Editor's Notes
The view from here
WE tv Asia runs wedding marathon for Valentine's Day
Andrea Wong leaves Lifetime Entertainment Services
Canadians and Americans honor Black History Month with doc screening
Canada's Citytv picks up Seinfeld's 'The Marriage Ref'
SBS commissions two formats from ITV Studios Global Entertainment
Endemol names EVP of acquisitions for North America
Waterlife wins multimedia award
Beyond to bring Cream's 'I Could Do That' to MIP
Breakthrough sells 125 hours
Discovery Health to mark Rare Disease Day with Disease Detectives
On 'The Virtual Revolution'
Johnny Depp puts on director's hat for doc on Keith Richards
'Fog of War' editor killed in hit-and-run
CBC doc examines mental effects of marijuana
Chimps manning cameras for BBC doc
L.A. Times pays tribute to Larry 'L.A.' Johnson
Good year for docs at Sundance
Redford hypes the future of docs
Participant and EW team up to ask Sundance directors "your" questions
"Balloon Boy" doc director believes film will clear Heene's nameThe view from here
Random musings on the non-fiction biz
Our take on current and past film and TV projects
Industry experts offer their take
| by: | Dec 22, 2008 |
Director Kim Longinotto (Rough Aunties) on...
Her films
In the last few years I've been trying to celebrate so called ordinary people, who are extraordinary and doing incredible jobs. Like the teachers in Hold Me Tight Let Me Go, and the carers. The carers really earn so little, and yet they're heroes on a daily basis. Every day they are dealing with crisis situations - they're putting out incredible amounts of emotional commitment and patience and strength and yet they're not recognized.
Filming in HD
I absolutely love HD; I loved the camera - it was gorgeous. The whole thing was brilliant. Nothing broke down; everything worked. It's all so easy now. We'd go off to film and I'd have a rucksack with tapes in it and batteries. And I could carry it all on my back, and I kept thinking, "No, it has got to be harder than this." Filming on HD I could film things speculatively - I've never done that before.
Working with her editor, Ollie Huddleston
I don't do much shooting unless I'm actually filming a scene. Now I'm trying to work out so I can film scenes in one or two shots. And I know that Ollie likes that; that's how he likes to cut it. This is the first time we've edited where he hasn't told me off about something. Because normally he says, "Oh, you should have held that for longer" or, "You haven't given me enough." Which is great because that is how I learn.
British television
Everyone is always saying to me, "British television is terrible." But I absolutely adore it; I love it. I've seen so many good things recently. I don't think we realize how lucky we are. I can show you two or three things I'd like to watch most nights. I watch mainly fiction. I think documentary and fiction feed each other - I don't see them as being opposites. I don't ever set anything up, so one is not acted and one is. But actually in terms of the way things are made they both feed each other. I learned an awful lot from watching Sopranos about how to make a story. You watch things and you learn from them.
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