MacDougall Beyond Observation Cinema PDF
MacDougall Beyond Observation Cinema PDF
DAVID MAcDOUGALL
EDGAR MORIN
The past few years have seen a. recommitment to. the principle of
observation in documentary filmmaking. The n::sult has been fresh in-
terest in the documentary film and a body of work which has separated
itself clearly from the traditions of Grierson and Vertov.l Audiences have
had restored to them the sense of wonder at witnessing the spontaneity
of life that they felt in the early days of the cinema, seeing a train rush
into the Gare de Ciotat. This sense has not grown out of the perfection
of some new illusion, but out of a fundamental change in the relation-
ship that filmmakers have sought to establish bet:Jween their subjects
and the viewer. The significance of that relationship for the practice of
social science is now beginning to be felt as a major force in the ethno-
graphic film. This would seem an appropriate moment to discuss the
implications of the observational dnema as a mode of human inquiry.
In the past anthropologists were accustomed to takmng their colleagues'
1 Many consider Vertov the father of observational cinema, and to the extent that he
was committed to penetrating the existing world with the "kino-eye" there can be
no doubt of his influence. But Vertov's films reflected the prevailing Soviet preoc-
cupation with synthesis, taking their temporal and spatial structures more from the
perceptual psychology of the observer than from structures of the events being fihned.
His was not a cinema of duration, in the sense that Bazin attributes it to Flaherty.
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116 DAVID MACDOUGALL
1
that it was difficult to understand the years of unrealized potential.
Why, we often wondered, with time running out to document the world's
vanishing cultures, had it not been anthropologists rather than journa-
lists who had first fashioned such a use for the cinema and struggled for
its perfection?
The observational direction in ethnographic filmmaking had, after
aU,. begun vigorously enough. The very invention of the cinema was in
part a response to the desire to observe the physical behavior of men and
animals (Muybridge 1887; Marey 1893). Regnault and Baldwin Spencer
quickly went beyond the popular interests of Lumiere,. making essentially
observational film records of technology and ritual in traditional societies.
Flaherty's work, for all its reflection of his own idealism, was rooted in
the careful exploration of other people's lives. It heralded the achieve-
ments of such diverse filmmakers as Cooper and Schoedsack among the
Bakhtiari of Iran, Stocker and Tindale in Australia, and Bateson and
Mead in Bali. From then on, the ethnographic film fell heir to the frag-
mentation of image that had originated in the Soviet cinema and that
began to dominat·e the documentary film with the coming of sound. I,,
It could be said that the notion of the synchronous-sound ethnographic ':
film was born at the moment Baldwin Spencer decided to take both an
Edison cylinder recorder and a Warwick camera to Central Australia
in 1901. It became a practical possibility in the late 1920's only to be
neglected in documentary films until the 19·50's. In 1935 Arthur Elton
and Edgar Anstey demonstrated what could have been done more widely
by taking sound cameras, bulky as they then were, into the slums of
Stepney and documenting the lives of the inhabitants. 2 To say that they
were ahead of their time is only to note with regret that they should not
have been.
When highly portable synchronous~sound cameras were finally deve~
loped around 1960, few ethnographic filmmakers jumped at the chance
to use them as though long awaiting this event. Two exceptions were
Jean Rouch in France and John Marshall in the United States. Indeed,
Rouch's influence was to become a major force in European filmmaking.
Marshall had already practised a makeshift kind of synchronous-sound
filming in the 1950's among the !Kung and Gwi of the Kalahari. His
observational approach foreshadowed the discoveries of the Drew
Associates group and the Canadian Film Board in North America,
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118 DAVID MACDOUGALL
although the originality of his early work only became evident with the
release, long after The Hunters, of additional material from his Peabody-
Harvard-Kalahari expeditions.
Filmmakers who followed an observational approach quickly divided
along methodological lines. Unlike the foUowers of Rouch, those in
the English-speaking world were hesitant to interact in any way with
their subjects, except occasionally to interview them. Their adherence to
this principle had an almost religious fervor and asceticism, as distinct
from the speculative Europ,ean approach as Calvinism is from Roman
Catholicism.
It is this self-denying tendency of modern observational cinema that
I should like to examine in particular. It is the tradition in which I was
trained, and it has an obvious affinity to certain classical notions of
scientific method. But this very orthodoxy could well make it a dangerous-
ly narrow model for ethnographic filmmakers of the future.
in the s~etting where events are occurring. He becomes no more than the
eye of the audience, frozen into their passivity, unable to bridge the
separation between himself and his subjects.
But it is finally scientific objectives that have placed the severest
strictures on ethnographic film. Inevitably, the extraordinary precision
of the camera-eye as a descriptive aid has influenced conceptions of the
use to which film should be put, with the result that for years. anthropo-
logists have considered film pre-eminently as a tool for gathering data.
And because film deals so overwhelmingly with the specific rather than
the abstract, it is often considered incapable of serious intellectual
articulation.
Certainly there are enough ethnographic films containing ~crude or
dubious interpretations to explain, if not to justify, such a conclusion.
Films risking more legitimate, if more difficult, kinds of analysis are often
flawed in the attempt. Still others receive no credit becaus~e their con-
tribution exists in a form that cannot be assessed in the t~erms of conven-
tional anthropology. Each of these instances adds weight to the common
impression that attempts to use film as an original medium of anthropolo-
gy are simply pretexts for self-indulgence. What is more, each attempt
that fails can be viewed as an opportunity lost to add to the fund of more
routine ethnography.
With data-gathering as the obj~ective, there is of course no real need
for the making of films, but merely for the coUection of footage upon
which a variety of studies can later be based. Inde~ed, Sorenson (1967)
suggests that footage might be coHected with only this broad objective
in view. Yet much bad anthropological writing is a similar gathering
and cataloguing of information, defident in thought or analysis. This is
not far from the criticism that Evans-Pritchard levels at Malinowski:
The theme is no more than a descriptive synthesis. of events. It is not a theore~
tical integration, ... There is consequently no real standard of relevance, since
everything has a time and space relationship in cultural reality to everything else,
and from whatever point one starts one spreads oneself over the same ground
(]962:95).
The same criticism could be made of many existing ethnographic films.
If it is a valid criticism, if ethnographic film is to become anything mor~e
than a form of anthropological note~ taking, then attempts must continue
to make it a medium of ideas. There wm inevitably be more failures. But
it seems probable that the great films of anthropoJogy, as distinct from
ethnography, are still to be made.
Curiously,. it is the survival of the data within the context of thought,
inescapable in the cinema, that is responsible for the impatience of many
Beyond Observational Cinema 123
that came from his subj·ects. Yet with the exception of Jean Rouch,. few
filmmakers today are abiDe or willing to invite such insights.
To the degree that the elements of one culture are not describable in
the terms of another, the ethnographic filmmaker must devise ways of
bringing the viewer into the social experience of his subjects. This is
partly an act of analysis, partly what Redfi,eM caUed "the art of social
science" . But it can also be a process of collaboration - the filmmaker
combining the skills and sensib]lities of his subjects with his own. This
requires that they and he, whatever their differences, be moved by at least
some common sense of urgency.
Rouch and Morin's Chronique d'un ete, about a disparate group of
young Parisians, explores their lives within the context of their interest
in the film itself. Despite the anonymity of the actual cameramen3
(which is unfortunat·e), there is no pact made with the audience to ignore
the role of the film's makers. On the contrary, it is the making of the
film that binds them and their subjects together.
Chronique d'un ete is an elaborate experiment which one would pro-
bably not ·expect to see transferred intact to a traditional society. Yet it is
remarkable how few of the ideas of this extraordinary film managed to
penetrate the thinking of ethnographic filmmakers in the decade after
it was made. The approach proved too alien to an effort preoccupied
with the needs of teaching or the urgency of preserving overall records of
imperiled societies.
It is, of course, the value of such records that is open to question. They
may be unable to answer future anthropological questions except in the
most general manner. An exhaustive analysis of a social phenomenon
usually :requires that the data be collected with the full extent of that
phenomenon in mind. It is clear from the body of Rouch's work that he
views broad salvage anthropology, based upon no defined perspective.
as more hazardous to the future understanding of extinct societies - and
therefore to an understanding of man - than a study in which the
investigator is passionately and intellectually engaged. If acutely per-
ceived,. he seems to say, the part may stand more accurately for the
whole than the survey, which succeeds only in capturing the most super-
fidal aspects of the whole. This is at odds with the view of Levi-Strauss
(1972) that anthropology is like astronomy, S·eeing human societies from
afar and only discerning their brightest constellations.
In Rouch's approach anthropology must therefore proceed by digging
from within rather than observing from without, which all too easily
Sometimes one hears only half of the conversation. The oldest exam-
ples go back to those ruminative testimonies of lonely people, of which
Paul Tomkowicz: Street-Railway Switch Man (Kroitor 1954) is perhaps
the archetype and Jorge Preloran's lmaginero (1970) the most convincing
document. Sometimes it becomes a performance - the compulsive
talking of a subject stimulated by the camera, as in Shirley Clarke's
Portrait of Jason (1967) or Tanya Ballantyne's The Things I Cannot
Change (1967). The out-of-work father in the latter film cannot resist
the offer to control the image of himself presented to the world. Yet he
bears out Rouch's dictum: whatever he tries to be, he is' only more
himself.
Sometimes role-playing provides the necessary stimulus. In Rouch's
Jaguar (1958-19•67) his young protagonists respond to the invitation to
act out an adventure for which they have long been eager. They use the
128 DAVID MACDOUGALL
POSTSCRIPT, 1994
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Beyond Obsen1ational Cinema 129
REFERENCES
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!
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132 DAVID MACDOUGALL