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Hauptseminararbeit, 2006, 25 Seiten
Autor: Katharina Berger
Fach: Anglistik - Anderes
Details
Tags: Dennis, O’Rourke’s, Good, Woman, Bangkok, Documentary
Jahr: 2006
Seiten: 25
Note: 1,7
Literaturverzeichnis: ~ 14 Einträge
Sprache: Englisch
ISBN (E-Book): 978-3-640-22014-4
Dateigröße: 97 KB
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Zusammenfassung / Abstract
Our presentation was about the film The Good Woman of Bangkok, the unique way the filmmaker Dennis O’Rourke made the film and how the critics reacted to these unique methods. When it came to deciding on paper topics, I knew I wanted to write about O’Rourke and his special methods, because I was especially fascinated by the man and his unique methods. I think, it is very interesting to get to know something about O’Rourke’s life fist and how and when the development from a celebrated ‘mainstream’ filmmaker to a much criticized experimental filmmaker took place. Also, it is essential to examine the ideas and opinions that influenced his decision to make such a film. Reading and talking so much about O’Rourke’s special methods and strategies in The Good Woman of Bangkok made me curious about the documentary genre in general, whether this film is indeed so special and if his forerunners were working in a completely different direction? After describing O’Rourke’s methods and objects, I will define ‘the documentary’ and examine the different modes of documentary film to see if The Good Woman of Bangkok actually is a documentary film and if it can be categorized as one of these modes. I hope this will shed some light on the question, whether O’Rourke’s film is as revolutionary as he puts it or if it is fashionable to provoke and agitate the viewers in the documentary genre in general. [...]
Textauszug (computergeneriert)
Dennis O′Rourke′s methods and objects in
The Good Woman of
Bangkok
a `Documentary fiction′ film?
What I care most about is my film. I care about my art more than anything...
(Dennis
O′Rourke)
2
Table of contents:
1. Introduction 2
2. Life and works 4
3. The genesis of
The Good Woman of Bangkok
6
4. O′Rourke′s methods and strategies 7
4.1. Enquiry/ Investment of time 7
4.2. `Engagement′ instead of `informed consent′ 8
4.3. Conversations instead of interviews 8
4.3. Secret Contract, cultural hero / Brecht′s alienation effect 9
4.4. Documentary fiction 10
4.5. Truth/ transcendental moment 12
4.6. Conclusion and objective 12
5. Theoretic classification 13
5.1. Documentary vs. fiction 13
5.1.1. Defining documentary 13
5.1.2. Is
The Good Woman of Bangkok
a documentary? 15
5.2. Modes 15
5.2.1. Development and description of the modes 15
5.2.1.1. Poetic Mode
16
5.2.1.2. Expository Mode
16
5.2.1.3. Observational Mode
16
5.2.1.4. Participatory Mode
17
5.2.1.5. Reflexive Mode
18
5.2.1.6. Performative Mode
18
5.1.2.7. Table of Documentary Modes
19
5.2.2. Categorization of
The Good Woman of Bangkok
20
5.2.2.1. A new mode?
20
5.2.2.2. The Good Woman of Bangkok: a participatory, reflexive and performative
documentary
21
6. Conclusion 22
Bibliography 24
3
1. Introduction
Our presentation was about the film
The Good Woman of Bangkok
, the unique way the
filmmaker Dennis O′Rourke made the film and how the critics reacted to these unique
methods. When it came to deciding on paper topics, I knew I wanted to write about O′Rourke
and his special methods, because I was especially fascinated by the man and his unique
methods. I think, it is very interesting to get to know something about O′Rourke′s life fist and
how and when the development from a celebrated `mainstream′ filmmaker to a much
criticized experimental filmmaker took place. Also, it is essential to examine the ideas and
opinions that influenced his decision to make such a film. Reading and talking so much about
O′Rourke′s special methods and strategies in
The Good Woman of Bangkok
made me curious
about the documentary genre in general, whether this film is indeed so special and if his
forerunners were working in a completely different direction? After describing O′Rourke′s
methods and objects, I will define `the documentary′ and examine the different modes of
documentary film to see if
The Good Woman of Bangkok
actually is a documentary film and
if it can be categorized as one of these modes. I hope this will shed some light on the
question, whether O′Rourke′s film is as revolutionary as he puts it or if it is fashionable to
provoke and agitate the viewers in the documentary genre in general.
2. Life and works
Dennis O′Rourke was born in Brisbane and lived for most of his childhood in a small country
town, where his parents ran a failing business. After having completed his secondary
education at a Catholic boarding school, he dropped out of University after two years, being
"a lousy student" (Hessey 2002: 136) in his own opinion. After that, he traveled in the
Australian outback, the Pacific Islands and South East Asia and worked at various jobs such
as a farm hand, salesman, cowboy and seaman. Although he was a "nobody" during that time,
he calls it "the best years of my life." He then even was on the edge of criminality, defining it
as a "reaction to my family" and an "expressed intention of antipathy to the establishment."
But then he discovered another way, though, another power of expressing his "saving
epiphany" (Hessey 2002: 137). He taught himself photography. He feels saved by the art of
photography through which he could finally express his emotions.
4
As a next step, he wanted to make documentary films; that is why he moved to Sydney,
starting as a gardener for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and later becoming a
cinematographer for the organization.
From 1974 to 1979 he lived in Papua New Guinea, being married to a native from Papua New
Guinea, with whom he would spend the next 15 years and have three children. The country
was at that time in the process of decolonization at the time. This inspired his first
documentary film
Yumi Yet Independence for Papua New Guinea
(1976), which "shows the
celebration of Independence day on Papua New Guinea through a scurrilous montage of
music, voices, radio transmissions and imagines of traditional customs as also of British and
Australian colonialism" (Gillner). This film was the start of a series of documentary films
about the destruction of the island cultures of Papua New Guinea by the "Western imposition
of so-called progress: television, liberal democracy, nuclear testing, international tourism"
(Powers 2002: 107). These documentaries, including
Ileksen- Politics in Papua New Guinea
(1978),
Yap... How did you know we′d like TV?
(1980),
The Shark Callers of Kontu
(1982),
Half life - A Parable for the Nuclear Age
(1985),
Cannibal Tours
(1988), made him " a
maverick hero and champion for the oppressed", Souter even goes as far as calling him the
"patron saint of the documentary film world" (Souter 2002: 117). Retrospectives of
O′Rourke′s works have been held at various documentary film festivals and he has received
numerous prices.
O′Rourke wasn′t satisfied with this perfect picture of him as a documentary filmmaker that
saves the world though. He started deconstructing the process of making documentary film
with
Cannibal Tours
in 1988. In this film, he first began playing games in terms of
representational shifts (cf. Hessey 2002: 135). Instead of just observing the tourists behavior
when exploring and photographing the natives, he also includes camera shots over the
shoulder of the tourist, from the perspective of the tourist so to say. With that technique he
wants to show the audience he is not necessarily something better than the tourists, but he is
actually one of them, looking at the natives like at animals at the zoo. He criticizes the
documentary filmmakers, which regard themselves as "cultural heroes" and says that, because
he has "made some docos about big themes and done them successfully, that same kind of
aura has attached to me" (Hessey 2002: 135). With
The Good Woman of Bangkok
(1989), a
film about a Thai prostitute, O′Rourke has finally made the conscious decision to move away
from conventional documentaries. He says it is at "the end of a journey" at "the culmination
of a personal quest for definition about what one can do with the form of cinema the called
`documentary′" (Urban 2002: 146).
5
O′Rourke′s new methods weren′t liked everywhere, especially
The Good Woman of Bangkok
and
Cunnamulla
(1999), dealing with racism and ignorance in a small place in Queensland,
Australia, provoked controversial discussions about his ethnic morals as a documentary
filmmaker.
O′Rourke′s latest film
Land Mines- A Love Story
was filmed in Afghanistan following the US
invasion (and fall of the Taliban), and tells the story of two landmine victims. Currently, he is
producing and directing
I love a sunburnt Country
... which is a feature film on the subject of
being Australian, as seen through the poetry and poetic imagination of ′ordinary′ people.
Dennis O′Rourke is a father of five children and lives in Cairns, Australia (cf. About Dennis
O′Rourke).
3. The genesis of The Good Woman of Bangkok
As already mentioned,
The Good Woman of Bangkok
is an important turning point regarding
O′Rourke′s work. He names several reasons for making such an unconventional documentary
film. First of all, after working in this field for 15 years, he was dissatisfied with `the
documentary film′. Interviewed by Urban, he even says: "I find most documentary films are
unwatchable and worthless as art in the broadest sense" (Urban 2002: 147). He felt like a lot
of pretexts were not being challenged and the films, as the filmmakers (including himself!)
made it just too easy to identify with them, made people lose their critical view towards them.
Second, he "felt the need to explore all the forms of cinematic expression" (Urban 2002: 147).
Documentary films were seen as a strict moral opposition to theatrical entertainment films
and so all the fiction film stylistics were banned from non- fiction films, leaving out an
enormous potential. Another reason was that after the end of his marriage, his thoughts were
revolving a lot around sexuality and relationships between men and women. That exact that
topic has never been dealt with in non-fiction films though. Sexual politics have been
addressed but he wanted to make a documentary film about sexual love (cf. Urban 2002:
148). It so happened then, that on a stop-over in Bangkok, in the need of refining love as well
as testing his new low-cost video system, he decided to record the act of going to a bar and
being picked up by a prostitute. But the film was not going to be like numerous others, in
which the filmmakers first hypocritically condemn what other men do in Bangkok and then,
after their day′s work of filming go to the brothels themselves (cf. Urban 2002: 149). He
wanted to "start the other way round" to first admit to your own sexuality and then make a
film about it. Luck had it, that he had a little money from the Australian Film Commission′s
6
Documentary Fellowship Scheme, which gave him the chance to make exactly the film he
wanted without having to ask for permission first. He admits as well that this was the only
way to make "the film which, in all other circumstances, would never be approved for
funding" (O′Rourke 2002: 209). Another inspiration for the film, as well as for the title was
Brecht′s play
The Good Person of Szechuan
. He had read it before working on the film, and
as the main character Shen Tee is also a prostitute he saw the parallel of it being "an ironic
parable about the impossibility of being good in an evil world" (Urban 2002: 151) as well as
the film. Not only was the play′s content a source of inspiration, but Brechtian theater in
general, as well, and much of the film was influenced by these ideas.
4. O′Rourke′s methods and strategies
O′Rourke does not believe in the documentary film as such anymore. The crucial thing for
him is to reveal the truth, or moments of truth and to reach that goal, he has developed his
own methods and strategies.
4.1. Enquiry/ Investment of time
One of Leaches guidelines, namely the investment of time, is a very important aspect for
O′Rourke. But in contrast to classical documentaries, where the enquiry begins with the idea
for the film, and is often not even done by the filmmaker himself, O′Rourke was personally
interested in the topic, so to say started the enquiry, before even having the idea for the film.
And O′Rourke takes the process of enquiry one step further by including himself and his
relationship to the subjects in his films (cf. Bayer 2003: 136). For
The Good Woman of
Bangkok
, he already invested a lot of time for choosing the right subject. The plan was
actually to "meet bar girls/prostitutes in a manner which is (ostensibly) no different than any
of the other 5,000 foreign men" (O′Rourke 2002: 210), but after `casting′ in the bars of
Patpong for weeks, he decided to only have one subject in his film, Aoi. About her, he says:
"I could intuitively feel that she was the woman I needed" (Powers 2002: 104). Having in
mind his "shopping list of qualifications" (Urban 2002: 150) he wanted someone with
experience in the `business′ as well as someone whom he could regard as his equal, who was
intelligent and whom he could have a love affair with. He didn′t want her to be a just a victim
(cf. Urban 2002: 150). This is another crucial point in O′Rourke′s work; he invests not only
time, but also his own feelings. He spent nine months in Bangkok, first `casting′ Aoi and then
establishing and exploring his relationship with her. Afterwards, editing and post- production
7
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