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Australian International Documentary Conference - A Report
by Kerry Sunderland
There was a record attendance at the 8th Australian International Documentary Conference (AIDC) in Byron Bay, held from 17 to 20 February. Eight hundred delegates, predominately practising and aspiring independent documentary makers and those who study the craft, attended the four-day talkfest and marketplace. This 'strength in numbers' certainly edged the conference, largely organised by volunteers, closer to financial success during a difficult corporate sponsorship climate corporate dollars have been an essential part of the funding recipe that has traditionally sustained staging the event. Herein, of course, lies the challenge facing the industry today the dichotomy between corporate dollars and the drive to make and watch documentary programs. Catherine Marciniak, AIDC 2003 Conference Director, doesn't mince words: Mary Anne Reid, Policy Manager at the Film Finance Corporation, says the record attendance was evidence of the best and worst things about being a documentary filmmaker in Australia in 2003. A less appetising prospect for documentary makers attending the conference is that Australia is too small a market, and funding too limited, to support anything like the number of delegates present. When the Byron Bay documentary community bid for AIDC 2003, their vision for it only the second in its 15-year history and to be held outside a capital city was that it would result in significant changes in the industry and particularly for those who had a passion for making documentaries that can make an intervention in public dialogue. There was a feeling that the scales had tipped too far in favour of the corporate world and that style over substance had gripped Australia's largest screen industry forum. But that was then, and this is now. Arguably, the corporate world is today under siege and extravagant expense budgets let alone program budgets have been confined to history. It was as a result of the first AIDC, held in 1987 at McLaren Vale, in the heart of South Australia's wine growing region, that the ABC introduced its pre-sale commissioning system. The AIDC 2003 local management committee's ambition was that this year's conference would be a forum where similar landmark outcomes would be achieved for the industry. And Byron Bay, with its reputation for alternative living, would be the perfect setting to think 'Outside the Frame'. What did this undercurrent wash up? Firstly, I must say that it was a robust program of considerable substance. With up to four consecutive sessions every hour and something happening every evening, it was impossible to cover everything. Here is what I discovered. Is it as bleak as we think?
Few feature documentaries are made for theatrical release and very few people can survive by making them alone. The focus always seems to be on the negative a constant crisis. We need to ask is the picture that bad? Are we worrying about the right things? Do we need to recognise that the world has changed and we need a new way of thinking about what documentary is, can be and should be?
She used figures from the Australian Broadcasting Authority, TV ratings and case studies to dissect each assumption and, after running out of time, concluded that it is not just about the site of exhibition, we need to pay more attention to [the] aesthetics of each medium, and the relationship between texts and audiences. Roscoe's view on factual entertainment programs offered some contrast to the views expressed the day before by Brian Winston (University of Lincoln) in his keynote address, during which he argued that they are flawed because they create artificial situations that don't exist in the real world. But Roscoe's conclusion was telling: DVDs the cash cow of the future? In Roscoe's introductory remarks, she said: Technology has changed the way we produce, exhibit and distribute documentary works Audiences have changed fragmentation and changed patterns of viewing have led us to expect more from the form, and to want to be moved and entertained as well as intellectually engaged. The series of Re-Frame sessions were deliberately designed to explore other avenues to channel money into the documentary industry. But the rapid pace of technological change and changing viewing habits permeated all sessions. As Reid observed:
However, when all else was said and done, I was left with the impression that distributors, networks and some commercially astute documentary makers had already set their sites on the 'great promise' for the industry DVD emerged as the medium de jour. There seemed considerable enthusiasm for this medium among the independent producers with whom I spoke, at least because it is seen by some as the natural prelude to, and training ground for, interactive television. Having said this, independent new media producer Keren Flavell (Springtime Productions) and her lawyer Karen Goodwin (Marshall & Dent) dampened some of my enthusiasm when they explained the very difficult copyright terrain anyone working with less than six figures would have to negotiate to make documentaries for DVD distribution. Documentary makers not only have to get their heads around new technology; they have to establish digital rights' management strategies at the outset. So, back to the minions. There was some isolated criticism in the lead-up to the conference that it had little to offer new and emerging documentary makers. Nothing could have been further from the truth. Not only were 'upcoming' producers and directors amply sprinkled across the program, there was genuine recognition of the need to foster the next generation of documentary makers and very serious debate about the importance of initiatives that seek to match emerging makers with experienced producers. I hope that this will be one very beneficial outcome of AIDC 2003. Personally, I found that high profile speakers from both Australia and overseas were more than willing to listen, encourage and offer practical support to those who, like me, didn't yet have the 'right' track record. There were offers from several successful, larger production companies to take emerging makers under their wings. There was interest from the networks in commissioning teams comprised of those with a mix of experience (and the AFC's and ABC's online documentary and broadband initiatives are encouraging this in a broader context, by bringing together new media producers and filmmakers). Australian DocuMart The Australian DocuMart, sponsored by the FFC, was held on the Wednesday and attracted an audience of more than 400. Seventeen pitches were made to a panel of 38 commissioning editors and sales people. There were 21 international panel members from the UK, Germany, Ireland, Canada, the USA, Japan, France, the Netherlands and New Zealand. Many of the pitches (by lunchtime, almost all, although enthusiasm dissolved somewhat after lunch) attracted genuine interest from the panel. David Curl's pitch for Shadows of Uluru received interest from CBC, NHK, NDR, S4C and the BBC. Earlier, Melanie Ansley walked away from lunch on the Tuesday with $20,000 development funding for her documentary, Shanghai Bride, following the ABC/CBC Pitch 'n' Punt. That many Australian delegates were at AIDC 2003 to finance their projects comes as no surprise. This is why sessions that gave independent producers the opportunity to gain some insight into what commissioning editors want were so popular. So popular, in fact, that after day one the 'Meet the Networks' sessions were moved into the (much larger) lunch marquee. Held outside the confines of a five-star hotel or conference centre and instead in a resort by the sea in Byron Bay, AIDC 2003 achieved its goal of creating a different flavour for what will probably now become an annual event (in a break with the biennial tradition, Perth is hosting the next AIDC in 2004). Huge marquees and portable air-conditioning units were trucked in for the week. After a long drought in Northern New South Wales, the heavens burst on days three and four of the conference. Fortunately the emergency truckload of straw that arrived just before lunch on the last day (very 'Byron Bay') meant no one was washed away. Many delegates, however, were not prepared to let the energy of the conference evaporate into thin air. The plenary session on the last day was extended to allow for discussion and voting on a number of significant resolutions. At the time of writing, most of these resolutions have yet to be finalised. However, the day after the conference a media release was issued concerning delegates' opposition to a war on Iraq. The resolution challenged the mainstream media to oppose the distortion and manipulation of one of the first casualties of war TRUTH. A second resolution called on the international media to resist the propaganda machinery of the US and its allies and to accurately report the views of those who dissent: We call on the media to always acknowledge when material comes from a pool source and when it is not genuinely and independently sourced. We challenge the international media to hold the freedom of information as their greatest responsibility in the lead up to and in coverage of any possible conflict. We as documentary makers ask the broadcasters to take responsibility for the role they play to create a peaceful and sustainable future.
© Kerry Sunderland, February 2003 Disclosure: Kerry Sunderland was a member of the local management committee for AIDC 2003 and produced the AIDC web site. |
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