, visit:
William Gazecki Under Fire
William Gazecki: The Interview -- The Truth and a Pile of Facts
Advice, William Gazecki for DVFormat.com
Dogpile.com Interviews William Gazecki
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