Larissa M Rosa
Codes and Modes
Conference
Extra Credit
Assignment : Blog on Participatory Culture of Documentary
I
attended a speaking on Saturday afternoon.
I walked away with my mind blown.
The
first speaker showed a clip from her documentary - Beauty in Transition. She traveled to 9 different shelters in New
York, as well as shelters in a few other cities. She put together a beauty team in a van and
they traveled to these various shelters and offered free services to the women
there. She said she faced stigmas along
the way. No one wanted to work with this
population - because they were uneducated. She said this population is invisible
and she wanted to use documentation to make them visible. She said beauty is not essential, but the
hair care and conversation gave the women hope.
Where they would otherwise be ignored they were paid attention to -
their stories were shared. I was
homeless when I was in high school, and I know from personal experience not
everyone who is homeless is crazy or a drug addict. There are people who are homeless and still
go to school or work every day; they still pay taxes and are part of society
not huddled on trains or sidewalks. I was really happy to hear that the
filmmaker learned a lot from her work as well.
She
spoke about the different problems she had with participation within her
film. She spoke about early problems she
faced with only sharing voices and not filming faces. She decided - with participant's permission - she wanted to show faces and tell
stories. Then they reached a problem at
one shelter, they were told 3 days into filming they did not have permission to
film anything and must destroy all footage.
Participation must happen on so many different levels. This reminded me of the Brian Winston speech
from the previous day. The filmmaker has
to work with everyone while still maintaining their vision. This woman had to find a comfortable balance
between working with and protecting the clients, all within the constraints
imposed by the shelter system.
I
was really really glad I chose to attend this conference. This is precisely the type of film I want to
make. Shining light on the lost
individual; the misunderstood group. And
doing it all with tact. Working with
your subject, and working within limitations and still portraying a beautiful
story many people would never see otherwise. I feel like I learned a lot. For example even if you go into something
with a set view, be open to changing it.
Anything from shot setup, to overall outcome. Always be ready to grow with the film and
learn when to be flexible and when to be rigid.