Two Captivating Video Essays from Sight & Sound - True/False Film Fest Two Captivating Video Essays from Sight & Sound - True/False Film Fest

September 1, 2014

Two Captivating Video Essays from Sight & Sound

The British Film Institute’s magazine Sight & Sound recently released it’s list of the Greatest Documentaries of All Time, the result of a new poll of critics, programmers and filmmakers. In connection with the list, they also released two captivating and provocative video essays. You’ll need to click the links below to watch them on their site, something we recommend highly.

The first is “The Art of Nonfiction” by T/F filmmaker Robert Greene. In it, Greene takes us on a whirlwind tour of 100-plus years of nonfiction cinema, presenting clips from masterworks and elucidating the inherent tensions which define the form.

Disorder, Huang Weikai, 2009, T/F 2010

 

gates of heaven
Gates of Heaven, Errol Morris, 1978

 

lessons
Lessons of Darkness, Werner Herzog 1992

 

leviathan
Leviathan, Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Véréna Paravel, 2012, T/F 2013

 

In the second video, “What was documentary? An elegy for Robert Gardner”, critic Kevin B. Lee looks at three anthropological films from career of director Robert Gardner. While tracing his evolving approach, Lee presses tough questions about “documentary” and the access to reality it promises us.

dead birds
Dead Birds, Robert Gardner, 1964

 

Rivers of Sand
Rivers of Sand, Robert Gardner, 1973

 

forest of bliss
Forest of Bliss, Robert Gardner, 1986