A VIDEO ARCHIVE IS NOT TELEVISION
Given the ubiquity of television documentaries in general
and the popularity of natural history documentaries in particular, I
suspect that it will be well-nigh impossible for viewers of the Archive
not to be instinctively drawn into the documentary mode of viewing.
But to fully benefit from looking at the Archive in all its rich variety,
viewers must recognise that something unfamiliar is on the screen.
The main purpose is to give viewers a sense of what outstanding biodiversity
is. This requires them to make a connection between all the Archive’s
parts so that they’re aware that one section relates to another
already seen, and that indeed all the myriad things they are looking
at live in this one small place on earth.
One thing that attracted me was creating a succession of pictures within
a picture, by pulling back from zoom shots to wide shots, which apparently
is against the tenets of good documentary film-making.
But the chief clue that the Archive is not a documentary is the absence
of story and music. This removes the element of televisual entertainment,
making it seem more demanding for the viewer.
The simple fact that the subject-matter is biodiversity, means that
there can be no ‘picking favourites’ – which typifies
so much wildlife documentary-making where the marquee creatures, whether
cute or dangerous, tend to command attention and the ordinary and ‘insignificant’
are likely to be ignored.
At some point the realisation crystallised in me that in pursuing biodiversity
as my subject, each of life’s varied and abundant forms was as
worthy of inclusion in the Archive as any other, from the tiniest moth
to the mightiest rainforest tree.
There are few ‘nature red in tooth and claw’ moments. These
seem to be the stock-in-trade of so many wildlife documentaries which,
in my view, needlessly pander to an atavistic demand for death as a
spectator sport.
Such moments in the Archive are mainly confined to spiders snaring and
devouring prey. Mostly, the fauna is sleeping, eating, staying stock
still, drinking, or moving about – in short, just living.
And there are no speeded up or microscopic sequences, beloved of documentary
film-makers. Predominantly, the Archive reveals what can be seen with
the naked eye.
Nevertheless I would like to think that my video presentation of biodiversity
could form the basis for a documentary series for an international audience.
Tamborine Mountain is an ideal location for such a documentary
because it can be seen in its entirety from 1500 metres in the air and
is not remote or in the Third World or only accessible to the intrepid
few. It is not where people commonly expect to find outstanding biodiversity.
The challenge would be to write a comprehensive story, combining good
science and contemplative awe, and abandoning much of the stock-in-trade
of the wildlife documentary.
I would like to see the focus on the subject rather than film technique
(granted that the two are not mutually exclusive). The pioneering techniques
of some recent films may be stunning and informative, but repetition
eventually dulls the impact and diminishes the value. Bringing genuinely
new subject-matter to the screen can have a more profound impact than
pioneering techniques.
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