SEPTEMBER 11, 2001: FILMMAKERS REACT
by Gregory Orr
I live in New York and on September 11th I was home, less than 20 blocks from the World Trade Center. I could have watched their undoing in person, but I remained fixed to the TV, hoping it would provide understanding and reassurance through its multiple-camera coverage.
I thought about picking up my Super 8 movie camera to record the immediate aftermath, but the camera just felt too heavy and I spent the day alternating between shock and sadness. As a source of comfort, my profession failed me--or did I fail it? Nearly two months later, I still wonder and so asked fellow filmmakers to share their experiences of that terrible day and what, if anything, they have done in response.
Nicole Betancourt: (filmmaker and creative director @ MediaRights.org.):
"I stood on my roof and snapped photographs compulsively (my video camera
was out of reach). I later felt guilty that I had documented human suffering
without any purpose in mind. I haven't developed the images yet because
I don't know what I am going to do with them. Taking pictures or video helps
me deal with traumatic events. It allows me to both hide behind the lens
and capture the moment so I can deal with it over time."
Cynthia Wade (filmmaker): "The next morning I put a little digital
video camera in my bag in case I wanted to shoot. I wandered the streets
in shock. I couldn't do it. I couldn't film. It seemed like a great violation
against the victims, the rescue workers, and the entire city."
Albert Maysles (filmmaker): "The next day on the street, I was watching
a TV crew interview a hot dog vendor. The questions weren't very interesting
and when the producer turned to me for a reaction, I said I'd answer only
if I got to pose my own questions because the news doesn't ask the right
ones."
Lynn Rogoff (President, Amerikids media company: "We grabbed the
camera and, although we were shaking, we took the first document to testify
to what we were witnessing. We feel we were lucky to have survived this
attack and must bear witness and let the world know what is happening here."
St. Clair Bourne (filmmaker): "I was in Los Angeles, but in talking
with many people of color in LA, I kept hearing the phrase 'chickens coming
home to roost' which referred to the military actions previously undertaken
by the US government in many Third World countries. In the wake of these
unfortunate events, NYC-based media center Third World Newsreel issued a
call to media makers to document the thoughts and feelings of people of
color and other under-represented communities to present an alternative
view to the mainstream media's coverage...an aspect that has been sorely
missing."
William Greaves (filmmaker): "I found myself returning again and
again to Ralph Bunche, the legendary UN Undersecretary General and Nobel
Peace Prize winner whose life I had been documenting on film for almost
a decade. He had a keen sense of the depths to which we humans can sink
when the dogs of war are unleashed. At the same time, he believed that reason
was a powerful determinant of fate. As such the onus was on him, as it is
on all of us rationale beings to come up with creative alternatives to war
and violence."
In a crisis our profession gives some of us a sense of purpose, others a sense of shame. Documentary filmmakers are not the same as TV news crews --who are more like tourists, invading a sight for twenty minutes and taking a few pictures. We are more like foreign exchange students, eager to invest our hearts and minds in a place and try to ask the right questions. The day after the attack, I rallied myself to visit the Trade Center site where I finally shot some Super 8 movies just for the record. One of the rolls I used was half-exposed with scenes from several weeks earlier when re-enactors in Revolutionary War costumes commemorated the 225th anniversary of the Battle of Brooklyn in what is now Prospect Park. Revealed in the developed roll was one of filmmaking's oldest truths: by juxtaposing images, new meanings are discovered. There, on a 50 foot roll of film, were represented two chapters in our nation's history--both of them undeniable disasters. (British forces routed the Americans in that first battle of the young nation and might have won the war if not for Washington's brilliant retreat.) A piece of film, edited by chance, had taught me a lesson about my country and reminded me of its resilience.