MSTERDAM, Nov. 29 - If sheer numbers
mean anything, the much-discussed documentary-film revival of the
last year continues unabated: attendance by industry professionals
was up more than 20 percent, to 2,300 from 1,900 a year earlier, at
the just-ended International Documentary Film Festival here,
regarded by many as the genre's equivalent of the far glossier
annual film festival at Cannes.
What remains less clear is whether the documentary world's next
wave will remain as firmly polemical as the last, which grabbed
attention and a surprisingly large share of the box office for
hard-edged message films like "Fahrenheit
9/11," "Super
Size Me" and "Control
Room."
Major prizes at the Amsterdam festival - where the memory of Theo
van Gogh, whose murder this month, the police say, was committed by
a Muslim extremist in response to one of Mr. van Gogh's films,
loomed large - went to works that took a head-on look at tensions
within and around Islam. Top honors went to Leonard Retel Helmrich's
"Stand van de Maan" ("Shape of the Moon"), about an Indonesian
Christian woman confronting poverty and rising Islamic
fundamentalism in Jakarta, while the youth film prize was awarded to
"Nabila," about a female Muslim rap artist in Sweden.
In another bow to world politics, the festival's "audience award"
went to "The
Yes Men," an American film that chronicles the adventures of
prankster activists who have made a career of sorts out of mimicking
representatives of the World Trade Organization.
But the festival's forum, in which 45 aspiring documentarians get
15 minutes each to pitch their dreams to gatekeepers from HBO, PBS,
Sundance, the BBC and other buyers, showed no discernible limits
when it came to proposed subjects for next-generation films. Ideas
ranged from a movie about the making of a North Korean film similar
to "Titanic,"
to a look at Kabul's Icelandic peacekeepers, who lack actual
military experience because Iceland lacks an actual military.
"We're seeing more and more hybrids," said Diane Weyermann,
director of the Sundance Institute's documentary film program, who
pointed to increasing doses of reality-television-style gimmickry,
animation and drama in today's documentaries. "For so many years,
documentaries were seen as medicinal - worthy but boring," she
added. "But I think that has really been shattered now."
David Kwok, a programmer for the TriBeCa Film Festival, agreed.
"People are attuned to seeing nonfiction on television now. It's not
so ghettoized anymore, and people don't differentiate as much."
At least some observers believe surging interest in documentaries
has been fed not so much by a heated political environment as a
welcome injection of humor. "The media is not doing its job, so
comedy has taken over the documentary," said Andy Bichlbaum, one of
the jokesters who figure in "The Yes Men." "Michael Moore is sort of
a comedian as well as a documentary maker."
But other industry veterans are less certain that documentaries
are experiencing a rebirth at all. "I think it's a fantasy to say
that it's the renaissance of documentary filmmaking," said Frederick
Wiseman, who first rose to prominence with "Titicut
Follies," his 1967 exposé of a state prison for the criminally
insane. "It's only that never before has the announcement of the
wave been quite as strong."
By Mr. Wiseman's account, documentary filmmaking quickly lost its
commercial footing after seeming to gain traction in the early
1990's, when the basketball-themed "Hoop
Dreams" won prizes and took in about $8 million at the box
office for Fine Line Features, and in the mid-1960's, when "The
Endless Summer" brought surf culture to the fore.
And there were already signs of documentary fatigue, even at the
industry's principal gathering, which ended on Sunday.
"One of the things that feature docs have spawned is a real
avoidance of good journalistic research," said Sydney Suissa, a vice
president of National Geographic Channels International, and one of
the buyers listening to those four dozen would-be sellers at the
forum. "It's like, I have an idea about this, and I'm going to go on
a journey. A lot of those personal-journey films I find a little
tedious."