Today, Doc Blog kicks off a new feature taking a global
survey of documentary production. From now until the Festival, we'll be asking
doc specialists around the world to describe the activity in their own
countries. We will post a few entries every week, as long as they trickle in.
We start off with Sandra Buchta, who's the documentary
specialist for German Films, the organization that supports cinema from that
country. This year, TIFF has programmed two documentaries from Germany, Peace Mission (pictured above), about Nigeria's Nollywood film industry; and Upstream
Battle, about an environmental conflict in Northern
California. (Apparently, German filmmakers like to travel).
Q: Describe the tradition of documentary making in your
country.
A: In Germany
there are two traditions of modern documentary filmmaking: one evolved in
Eastern Germany, the other one in Western Germany.
In the former GDR most documentary films were produced by the state-owned DEFA
studio. Among the notable directors who created a distinct style are such names
as Volker Koepp, Jürgen Böttcher and Thomas Heise. In Western
Germany the documentary production was closely linked to the
public broadcasters. The 60s and 70s were
particularly fruitful and produced the rise of filmmakers such as Werner
Herzog, Alexander Kluge or Hartmut Bitomsky, to mention a few. After 1989 these
two traditions of documentary filmmaking crossed ? and a new generation of
filmmakers has been emerging since then.
Three German documentary filmmakers who have had an impact
on the documentary world: Werner Herzog ? no comment necessary or, if so, watch
his latest film Encounters at the End of the World (by the way, not a German
production). Volker Koepp ? from his Wittstock-series in the 70s up to his last
two films Sons and Elder Blossom in 2007, he has been exploring unknown Eastern
territorries and has introduced us to unforgettable protagonists such as Mr.
Zwilling and Mrs. Zuckermann in a very unique and human approach. Philip
Gröning ? for creating a
3-hour-documentary about Carthusian monks which turned out to become not only
an international festival-hit, but one of the most successful German
documentaries in cinemas at home and abroad (Into Great Silence) [which played
at TIFF in 2005].
Q: Describe how
documentaries in your country are reaching audiences.
A: Although slots have diminished, documentaries still have
their place in the programmes of the public broadcasters ARD (where each
regional station has their own documentary commissiong editors), 3sat,
ARTE/Germany and ZDF. Documentaries are also regularly released in cinemas, but
distributors still fight to find audiences. In the last 10 years there have
been some breakthrough successes, which have also changed the public image of
documentaries ? from a mere TV-programme into a theatrical event. The
documentary Rhythm is It (2004) by Thomas Grube and Enrique Sanchez Lansch
about a social youth project by the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra hit the nerve
of more than 600.000 viewers. Part of the success was due to specific target group-marketing
and distribution ? the rest was magnificent word of mouth. After monks and
music, other ingredients for successful cinema-releases of documentaries in
Germany are polar bears (Earth, the British-German co-production reached over
3,500,000 viewers) and, of course, soccer: the documentary, Deutschland - Ein
Sommermarchen, about the German team at the soccer World Cup 2006 leads the
list of successful docs with almost 4,000,000 viewers.
3) Describe where documentaries are headed in Germany.
A: Germany?s
new Federal Film Fund (DFFF), which was installed in 2007 to support the
production of feature films for cinema, also funds creative documentaries (and
coproductions). In general, due to the film funding facilities on a federal and
regional level, there are many independent documentary filmmakers/producers in Germany. Around
700 of them are members of the Association of Documentary Filmmakers (AG DOK).
There are different initiatives in Germany for online-distribution of
documentaries as well.
Due to excellent training at the major film schools in Germany (many
with specific documentary departments) young documentary filmmakers are now
producing creative documentaries demonstrating individual signatures and high
quality. Among the many talents, watch out for these three and their film
school productions: Bettina Timm ? in her 30-minute documentary Cosmic Station
the director takes us to the top of an Armenian mountain, where a couple of
scientists still dedicate themselves to a prestige project of the Soviet Union
? the discovery of unknown galaxies. (Festivals: Visions du Réel/Nyon, Karlovy Vary). Maximilian
Plettau ? Comeback follows the German boxer and ex-champion Jürgen Hartenstein
from his provincial town of birth through shabby training halls to an
all-decisive boxing match in Philadelphia.
(For this film the director, who is also the DoP, won the German Camera Award.
Festivals: Visions du Réel/Nyon, Silverdocs). Sebastian Heidinger ? his film
Drifter closely and controversially observes young drug addicts in the district
around Berlin?s
Bahnhof Zoo ? a place which gained notoriety in the early 80s after the
biography and film ?Christiane F.? (Festivals: Visions du Réel/Nyon, Cracow).