Errol Morris Expands the Documentary Genre. An Analysis of "The Thin Blue Line"


Term Paper, 2016

18 Pages, Grade: 1,0


Excerpt


Table of Content

1. Introduction

2 The Thin Blue Line - A Documentary
2.1 Traditional Documentary Elements
2.2 The New Documentary

3. The Narrative Documentary
3.1 Linear and Nonlinear Narratives
3.2 Historical Narratives

4. The Experimental Documentary
4.1 Experimental Features
4.2 The Thin Blue Line - An Experimental Documentary

5. Conclusion

Works Cited

1. Introduction

In November 1976, the protagonist, Randall Adams, moves to Dallas with his brother Ron. One day after work, he runs out of gas and meets David Harris who picks him up. They spend the evening and night together, drink beer, smoke marijuana, and go to a drive-in movie. Later that night, either Harris or Adams murders police officer Robert Wood during a pull-over on Inwood Road, Dallas. The police department charges the supposed “drifter” Randall Adams, who was sentenced to death in 1977.

Errol Morris came across the case, when he interviewed Adams about one of his forensic psychi­atrists James Grigson alias “Dr. Death”. He recognized the injustices and mistreatment during the investigation and trail of Randall Adams. Therefore, he dropped his previous project to start one about Randall Adams (Morris, Interview Gallery; Morris, The Museum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum).

The filmmaker creates The Thin Blue Line, an investigative documentary, which reviews the event from various perspectives. A common denominator is the extensive use of interviews with the actual people involved in the case and of reenacted scenes. The interviews are conducted with the suspects, David Harris and Randall Adams, the Dallas and Vidor police officers, the attorneys of Adams, three friends of David Harris, the judge, and the witnesses of the trial. Several positive critics and awards show the success of the rather new form in the documentary genre (Mathews). Morris uses new strategies to make his case for Mr. Adams and opens the door to new techniques, narratives, and interpretations. Hence, the paper deals with the following research question: Is Errol Morris’ The Thin Blue Line a new experimental documentary?

The paper unfolds the quest for new elements and experimentation in three distinct chapters. The first introduces the documentary genre and presents its traditional and modern features. Those are compared to the documentary The Thin Blue Line. In the following chapter, the debate moves towards the narration in the film, discussing how far a classical, nonlinear, or historical strategy is included. The final chapter examines experimental film features as another part in the documen­tary. Taken together at the end, the paper shall reveal that experimental and unusual techniques are incorporated, but the documentary does not consciously separate itself from its own genre and purpose. The disruption is not omniscient in the whole film; it rather is a composition between at least two genres and it has an unsettling force.

2 The Thin Blue Line - A Documentary

2.1 Traditional Documentary Elements

In an interview with Ron Rosenbaum, Errol Morris introduces his approach to documentary film as a form that reveals an “interior world” of its chosen topic. He wants to explain the self-percep­tion of the individual and collective “mental landscape”. As a result, the director sees the usage of language as its key indicator (Morris, The Museum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum). There­fore, the various interview segments structure The Thin Blue Line. The film lacks any narration or voice-of-god to guide the audience through the documentary. In other words, “personal language” influences the viewers perception on the case of Randall Adam and the people involved (Curry 157). It appears that Morris digs deeper than the state officials in 1976 and 1977 and offers new insights, which result in the release of Randall Adams in 1989 (Miller).

In contrast to Morris’ proposal, Timothy Corrigan and Patricia White’s The Film Experience: An Introduction defines the documentary broadly as a “[...] visual and auditory representation of the presumed facts, real experience, and actual events of the world” (254). Furthermore, Jay Rosen­blatt highlights representation of ‘real people’ in historic situations as a cornerstone of documen­tary filmmaking (qtd. in Johnstone). The first interviews in the film establish the original infor­mation about the case, however, the defendants of Adams oppose those initial conclusions and raise critical questions about the investigation and trial. For example, The Thin Blue Line presents the criminal history of David Harris with original police documents, Harris’ confession to prior crimes, and accusations by Edith James and Dennis White. Yet, the criminal record was not al­lowed as evidence in the trial of Randall Adams - even though according to Edith James, Harris committed another robbery with the same weapon (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 00:42:10­00:46:14). Hence, The Thin Blue Line combines new perspectives with the original case.

In addition to a general definition, the documentary uses “contrastive organizations” to present the contradictions between two sides (Corrigan and White 265). The Thin Blue Line includes several oppositions, for example concerning the investigation of David Harris’ car. In a first statement, officer Teresa Turko names a blue Chevrolet Vega as the car of the murderer but this was the wrong brand (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 00:15:19-00:15:59). In a different scene, the establishing shot was a tilted newspaper article with the headline ‘Officer put on leave pending investigation’ with a picture of officer Turko. The camera zooms in to a close-up of her face while twisting into an even position. A voiceover begins to evaluate her statement and the film cuts to the interview: “[...] And she gave us a pretty good description of the car. As it turned out, her description of the car was very close.” An immediate cut shifts the picture to a mid-shot of a back of a Chevrolet Vega and zooms in for an extreme close-up of the brand name in the middle of the trunk. Further­more, the score begins to play. After two seconds, the film cuts to another mid-shot of a back of a car. This car is a blue Mercury Comet - the camera repeats the revision movement and zooms in. In the following scenes, the film displays the differences of the rears to show the minor details and different polices officer comment on the confusion. The contrastive organization climaxes when officer Jackie Johnson names the wrong brand and has to correct himself. The reenactment ends with the flight of both cars from the murder scene and officer Turko shoots at the accelerating car (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 00:35:19-00:37:15).

Returning to the use of language, according to Corrigan and White, documentaries could use in­terrogative or persuasive positions to guide its content (267). The first sees a subject under inves­tigation - The Thin Blue Line investigates the murder of officer Woods and the trial of Randall Adams. In addition, this position could cause more questions or more knowledge (267). The un­specified statement does not apply for the chosen documentary because on the one hand, Morris intentionally raises critical questions and on the other, he provides resolutions for some of them (Morris, The Museum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum). The latter position combines an ana­lytic form with compelling arguments to change the viewer’s assumptions and emotions about the case. In her review of The Thin Blue Line, Renne R. Curry identifies an intentional persuasion (157). She stresses the change of perception about the crime to highlight Randall Adams’ inno­cence: “The Randall Adams we meet in this film is Errol Morris’ definitive construct of an inno­cent man, particularly dressed and meticulously situated for the occasion” (156). In view of all that has been mentioned so far, Richard K Sherwin infers that “[t]he persuasive force of Morris’ tech­niques within the documentary frame of the film is strong” (59).

Moreover, Chris Cagle argues for a categorization of approaches to documentary filmmaking in addition to general elements like transparency, “economy of communication”, and an aesthetic norm (45). On the one hand, a filmmaker could aim for an observational perspective that intends to provide a realistic image of the topic (48, 55). Thus, The Thin Blue Line employs interviews with the original people, newspaper articles, documents, evidence, and reenacted scenes to gain credibility. On the other hand, the documentarist deliberately engages in the film to create a rela­tionship between ‘social actors’1 and himself or herself (45, 55). However, the ‘interactive ap­proach’ is not present in the documentary. Errol Morris sits behind the camera and has no visual and only one auditory appearance. The exception is the recording of his voice in the last interview with David Harris (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 01:51:08-01:54:40).

Morris highlights ‘cinema verite’ as paramount for the release of Randall Adams (Morris, Play It Again, Sam). The cinematic school confrontationally emphasizes the portrait of ‘real’ events, peo­ple, and objects by camera recordings (Corrigan and White 276). Furthermore, a distinction is drawn between the French tradition and a more observational form called ‘direct cinema’ (Corri­gan and White 276-77). Chris Cagle’s Postclassical Nonfiction: Narration in the Contemporary Documentary gives comprehensive description of distinct elements of the ‘cinema of truth’. Fore­most, it contains an open and ambiguous argumentation with multiple contrastive or causal posi­tions (55). A primary opposition is drawn between Randall Adams side including the director and anyone opposing his innocence. Nevertheless, Errol Morris distances himself from the discourse by cutting out his interview questions but employs a strong favorability for Adams’ innocence by using specific cuts and editing.

Taken together, these results suggest that the documentary applies traditional documentary fea­tures, elements, and approaches in order to give a trustworthy account of the events. In the follow­ing subchapter, the paper looks for recent or contemporary methods of documentary filmmaking in The Thin Blue Line.

2.2 The New Documentary

Next to traditional elements, temporal modern factors play an essential role in documentary filmmaking. In addition to interviews, reenactments are a key element for The Thin Blue Line. Morris explains its importance with the example of the contradictory statements from officer Turko (Morris, Five Key Witnesses). Firstly, she claims to have seen only one person in the car with sandy blonde hair. Later she changes her statement to two people sitting in the car and the driver has bushy hair. Hence, the film presents the crime and tries to explain it by a reduction to essential questions and a focus on minor details (Morris, Play It Again, Sam). The reenacted scenes employ documentary techniques to depict ‘true’ or ‘real’ events. However, a separation between reenacted and real events is crucial, a film needs to be as clear as possible in the distinction for its audience. But, Morris argues that a mix up is unrealistic because the event happened eight years after its release and nobody was present with a camera at the time (Morris, Play It Again, Sam). According to Johnstone, if a film does not fit into the academic categories, it shall be defined as a “hybrid”. The paper Redefining the Documentary: Experimental Forms Explore New Territory describes the design of hybrids in documentaries as the combination of the essential qualities of traditional documentary and its interrogation and expenditure of the basic traits, and the ventures into the unpredictable. Johnstone makes no attempt to explain the meaning of the last one. There­fore, an interpretation could involve too many features from an unpredictable narrative, cinematic techniques, or its aesthetic form.

The Thin Blue Line incorporates various traditional elements as discussed in the previous chapter but expands for example with the reenactments. Chris Cagle highlights complexity as another key element for hybridity because new form has to disconnect from old taxonomy (46).

Next to overarching categories, the content and details may reveal another side of new documen­taries. Beginning with the choice of evidence, a documentary may include historic documents or archival imagery and sound to create a coherent experience. Jeanne C. Finley mentions the filmmakers power to transfer these materials and their films into an artistic authority (qtd. in John­stone). Morris does not insert himself as an artist - his “obsession with details” and chosen meth­ods create a documentary (Morris, Play It Again, Sam). He reconstructs the historic events through interviews in a retrospective version, includes documents, and other evidence. In The Thin Blue Line, Morris shows over-the-head interviews and adds original evidence from the case and trail, for example as Adams explains the events around his voluntary statement, the film cuts and shows it (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 00:34:45). Furthermore, the film similarly introduces new phases with newspaper articles and court drawings were also included. One example for this is the intro­duction of Michael Randall, the third witness. The scene begins with an extreme close-up of the “third witness” from a newspaper, followed by close-up of a drawing of Randall in the witness stand, and the interview (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 01:07:51-01:08:16).

Next to hybridity, Chris Cagle suggests a postclassical documentary as another form of contem­porary filmmaking the genre. In its center is a specific narrative which will be analyzed in the following chapter. In addition, a film has a temporal openness for multiple arguments and is quasi­open for counter positions (55). The documentarist highlights the meaningful argument of the fa­vorable side with “long-take aesthetic”, “intellectual montage”, and moderate use of “ironic jux­tapositions” (55). Cagle’s key elements are not completely compatible with The Thin Blue Line. Morris does not restrict the opposition to Randall Adams - Harris, the police officers, and wit­nesses can make their statements about the murder or trail. However, the editing persuades the audience to share the view of Adams’ innocence (Morris, Play It Again, Sam). For example, the events around the first arrest of Randall Adams are explained by himself and highlighted by the reenactments in an interrogation room. Mr. Adams accuses the Dallas police of tampering with evidence and mistreatment of a prisoner. In contrast, officer Gus Rose calls his first encounter with Randall Adams “casual, friendly conversation [...] to size him up”. After the description of the situation, officers Rose and Johnson elaborate his attitude towards them and his questionable mental status (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 00:07:16-00:11:26). The scene shows the persuasive force of reenactments because its length and elaboration make Randall Adams’ statement more credible. Moreover, the police officers answer short and less detailed. In combination, it creates a reluctance towards the police department.

To conclude, the documentary embeds different features to separate itself from the traditional form. The fission becomes part of a new mode “towards a wider reality” (Curry 166). Morris is a detail-oriented filmmaker because every fragment is important to form the viewers experience. According to Morris, The Thin Blue Line especially uses “slow-motion re-enactments” to prove the innocence of Adams (Morris, Play It Again, Sam). However, the connection to traditional forms is not completely terminated because the established aesthetics and language are used to give a credible account of the historic events. Next to the analysis of techniques and montage, the paper will expand its research to the storyline of The Thin Blue Line in the third chapter.

3. The Narrative Documentary

3.1 Linear and Nonlinear Narratives

Timothy Corrigan and Patricia White name the “non-narrative” a prominent element of documen­taries. These films constrain the narrative or story to an inferior position but consequentially sup­port other more formal organizations (261). Traditionally, narratives are associated with the com­mercial industry and the characters shall be recognizable, close, and resolute their actions during the development (Corrigan and White 261; Sherwin 65). More progressive approaches may chal­lenge the centrality of the characters, causality, or realistic depictions in order to move beyond the boundaries of a traditional narrative sources.

While Corrigan and White focus on the choice to structure the film by a storyline, Richard K. Sherwin’s Law Frames: Historical Truth and Narrative Necessity in a Criminal Case proposes a “narrative necessity” for criminal cases (66, 74, 80). Hence, The Thin Blue Line should apply a narrative to explain the case of Randall Adams. Generally, Sherwin argues that social actors favor a coherent report but tend to skip events to sound more plausible (42). They state past events, actions, characteristics, and give background information without an external limitation (41). The narrative shall reveal the multiple forms of truth. Sherwin’s judicial perspective leads to the frag­mentation of such statements into individual blocks. Those have to be reassembled as construction of a new narrative which emphasizes new details in order speak a verdict (63).

Following the argumentation, Sherwin splits the case of Randall Adams into two narratives: Linear and Non-Linear Narrative (52). The first is a “classic linear fashion” in which the audience recog­nizes beginning, development, and ending (52-3). The film starts with the reenactment of the mur­der of officer Woods and opens the investigation of his murder. During the main phase, Morris shows interviews according to the development of the case and trial. The final act characterizes David Harris as a criminal - mainly through his convictions for unrelated crimes and Randall Adams’ accusations. The film ends with a taped interview of Errol Morris and David Harris. The combination of a “detective story” and a “causal-linear” narrative involves the audience in the process of decision-making (Sherwin 52-3). However as stated in the previous chapter, Morris employs a more persuasive position and supports Randall Adams (Morris, Five Key Witnesses; Morris, Interview Gallery; Morris, The Museum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum; Morris, Play It Again, Sam; Sherwin 59). Curry has taken a different approach by focussing on the tales of the social actors, its “fantastical elements”, and the continuous use of interviews as evidence for a linear narrative (154). The Thin Blue Line emphasizes an oral history of the social actors to gain integrity but a loose structure or chronological rendering is not compromised by Curry’s argument (Curry 154; Abrash and Walkowitz 206; Nichols 42). The conscious arrangement by Morris pro­vides the proposed linear structure. Nevertheless, both authors agree that the tape recording is the resolution to the mystery with the final sentences (Sherwin 52; Curry 164):

I’ve always thought about.. .if you could say why there's a reason Randall Adams is in jail, it might be because the fact that he didn't have no place for somebody to stay that helped him that night...landed him where's he’s at. That might be the rea­son. That might be the only, total reason why he’s where he’s at today (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 01:54:07-01:54:39).

The second narrative is a provocative and unresolved non-linear composition (Sherwin 52). In opposition to the clear resolution, the other tale does not close the mystery of Randall Adams. Furthermore, Morris creates a universe of fate and fortune as another complement of a non-linear narrative (Sherwin 53). Randall Adams introduces the idea of the American frontier in his first sentence: “In October my brother and I left Ohio. We were driving to California.” The voiceover highlights the brothers goal and destination and is supplemented by a long shot of the Dallas sky­line. Moreover, Adams continues to talk, the film cuts to a mid-close-up of his upper body. He sees the immediate job offer “[...] as if I was meant to be here” (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 00:02:18-00:02:47). Sherwin calls it a “disquieting sense” which sustains across the documentary (52). Next to the American dream, the audience encounters various mysteries, which are not solved at the end of the film. This is certainly true in the case of the drive-in movie scene. Adams and

Harris drive to the cinema to watch Student Body and Swinging Cheerleaders - two soft pom mov­ies - together and drink some beer. The scene creates a distance and a more questionable image of the relationship between the two suspects because Harris was a minor and Adams did not vigor­ously resist these actions at the beginning (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 00:27:31-00:30:21).

In retrospect, The Thin Blue Line incorporates a structured and linear storyline. The film has an introduction, develops further in a chronologic fashion, and solves the historic mystery in the end. Scholars, like Sherwin and Curry, stress a non-narrative or non-linear path of the film. This tax­onomy focuses on the formal aspects of narration, however, a documentary although implies to depict ‘realistic’ events. But as mentioned in the previous chapters, this is no ongoing process throughout the complete film (Curry 157-8; Abrash and Walkowitz 205-6, 212; Morris, The Mu­seum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum; Morris, Play It Again, Sam; Sherwin). Therefore, the following subchapter will combine the historic truth(s) with the narrative form.

3.2 Historical Narratives

The aim of this subchapter is to introduce an historic-orientated narrative and analyze The Thin Blue Line according to these features. Corrigan and White state a basic orientation with the non­fictional elements (261). A documentary shall be a “factual description of actual events, persons, or places”, which incorporates evidence or newspaper articles to gain credibility. Furthermore, filmmakers might artistically present the topic and interview actual participants (261).

Difficulties arise, however, when an attempt is made to find the historic truth. A key debate evolves around the question: Is there one truth or are there multiple truths (Curry 158; Abrash and Walk­owitz 203-06, 212-13; Morris, The Museum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum; Sherwin 43)? Morris describes multiple claims as a “truth-combo platter” which contains the several views on a discussed issue. He attempts to reveal these positions and present more information to aim for the one historic truth (Morris, The Museum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum).

In their journal article Sub/versions of History: A Meditation on Film and Historical Narrative, Babara Abrash and Daniel J. Walkowitz argue that the past could be seen from “multiple perspec­tives” (203, 206). The Thin Blue Line shows different views about the murder, trial, characteristics of the suspects from several individuals. In addition, reenacted scenes display the interviews, the original version, and the filmmaker’s ideas; evidence, newspapers or other implemented information are edited into or between scenes. Rosenbaum names the combination a “series of perspectives” where the innocence of Randall Adams is only partially relevant. Morris replies: “Yes, I believe there is such a thing as real, historic truth. I am no post-modernist” (Morris, The Museum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum). Hence, he investigates and uses written, visual, auditory ‘text’ to explore connections, social and power relationships.

Abrash and Walkowitz review The Thin Blue Line from a historian’s perspective as an example for succeeded historical narrative (203-213). First of all, the large production has informed a con­siderable public audience about the events surrounding the murder of officer Woods (204). The followed impact gives documentarist a possibility to “write history” (204). In this case, the film influenced the judicial system to reevaluate the case and ultimately release Randall Adams from prison.

Moreover, they consider the force to disturb conventional forms communication within the field of history (205). The Thin Blue Line challenges the presumed truth because it was an incomplete picture during the production. Similar to the categorization as a detective film, the audience is involved through its sense of history (206). It creates a connection between the audience’s personal and historic experience which provokes a critical reevaluation of the criminal justice system, cap­ital punishment, and the case of Randall Adams (213). The narrative may use post-structuralist techniques which question a singular historic truth - Morris opposes this statement (Morris, The Museum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum). The theory further states that a post-structural film operates outside the boundaries of “academic” (Abrash and Walkowitz 205). Both modes operate against the aesthetics of a traditional narrative because they are explicitly not chronological, factual reports of the ‘real’ world.

In contrast to Morris himself, Abrash and Walkowitz define his narrative strategy as post-modern from a historian’s position. Their post-modern definition does not comment whether there is one truth in a physical world, it rather sees specific changes and interpretations as paramount for their concept (212-13). The narrative reveals new form, content, and development which raises ques­tions about the understanding and interpretation of evidence. Furthermore, the theory recognizes a conflict between the “historic veracity” and the “construction of ‘the real’” (213). The Thin Blue Line takes a different approach because it shows multiple constructions on the subjective positions of the ‘real’ through the interviews and reenactments. The various perspectives shape the aware­ness of the audience, contradict previous assumptions, and question the established assumptions about the case of Randall Adams. However, Morris and Rosenbaum agree upon the investigative

mode in the documentary. The film evolves around critical questions like: Who was driving? Who pulled the gun out from underneath the seat? Who shot the police officer (Abrash and Walkowitz 205; Morris, The Museum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum)?

The previous chapter has shown that Errol Morris’ The Thin Blue Line is closely linked to an historic perspective about the truth. The film attempts to reveal new history with nonfictional basis but it operates outside the traditional narrative of historians. In the last chapter, the paper will examine the experimental features from a general definition and the previous chapters.

4. The Experimental Documentary

4.1 Experimental Features

In the following chapter, the paper will examine the character traits of an experimental film and analyze Morris’ documentary on this basis. Firstly, an experimental film is produced by an indi­vidual artist and seeks a small audience that is motivated to engage with unconventional methods. The Thin Blue Line was produced by Home Box Office (HBO), American Playhouse, Channel 4 Television Corporation, and Third Floor Productions (IMDb.com, Inc.; Corrigan and White 284; Curry 153). Hence, it was not a part of an idealist small production circle but the theatrical release reached a public audience and brought the case of Randall Adams to national attention.

In general, a film experiments with form and abstract imagery to approach and challenges the viewers in “fascinating ways” (Corrigan and White 284). This film includes post-structural ele­ments to create a combination of technical and verbal elements for the construction of innocence (Curry 155). It uses a red rotating beacon between the first statement of Randall Adams and David Harris and after Harris described the shooting (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 00:02:49-00:02:52; 00:26:23-00:26:27). In addition, the film uses post-structuralist elements with the comparison of the two blue cars as described the first chapter. Furthermore, an experimental form is presented, during the evaluation of officer Turko’s statement, Marshall Touchton mentions “the thing” that was really interesting. The film cuts into a black screen and a pocket watch begins to swing from side to side. A minimalistic score plays and the watch accelerates and slows down during a 28 seconds hypnosis session. In the last seconds, a voiceover begins and Touchton explains the results of this experimental technique (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 00:17:43-00:18:09). The scene fulfills Corrigan and Whites requirement to show obvious “bizarre” or “mundane” images because it does not match the traditional documentary conventions (284). Taken together, Curry summarizes The Thin Blue Line as a “blend of documentary” and a “surrealistic representation” of the case of Ran­dall Adams (158). The voiceover narration empowers the credibility of the shown imagery and historic truth. Moreover, he associates the promotion by HBO with the altered documentary format (Curry 158).

The Film Experience: An Introduction by Corrigan and White distinguishes documentaries and experimental film through their organizational form (296-97). Whereas a documentary film uses expository positions like the persuasive or interrogative, experimentalists offer either a disregard to “realism and rational logic” or an extensive formal work of art (296). The film does not use a strict formal imagery, rather oppose a stringent narrative and logic. Therefore, a metaphoric asso­ciation appears to offer a suitable explanation for the connections between multiple perspectives, events, and images (297). The audience develops new perceptions, emotions, or ideas from the encountered experience (285). This is certainly true in the case of Emily Miller. She introduces herself in the film as a person eager to solve mysteries or crimes. In her childhood, she dreams of becoming a detective - the film immediately cuts and inserts an old black and white scene from a detective movie. She continues her statement: “It’s always happening to me, everywhere I go, you know, lot of times there’s killing or anything, even around my house.” A perhaps positive view of Ms. Miller shifts towards a critical one because it sounds rather bizarre when a person is sur­rounded by death and murder. The scene continuously switches between the old film and her in­terview footage. She explains and justifies her involvement by determining a murder before the police does (Morris, The Thin Blue Line 00:57:33-00:59:12). The witness denounces herself through the statement and gets further ridiculed by the implementation of the old detective movie. This changes the perception of the first of three witnesses who are partially responsible for Randall Adams’s conviction (Morris, Five Key Witnesses; Nichols 44).

The last analyzed experimental feature is the confrontational approach by such films. Experimental films shock their audience through its visual and auditory material. It provokes experiences outside the ‘real’ for example with juxtapositions of artistic elements and the camera recordings. The Thin Blue Line does not harshly unsettle the audience with disgusting or eerie images. However, the documentary uses various reenactments and illustrations to contradict the presumed facts and in­terview statements, for example it ridicules the statements of Emily Miller, R.L. Miller, or Gus Rose. Furthermore, the last sentences by David Harris most prominently exonerate Randall Adams as a murderer.

This section has reviewed the key elements of experimental filmmaking in the documentary The Thin Blue Line. It contains post-structural and bizarre images; it partially includes metaphoric as­sumptions to induce new perspectives about social actors, the investigation, and the trial. Moreo­ver, Morris confronts various statements through evidence or reenactments like the extensive dis­pute of officer Turko’s statement. A summary of the main findings and of the principal issues and suggestions which have arisen in this discussion is provided in the next section.

4.2 The Thin Blue Line - An Experimental Documentary

With The Thin Blue Line Errol Morris created a documentary that aimed at freeing Randall Adams from prison. The film rewrites the investigation and trial into a new version - but not only on the content level; it significantly operates with new features in the documentary genre, too.

The first chapter reviewed the traditional spectrum of a documentary. The film fulfills the idealized requirements to involve the ‘real’ people and documents of the chosen topic, includes contrastive organizations, analytical and persuasive positions. Furthermore, Cagle’s observational perspective is visible in the documentary (55). Morris sees the concept of cinema verite in his documentary, however, its definitions oppose significant elements of The Thin Blue Line. Foremost, the docu­mentary passively contradicts the presumed truth and presents different reenactments - not only the historical truth.

The documentary genre includes new forms of presentation. The film integrates the available evi­dence artistically with rapid cuts or slow motion zooms. Those are combined with interviews and reenacted scenes to create an unconventional combination of elements. Furthermore, The Thin Blue Line opposes an active involvement of the documentarist to persuade the audience; Morris reveals the contradictions and solutions with the editorial organizations of the interviews and ad­ditional evidence.

Next to the different styles, the paper looks into the narrative strategies of The Thin Blue Line. The film incorporates a progressive form of storytelling because it uses and challenges linear structures on various occasions. A classic setup guides the audience through the murder, investigation, and trial, which is complemented by nonfictional elements. Morris answers a lot of questions about the murder but leaves others unanswered. This non-linear strategy does not satisfy the audience’s expectations like the believe in fate or the sexual aspects of Adams’ and Harris’ relationship. Furthermore, the paper analyzed the potential of an historical narrative strategy in The Thin Blue Line. The film shows multiple perspectives of the murder and gives various social actors the op­portunity to state the view. Hence, the audience is confronted with multiple claims of truth. The reenactments and evidence agree with and disagree with the oral histories in different scenes. The documentary bares one major contradiction in opposition to the interpretation of multiple scholars like Sherwin, Abrash and Walkowitz, and Curry. The reenacted scenes and observational positions are at times fictional or nonfictional depending on the statements in the interview which highlights the multiple perspectives and narratives of an event. The interpretations argue that the combination and arrangement creates a more holistic picture and this is historic truth. Morris, however, believes in a single historic truth that may not be revealed but nevertheless exists (Morris, The Museum of Modern Art with Ron Rosenbaum).

All in all, The Thin Blue Line incorporates various new forms and elements to pursue its goal: The release of Randall Adams. Morris combines traditional, more progressive, and experimental fea­tures, techniques, and narrative strategies. It is rather a synthesis than a disruption.

5. Conclusion

This paper sets out to establish whether the documentary The Thin Blue Line is a new experimental documentary or a hybrid. It has examined the concepts of traditional and new documentary and found out that it roots in a traditional format and engages with numerous new techniques. The study identifies a contrastive organization, two rhetoric positions, and ‘cinema verite’ as estab­lished features. In contrast, the film does not fit into Chris Cagle’s classification of approaches or definition of a postclassical narrative.

The second major finding is that the scripted reenacted scenes were an unestablished form in 1988. While other documentaries of the time had to justify and clarify their reenactments, The Thin Blue Line uses them with changing details for the murder of officer Woods (Lacher). Furthermore, Morris embeds original evidence from the police into the film. The artistic methods move the documentary close to hybridity which foremost highlights the unpredictability of the genre.

The third chapter of the paper analyzed the narrative strategies and forms of The Thin Blue Line. It contradicts the popular opinion a non-narrative structure is a key element of documentaries (Corrigan and White 261). The investigations of Cagle, Abrash and Walkowitz, and Sherwin have shown that there is a storyline and the debate is about the question of a singular or multiple truth(s). Moreover, Sherwin distinguishes between a linear and nonlinear narrative to evaluate the criminal case of Randall Adams. Morris’ documentary contains various aspects from both sides to structure his narrative, for example it simultaneously supports the process of decision-making by the audi­ence, a persuasive position, a disquieting sense, and sexual tension.

Another perspective on narratives is an historic approach because The Thin Blue Line reviews a recent historic event. It has the goal to show the innocence of Randall Adams which evolves into an active process of writing history. The discussion about truth continues in this field because a line is drawn between historic veracity and the construction of the real. The documentary may show a variety of perspectives to understand the event, it has to be mentioned again: Morris does believe in a variety of perspectives but also in a historic singular truth. In addition, this perspective moves into the background when post-structuralism is introduced on multiple occasions in the film.

The experimental aspects of the film are not only the usage of old methods in a new genre but also structural elements like the short hypnosis of the audience.

All in all, The Thin Blue Line incorporates multiple accounts and positions of the same event. These are artistically, traditionally, progressively, and experimentally illustrated in different scenes of the film. The documentary stretches the boundaries of its genre through reenacted scene, post-structural montages, and a new narrative strategy.

Works Cited

Abrash, Babara, and Daniel J. Walkowitz. “Sub/versions of History: A Meditation on Film and Historical Narrative.” History Workshop 38 (1994): 203-14. Web. <http://www.jstor.org/stable/ 4289325>.

Corrigan, Timothy, and Patricia White. The Film Experience: An Introduction. 4th ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2015. Print.

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1 Chris Cagle defines a social actor as the interviewed subjects of the documentarist, hence its anybody from wit­nesses to experts (45).

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Details

Title
Errol Morris Expands the Documentary Genre. An Analysis of "The Thin Blue Line"
College
University of Göttingen
Grade
1,0
Author
Year
2016
Pages
18
Catalog Number
V453243
ISBN (eBook)
9783668853003
ISBN (Book)
9783668853010
Language
English
Keywords
documentary, Errol Morris, The Thin Blue Line
Quote paper
Maximilian Christian Kühn (Author), 2016, Errol Morris Expands the Documentary Genre. An Analysis of "The Thin Blue Line", Munich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/453243

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Title: Errol Morris Expands the Documentary Genre. An Analysis of "The Thin Blue Line"



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