There are thousands of found footage films.
I like Rumpelstilzchen too - in fact the link you sent is to a pirated rip of 
the VHS I published in 1996!

To be clear, the question was specifically about fiction films made from found 
footage.
It’s an interesting question. 

For example I would consider Philip Hoffman’s 1986 “?O, Zoo! (The Making of a 
Fiction Film)” - because this film appears to be a documentary made from found 
home movies but it turns out to be a fiction film that was all shot by the 
filmmaker (therefore not found footage, finally, but therein lies the fiction).

I would consider “Crossing the Great Sagrada” by Adrian Brunel (1924) which is 
a parody of a travelogue combining found footage with shot footage - so it is a 
fictional travelogue.

And a film essay like “The Smell of Burning Ants” (1994) by Jay Rosenblatt. The 
film could be seen as a fiction about the coming of age of a boy told through 
home movies and educational documentaries, but the character is only 
incidentally referred to as “the boy” in a general sense and many boys are 
shown. Can it be considered a fiction film with nearly no plot and no diegesis? 
Or is it an experimental documentary?

Finally, a film that comes to mind is “Dragonfly Eyes” by Xu Bing, a feature 
film from 2017 made entirely with surveillance camera footage in China. The 
soundtrack creates the fictional story of a woman transitioning from a Buddhist 
temple to a dairy farm. The genre is classified as a “mystery/documentary” 
which could only mean a fiction.

Of course experimental films escape from the binary distinction of 
fiction/documentary but some films escape from the trinary of 
fiction/documentary/experimental."

- Pip Chodorov

PS Christophe Runne: Thank you for contributing but please refrain from copying 
the entire digest into your replies!



> On Dec 12, 2020, at 4:02 AM, Christoph Runne <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> 
> Found footage films.
> 
> One of my favourites Rumpelstilzchen, (Jürgen Reble). 
> <https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2ox3j> 
-- 
Frameworks mailing list
[email protected]
http://film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org

Reply via email to