A Companion to Documentary Film History. Группа авторов

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу A Companion to Documentary Film History - Группа авторов страница 22

A Companion to Documentary Film History - Группа авторов

Скачать книгу

target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_e20e51f3-c08a-557f-8ce6-a334e733b172">8 “Cummington Packs Town Hall to See Itself in the Films,” The (Pittsfield, Mass.) Berkshire Evening Eagle, 30 January 1946, 4.

      9 9 Local participation in government documentary was not a new phenomenon, as it was also used before the war. In Jonathan Kahana’s analysis of Joris Ivens’s Power and the Land (1940), he suggests that the film constructs a “public sphere that is depicted in, and eventually embodied by, the film itself.” See Kahana (2008: 131).

      10 10 “Madison Sees Itself in Preview of OWI Film,” Indianapolis Star, January 14, 1944, 9. A copy of the film was given to the Madison Chamber of Commerce, so it could be screened noncommercially in public and private settings. See The (Columbus, Indiana) Republic, 9 June 1944, 4.

      11 11 Although the pastor is unidentified in the film, later accounts name him as Rev. Carl Sangree, a conscientious objector during World War I, and a Congregationalist minister. See Richie Davis, “The Cummington Story,” The (Greenfield, MA) Recorder, 30 April 2005. http://www.recorder.com/richie‐s‐top‐40‐cummington‐4080218 (Accessed 20 September 2016).

      12 12 For more on Copland’s role in the film, see Lerner (2005).

      13 13 For example, the wave of “city symphony” films produced in the 1920s and 1930s encouraged filmmakers and audiences to make connections between modernism and international aspirations. See MacDonald (1997‐1998).

      14 14 See Goldstein (2009), Kitamura (2010), Wagnleitner (1994), and Fay (2008).

      15 15 See Kitamura (2010: xii).

      16 16 As Alice Lovejoy (2018) notes, the selection of American films for exhibition in occupied countries was a logistically and politically complex process, with lobbying groups in the film industry negotiating with government officials which films were appropriate to be screened.

      17 17 Among the government films adapted by the CAD were the Pare Lorentz pictures The River and The Plow That Broke the Plains.

      18 18 Smulyan (2007: 100).

      19 19 Memo from Pare Lorentz to Lt. Col. R. B. McRae, “Documentary Films for Germany,” 29 October 1946. Box 252.

      20 20 “Reorientation Branch Work Program, Fiscal Year 1947.”

      21 21 “Army to Release 52 Documentary Shorts in Reich,” Motion Picture Herald, 8 November 1947, 20. The Herald reported that the Army planned to spend $600,000 on documentary films.

      22 22 Lorentz’s departure may have also been linked to political disagreements over the direction of the CAD. Lorentz, like many other government filmmakers active in the 1930s, was closely associated with nongovernmental leftist filmmaking. Several of the projects proposed by Lorentz – a documentary on African American history titled “The Thirteenth Amendment,” a study of rural cooperatives, and a profile of community organizer Saul Alinsky – reflected this political agenda. Of these proposals, only The Rural Co‐Op was produced. After Lorentz left, the CAD tightened its control over film scripts, and began outsourcing film production to companies accustomed to working on contract. See Memo from Pare Lorentz to Lt. Col. R.B. McRae, “Proposed Productions for Occupied Areas,” 4 October 1946. Box 252.

      23 23 Memo, Chief, New York Field Office to Chief, Civil Affairs Division, 24 November 1947, Box 254.

      24 24 The CAD’s film Tulsa, Oklahoma (1949) is apparently the only of the planned six‐film series to come to fruition. In 1950, another CAD film, titled Community Chest, was made in Yonkers. In fact, several CAD films were produced within a few hours’ drive of New York, where the film production unit was based.

      25 25 Letter from Patrick Belcher to Mary, Undated. Pittsford, Vermont Historical Society.

      26 26 McCarthy (2010: 99).

      27 27 “Sun Dial Films to Make Educational, Tele Pix,” Film Daily, 28 June 1944, 2.

      28 28 “Democracy Film To Show Biloxi Fishing Scenery,” The (Biloxi, Mississippi) Daily Herald, 26 June 1951. Thanks to Ray Bellande for providing these articles.

      29 29 “Biloxi Students Needed to Take Part in Democracy Films,” The (Biloxi, Mississippi) Daily Herald, 30 June 1951.

      30 30 Monday Date Set For Beginning of Democracy Film,” The (Biloxi, Mississippi) Daily Herald, 12 July 1951.

      31 31 Stuart J. Seborer, “Annual Report of Stateside Activities Supporting the Reorientation Program in Japan and the Ryukyu Islands.” October 1950. Reorientation Branch, Office for Occupied Areas. Office of the Secretary of the Army. Washington, DC.

      32 32 Ibid.

      33 33 See Immerwah (2015) and Sackley (2011).

      34 34 For example, the production of The Cummington Story became an important episode in the town’s local history. See Richie Davis, “The Cummington Story,” Greenfield (MA) Recorder. 30 April 2005. http://www.recorder.com/richie‐s‐top‐40‐cummington‐4080218

      35 35 In recent years moving image archivists from NARA have started placing online high‐resolution digital scans of government films, including A Town Solves A Problem (1950) and The Cummington Story (1945).

Скачать книгу