I think that it's pretty clear that quite a few things have changed in the
documentary genre, but like everything, there are good ones and bad ones.

My personal bete noire is the over-extension of stories into multiple
episodes when the story just doesn't deserve it. I guess that this all
follows the success on Netflix on series like Making a Murderer, and then
more recently Tiger King. The former was a well told narrative, made over
years, and deserving of the series length they delivered. But I believe
that Netflix only came on board fairly late in the day. It was a massive
success, at least by Netflix's metrics, where keeping audiences coming back
for many hours is critical for maintaining subscribers. The worst case of
this I came across recently was the HBO series on McMillions. It was a
decent story, but could have been told in 90 minutes instead of six hours.
I didn't make it to the end I got so frustrated with it.

Some of these series getting long run times are greater than series
covering major wars or political figures.

The same problem is also becoming true for many fiction series where
something that could be told in six episodes is stretched out to ten or
more. But that's another discussion.

Then you've got the likes of Tiger King, where the story is clearly more
"scripted." Which takes us into my second big bugbear - the late reveal.
You see this over and over, where some major piece of information that the
protagonists knew very early on, is withheld from audiences because it
creates a cliffhanger at the end of an episode. I think it was the Netflix
series Don't F**k with Cats that did this really egregiously, painting one
person as a potential culprit before revealing a key piece of information
that only 'cleared' them relatively far down the line, when in reality it
happened very quickly.

If there's a clear, "We learnt this... then we learnt that a few months
later," narrative arc to the story, then it's acceptable that the
documentary series. But if the reveals are being scripted in after the
fact, and I don't believe that's good journalism. I read that the HBO
Robert Durst doc might have been culpable of that, with the makers holding
on to his self-incriminating statements until much later than they actually
learnt it. I understand that series, especially those with complex stories,
do need some kind of structure to guide viewers through. But what we're
seeing more and more, is artificially devised cliffhangers.

The corny dramatisation is also a problem. If you're producing a historical
piece on Alexander the Great or someone, then of course you might want to
have some CGI of him crossing the Alps with elephants or whatever. That
makes sense if done well. But for grisly true-crime stories, it can just be
salacious and pandering to the lowest common denominator. And if events
have taken place in the lifetimes of real friends and family of victims,
then this kind of thing can be simply the worst kind of tabloid journalism.
Do we really need to see the serial killer attacking their victims?

It's possible to work around it. Recently, the BBC aired an excellent
documentary on a notorious British killer from the late 70s known as the
Yorkshire Ripper. But it was told very much from the victims' perspective -
one of the problems in the case being that because many were working class
and some prostitutes, they were all considered the latter and therefore,
not really worthy of thorough investigation. The acts of murder themselves
were not detailed unnecessarily (Don't confuse this doc with another
similar one that turned up on Netflix recently. It may be good, but I've
not seen it, and it'd have to go a long way to beat the BBC one. This also
highlights the problem of the same stories being told over and over). And
then ITV made a drama about another notorious killer - Dennis "Des"
Nielsen, played in the drama by David Tennant. They managed this without
showing any murders whatsoever. Again, it was more about the victims than
the crimes perpetrated on them.

I think some of the problem is that the same broadcasters/streamers produce
both good docs - the kind that win Oscars, BAFTAs and Emmys - and tabloid
trash. The same glossy "sheen" is applied to all of them, and it's really
hard to tell in advance, without knowing at least something of the makers
and perhaps their previous output, whether we're going to get something
good, or something trashy.


Adam


On Mon, Apr 12, 2021 at 6:55 PM PGage <[email protected]> wrote:

> I am watching “This is a Robbery...”, like many, I always like a good
> (sometimes even a not so good) art heist story.
>
> The story here is interesting, but there are elements of the documentary
> style that I dislike (musical and sound effects, and some visual effects,
> added to create cheap drama). But what is really interesting to me is how
> this relates to the state of TV (especially cable and streaming)
> documentaries. After the shit show that was ‘Allen v Farrow’, I did some
> reading and found that there is a general sense that the skyrocketing
> popularity of documentaries on places like Netflix and HBO has been
> accompanied by a plummet in credibility and journalistic integrity. That
> helped me place the Allen project in a better context: more infotainment
> than actual news documentary.
>
> It does seem that someone, perhaps news divisions at the TV networks, or
> outside sources like Columbia School or Journalism, needs to define a sub
> genre of news documentary, and establish criteria and best practice
> guidelines. Then we could have like entertainment documentaries, that would
> perhaps contain a disclaimer of something like “inspired by real events”,
> and news documentaries, that would indicate it was produced based on
> accepted journalistic standards.
>
> I’m only halfway through “This is a Robbery”, and so far think it is not
> as entertaining as a Ian Pears novel, and about as credible as a
> documentary on the History channel.
>
> On Mon, 12 Apr 2021 at 7:16 AM Mark Jeffries <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> For the Sunday after Easter: (Snip)
>>
>> 2.  THIS IS A ROBBERY:  THE WORLD'S BIGGEST ART HEIST--The Netflix
>> original true crime docu-mini about the 1990 theft from the Gardner Museum
>> in Boston of $500M of art works dropped Apr. 7 and has an 88% RT
>>
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