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The
Kindness of Strangers
Veteran
documentary filmmaker Albert Maysles was guest of honour at
the Belfast Film Festival. Vanessa Gildea caught up with him
to discuss direct cinema in the digital domain.
'As a documentarian I happily place my fate
and faith in reality. It is my caretaker, the provider of
subjects, themes, experiences - all endowed with the power
of truth and the romance of discovery. And the closer I adhere
to reality the more honest and authentic my tales. After all,
knowledge of the real world is exactly what we need to better
understand and therefore possibly to love one another. It's
my way of making the world a better place.' Al Maysles.
Albert & David Maysles (1932-1987) are credited
with being the creators of 'direct cinema,' the distinctly
American version of the French 'cinema verité'. Al
Maysles and Maysles Films count over three dozen films to
their credit, including Gimme Shelter, Grey Gardens
and the landmark Salesman, a portrait of four Irish
American door-to-door Bible salesmen from Boston regarded
by many as the classic American documentary.
The last time Film Ireland spoke to Albert
Maysles he told me about a dream he had to sell his family
home in the famous Dakota building in New York, buy a whole
building in a cheaper part of town, divide it up and install
his children and close friends each in an apartment there.
I ask him how his dream is coming along, he tells me that
they have indeed purchased a building in Harlem, and that
two of his children are already living
there. With an enormous childlike smile he also tells me that
in a couple of days he will know whether the sale has gone
through on his Dakota building home. So, dreams do come true!
You would be forgiven for thinking that as one of the most
famous and celebrated documentarians of all time that Albert
has made his fortune through films, but not so. Albert is
still a struggling filmmaker; he has many projects in pre
and post production that he is trying to get money to make
or to finish. Albert was honoured with a retrospective of
his work at the Belfast Film Festival in April; I had the
opportunity to ask him about filmmaking and his current projects
in between Masterclasses and screenings.
Vanessa: The first questions
I want to ask you Albert is about the Direct Cinema movement
that you and your brother David pioneered in America, is it
still a relevant style of documentary filmmaking? And do you
still make documentaries in that style?
Albert: I think it's very important that make
a documentary, in terms of filming people's experiences as
they're happening. Still in America we rely too much on narration
and music to dramatise and give what I would call a 'non cinematic'
style.
And you are still making films in this way?
That's right and now even more so because we
have better equipment with which to do so
I wanted to ask you a quite personal question
about your brother David, who you were very close to and was
your collaborator in film. He died prematurely in 1987 which
I know had a profound effect on you, was there a point after
his death where you thought I don't want to make films without
him?
I never doubted my instinct to go on making
films despite the loss. Susan Froemke who was working with
us at that time became a replacement for David and more recently
Antonio Ferrera. I haven't been at a loss for good filmmakers
to collaborate with.
Despite the current obsession with so called
reality style documentaries on TV, do you think there is a
current resurgence for the creative documentary, what with
quite a number of documentary features getting extensive theatrical
releases?
I think people aren't exposed enough to the
purer form of documentary that I would advocate. I think any
attempt to get at the real thing will help to move people
more in that direction. I remember when the reality shows
first began; it was reported on TV with the word reality having
quotation marks around it, which meant something about how
it had a special attitude towards documentary filming. With
the word reality in quotation marks people think that they're
getting the real thing and they're not, that's a dangerous
thing. Just as in literature there is a move from pulp fiction
to non fiction and I think it's going to happen in film as
well, it'll become more and more an important factor in our
lives.
From the early days when you made Salesman,
Gimme Shelter and say Grey Gardens you funded
the films yourself and exercised complete creative control,
so when you were commissioned by HBO to make a series of 'Filmmakers
in Profile' films featuring Martin Scorsese and Jane Campion
to name just two, are you still afforded that level of creative
and editorial control?
Well there are few places
in America where you make your film the way you want and they
accept that, but one of those places is HBO, and so we've
made three films with them and I'm making a fourth one, the
Gates / Christo*
project and I'm glad we're doing it with HBO. It's always
been impossible for me to get films shown on the nationwide
networks ABC, CBS, NBC & CNN. So you use your judgement
to exercise freedom and anyway the films shown there are so
stylized. Some of the theatre owners expect you to sacrifice
your own expression, so you have to fight that a lot, but
then there's DVD too as a way of exhibiting but still maintaining
the freedom that you want.
At festivals and documentary forums you
hear a lot about the MTV generation audience and how certain
demands are made on filmmakers by funders / TV channels for
a cut every seven seconds or that the subject of the film
is repeated every few minutes so that people can join in viewing
at any time, have you come across those restrictions at all?
I've never had funding from any of those places
or had any of my films screened on those channels you're talking
about. So I haven't had that problem.
Now that you have received certain awards
and recognition, like Lalee's Kin getting an Oscar
nomination in 2001, and your cinematography awards etc is
it easier for you to get funding to make your films?
It's hard for me to assess that, I know that
maybe 20 years ago PBS wanted to make an American Masters
film about me, but when I said well I will make it, they turned
that down. But now I've put together and am selling the idea
of an autobiographical film, I'm getting very good support
for that so I'm going ahead with it.
You are publicly a great advocate of the
Sony PD150 and subsequently the PD170, how has the DV camera
changed the way that you make films from when you shot everything
on 16mm cameras with separate sound?
Well firstly if someone wants to make a documentary
on film, it's going to cost you a lot of money compared with
video. To buy a proper film camera set up it would cost you
$100,000 compared to the PD170 which I think you can buy for
$3,000. And you have the picture and sound all in one little
package and all on the one tape. Other than that you throw
a tape into the camera you can film for a whole hour before
you change tape again compared to film where you re-load every
ten minutes. People argue with ten minutes you have to be
more careful but I don't know I think tape is better; it seems
to be you have more ability in a normal situation when you
turn the camera on
I recall you telling a story about a particular
time in Cuba in the sixties with Fidel Castro when you wished
you'd had a DV camera to record something that happened, can
you tell that story?
In 1960 when I was in Cuba, I spent whole 24
hour periods with Fidel, I remember during one of those days
Fidel said this evening 'I'm going to a reception in the Cuban
embassy' and asked would I like to come along and so indeed
I took him up on that. During the course of the reception,
I was standing shoulder to shoulder with him when a telegram
came to him, he tore it open read it and said 'Would you like
me to translate it for you?' And I said please? 'Your state
department has just broken off relations with Cuba.' Well
it was a situation where I couldn't have brought my big camera,
but if I'd had a small video camera that precious moment would
have been caught
Have you ever transferred any of your films
to 35mm from DV, if so what kind of results did you get?
To tell you the truth I've only made tests
and they looked fine, but that's expensive to transfer to
35mm
I read somewhere that you believe that the
human urge to reveal itself is stronger than the urge to conceal
or keep secrets is. With specific relation to your ongoing
Train project In Transit where people have been know
to tell you and allow you to film their life stories or intimate
secrets between train stops, what is it about you or your
approach that makes people want to do that?
I think that unlike some, and I hope they're
in the minority, documentary filmmakers who are out to get
people to prove their point. My approach is quite different,
I like people and they sense that right away, the way I approach
them and look at them produces a kind of trust. And also I
want to do a good job at representing their lives fairly and
truthfully. I would say that when documentary filmmakers don't
have that faith that what they do then isn't very true representation
of what's going on. It's just the fact that everybody has
a point of view and that they can control that for themselves.
Editing itself no matter how careful you are is a kind of
manipulation, I chose editors who are very faithful to the
material and I shoot it in such a way so as to render a very
truthful account of what's going on. The whole relationship
is based on the kindness of strangers
A film like Salesman which says so
much about America of a certain time, but is still a film
that when it screens today 40 years later still resonates
so powerfully with audiences, why is it still so relevant?
Well I think that certainly in America and
it's a growing trend all over the world, even in China, buying
and selling, the capitalist dream to attempt to be rich. People
lose their foundations with one another because everybody
is buying and selling. So that theme which was so important
in Salesman is still important today and even more
so maybe
There is such heart and such melancholy
in the character of Paul Brennan to which I think people will
always relate to
He was a man who like my father was in the
wrong job. Paul should have been a writer and my Father instead
of being a postal clerk should have been a musician.
He played the trumpet?
Yes he played the trumpet but never as an occupation.
I know that you are currently working on
quite a few projects, can you tell me a bit about them?
Well I'm still trying to raise money for my
Train* project, the
Gates/Christo* and
my autobiography. I'm also making one about the Dalai Lama
and his visit to New York in 2003 which I need to get money
to finish the editing of. Other projects have diverted my
attention away from the train film but as soon as I can I
will return to it because I think it has potential to be one
of my best.
You started shooting the Train*
film as early as the sixties when you were in Russia, is that
right?
Yes when I was visiting mental hospitals (Albert
is a qualified psychologist and went to Russia to make a film
about the state of Mental Health care there) making a film
and also when travelling on motorcycles with David
That time reminds me of a wonderful moment we
captured when we went to film my mother as she was about to
become the president of a local chapter of a club she belonged
to. When we came to Boston and knocked on her door with the
camera running. My mother pulled her hand up over the camera
and on to the top of my head and turned to me and said Albie
you need a haircut (laughs). At this time I think that that
may be the opening of the film
What about your Jew on Trial*
Film, where are you with that?
Again I've been working on these other projects
so it's been put on hold somewhat. There is some urgency with
that film because Anti-Semitism is on the rise. There is one
significant piece in that film, where it was told that Jews
killed Christian children to take their blood and mix it with
matzos for the Passover celebration, totally ridiculous charges
that no one would begin to believe except the Hezbollah's
who come out with such stuff on satellite television.
When you say Anti-Semitism is on the rise,
do you mean in America primarily?
I think in other parts of the world primarily,
in the Middle East and Muslim countries, but even certainly
in France and Germany and probably this Country too.
What you're talking about there is the demonisation
of one race so as to justify abusive or prejudiced behaviour
Yes exactly, so just as some use this propaganda
to propagate Anti-Semitism, a good documentary can re tell
the facts of this charge that was made against the subject
of my documentary. We need information that we can rely on
about the real world.
I want to ask you a bit more about Going
on a Lark* your autobiographical
film, did that idea come out of being approached about the
American Masters series?
Yes, that gave me the idea and with my 50th
anniversary coming up of making movies, I thought this would
be a good time to look back on my life and look forward too,
and an opportunity to tell people what I'm engaged with now.
One of the things I do all the time which I will show in the
film is that I teach people how to make documentaries; people
call me and say they have an idea for a documentary but they
want some clarification on how to go at it. I say come on
over we'll talk about it, some of those sessions I will be
filming, sometimes the idea is so good and they need that
help from a professional I'll just go ahead and help them.
I want to ask you about an old friend of
yours and someone you collaborated with on a recent project
and that's Shivaun O'Casey, who made a film about her father
Sean O'Casey and I know you shot quite a lot of that for her.
We spoke before about possible difficulties of making a film
in the Direct Cinema style about someone who is dead, can
you tell me about working on that film?
It went very well, especially the scenes where
she had conversations with her Mother. It was a work of love
all the way through. I had never met him, we were about to
film Sean O'Casey when he died but we had gotten all this
other great material with Shivaun and her Mother so it just
didn't happen. The love that the daughter had for her Mother
and Father is carried all the way that film and it makes for
a film that represents him so beautifully. The archival footage
is so strong even though we weren't able to actually film
him we had that material which was a direct representation
of his thoughts and his philosophy.
With regard to all the projects you are
currently involved with, you seem to be still struggling to
get money to finish them?
That's right but you know we had a harder time
in the old days. We had to go ahead and make Salesman
and Grey Gardens on our own, without any support from
anybody.
So is it easier now to make films like Salesman?
I think it's somewhat easier now. But subjects
like the relationship between a Mother and daughter in Grey
Gardens, who's going to put up money to make that? It's
not about politics or violence or the usual kind of topics.
So far nobody has sworn, there's been no profanity in our
films and so much of the trash on television is full of that
kind of stuff which I find so unattractive and unnecessary.
So you had no money in place when making
Grey Gardens?
No, in fact we had a hard time distributing
the film; it took twenty years before any television station
would show it, it got very well shown in England. Salesman
took over thirty years to be shown and these are films that
are not one political persuasion or the other which could
be used as a reason not to show them.
A filmmaker once remarked that to make documentaries
is to take a vow of poverty (Albert laughs), that even if
you have received critical acclaim or success or indeed at
your level Al it doesn't seem to make it any easier?
That's totally true. Doesn't make it easier
in terms of sales, but it is an extremely satisfying profession.
I'm so pleased with the films that we've made and the good
things we've done for the people represented, who would otherwise
be totally unknown. And for the public who learn so much about
life around them through experiencing the things that go on
in the films.
You don't seem to ever get disillusioned
Albert?
Not about that, I feel that there's plenty
out there to be represented in documentary and there's a lot
of good to be done that way. I just the got a call the other
day from Yoko Ono asking me to do an essay on John as she's
been asking other people who knew him for a book. Then I thought
well what about a film and so we're going to do that too
You made a film before with Yoko Ono when
she was starting out as an artist?
That's right one of her Happenings that
I filmed. More recently just last year, she invited me to
her birthday party and so I said maybe I'll bring my video
camera and that could be my gift, so she agreed to that, ended
up with a 3 1/2 minute piece which was lovely.
Are you making a film about John Lennon
solely?
A film of the people who knew him and who are
contributing essays to the book
The film will co-exist with the book almost?
That's right; it should go with the book and
exist as a film on its own.
Are you and Yoko Ono still good neighbours
then?
Oh yes, oh yes but not for much longer
(Albert smiles).
*please see www.mayslesfilms.com
for treatments, proposals, advice and more info on his projects.
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