Tuesday, November 11, 2008

The Pseudo-documentary

Last night, Walrus, Jen and I went to see John Hodgman speak at the City Arts and Lectures series at the Herbst Theater in SF. It was, as was anticipated, highly entertaining--Hodgman's quirky genius for bullshit is unmatched.

It got me thinking, though, about bullshit of all kinds, and a semi-private wish that I've harbored for a long time: the pseudo-documentary. This is distinct from the mockumentary in that it is not intended as a platform for satire, like Waiting for Guffman or Zelig, but is rather a dead-serious film intended to inform the audience about something that does not, in fact, exist. There are glimmers of this on occasion; The Discovery Channel's The Future is Wild came awfully close by speculating (wildly) about what life might be like in hundreds of millions of years--the spear-chucking tree octopodes were pretty awesome, and shows like Star Wars Tech almost get there, but fall short by turning into ads for their subject matter.

What I really want to see is what's on the Discovery Channel in the Star Trek universe. It seems to me that some really cool ideas are being done a disservice by the need to connect them to a narrative with characters, resolution, and conflict.

Walrus and I had a brief opportunity to do something like this when we produced a magazine for a wierd sci-fi spaceship simulator we were involved with in the early '90s. We became the creative force for shaping the narrative surrounding this uber-geek enterprise, and it mainly took the form of an in-context magazine written for the consumption of not the players of the game, but for their in-game personae. I guess it was kind of an exercise in role-playing, really, but I liked the idea of it in a more abstract way.

I'd like to kick around the idea of a Journal of Unreal Studies--a forum for all that doesn't exist yet bears discussion nevertheless. Any ideas out there?

6 comments:

  1. Have you seen our little "project" titled "The Chupacabra Hunter"? It's a no-budget mock-mockumentary--or something. We put it together with iMovie, a couple of handheld point-and-shoot digital cameras and what we had laying around.

    I do like the idea of your Journal, but I'm pretty sure you can find similar stuff if you hunt around on futurist sites.

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  2. I haven't watched the final episode of that yet, but I watched the ones leading up to that, "I'm French"for some reason keeps making me giggle. I gave it a thumbs up on stumble (Machine stumblers, perhaps we could give fellow artists a boost? Links are on Incertus' blog)

    Writing that news magazine was about the best time I had writing. I think maybe because it had no future, it was what it was and we could just enjoy it for what it was. Fun to write.

    Every once in a while some independent film maker takes a charge at Stanislaw Lem's One Human Minute (something I'm going to do once I upgrade my computer with some Archive.org footage) Not necessarily a 'not real' documentary, instead a review of a book that does not exist.

    Me and SR have talked about a few of these projects in the past. Now that I think about it, we now have access to 'academic' types that we didn't when we used to come up with this stuff...

    I really need to buy a camera...

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  3. Links are in Brian's comment, too...of course...I remain a barely functional blogger...

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  4. Anonymous8:05 PM

    My favorite mockumentary is "An Inconvenient Truth" also up there is "Fahrenheit 9/11"

    Also "Burn Hollywood Burn" was great, Eric Idle is almost as funny as Al Gore and Michael Moore.

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  5. We should clarify that the definition of "mockumentary" is not, as some would seem to believe, a documentary you happen to disagree with.

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  6. Anonymous10:02 PM

    Maybe it's just me, but having scences from a hollywood motion picture put in to illustrate the rapid melting of the glaciers, just seems fake to me.

    Another point, I know, I know you work in the "industry" however, there was never a film editor who got a chance to be a director and the producers wreaked it so bad, but he was stuck because his name was actually Alan Smithee. I do know a mockumentary when I see it.

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