|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||
THE FOLLOWING INTERVIEW WITH JOHAN VAN DER KEUKEN WAS COMPLETED IN AMSTERDAM IN 1997. MY HOPE IS THAT THIS SMALL TRIBUTE WILL MAKE SOME OF VAN DER KEUKEN'S KNOWLEDGE AND INSIGHTS AVAILABLE TO A LARGER PUBLIC.
|
|
REINVENTING THE DOCUMENTARY CINEMA: A DISCUSSION BETWEEN JOHAN VAN DER KEUKEN AND RON BURNETT
Ron Burnett So much of what you are trying to do in your films is a response to the history of the documentary, the way in which the documentary has tried to set up a false window/mirror on the world and presumes itself to be showing what is happening in the reality around us but never really trying to bring out the complexity of what it is showing, never self-reflexively bringing out the political, economic and social context of which it is a part. The window presumes a clarity on the part of the filmmaker, a unified view of the world, a homogeneity, a lack of contradiction--all these are perspectives which I think you are trying to work against. There are two levels at which I perceive you operating. One is at the level of the reality that you are trying to depict and show and the other is a level of discourse in which you try to comment upon and politicize the way reality is understood and seen. I would like to understand how you are affected by what you are filming and then how you feel you are, politically, influencing the images which you are show. You are trying to include two sets of complex elements simultaneously in the act of filming, does the history of representation, the history of the documentary, overwhelm the spectator's capacity to recognize the level of critique which you are trying to construct? Van der Keuken: From one film to another you may even diametrically change your own point of view. I feel there is a strong theme of unity between my films. In fact I sometimes get the feeling that I am doing the same thing in all my films! Always the same story, but taken in different directions, from different viewpoints, and even different viewpoint inside my self...although each new film starts at a point opposite from the last one. My film on the Palestinians was responding to the immediacy of the situation and was therefore less concerned with itself at the level of self-reflexivity. And this is an important moral choice and perhaps also an important political choice. Whereas in SPRINGTIME it seemed necessary to be outspoken thematically and restrict feeling, in THE PALESTINIANS there was certain need to make the film available to a specific group of people...the committee in support of the Palestinian cause in Holland...a country by the way which has never understood its guilt as one of the major causes in its lack of understanding about the Palestinians...a guilt, the result of Holland's policies during the Second World War.... |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
|
WEB RESOURCES DEVELOPED OVER AN TWELVE YEAR PERIOD IN MONTREAL + VANCOUVER, CANADA BY RON BURNETT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. COPYRIGHT 2009
|
||||