Adam Curtis and some bold documentaries
A couple years ago, some friends in Philly held a little screening session with a selection of films they brought back from the annual INPUT festival that features the best of worldwide public television.
After the screening, a couple films really stuck with me. One was Adam Curtis’ “The Mayfair Set”, but at the time it seemed destined to remain a UK-only film.
I was struck by the playful imagery, imaginative work-arounds for sections without direct footage and for Curtis’ willingness to tackle a bold narrative that assailed major figures in the UK power structure and even threatened his bosses at the BBC.
Thanks to the magic of the internet, we can now view much of Curtis’ work on line (albeit missing quite a bit of beauty due to web delivery limitations.) As his wikipedia entry describes, Curtis combs the BBC film vaults for archival footage that wonderfully illustrate his narratives.
Here are a couple of links in no particular order. I haven’t watched the whole of Mayfair Set yet, but look forward to working my way through.
A more recent film “The Trap”
A writeup and trailer for his most recent collaboration with an avante garde theater group:
A wonderful dialogue between Errol Morris (Fog of War; Fast, Cheap & Out of Control) and Curtis.
Finally, here’s Adam’s blog at the BBC.
Hope you enjoy his work as much as I do.