Ross McElwee

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Ross McElwee

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Biography

Ross McElwee took the basic precepts of cinéma vérité and personalized them to create a unique form of documentary making that earned him much acclaim and several awards. His work is almost always autobiographical and he often films himself at some of life's most personal and awkward moments, though usually within the bounds of decency and good taste. Though there are many who feel his documentaries are too slow-paced, detailed, or abstract to be appreciated, there are an equal number of fans who love slowly being drawn more deeply into his world. The three feature films most representative of his style are also his most famous: Sherman's March: A Meditation on the Possibility of Romantic Love in the South During an Era of Nuclear Weapons Proliferation (more simply known as Sherman's March), Time Indefinite, and Backyard.

A native of Charlotte, NC, McElwee earned his bachelor's degree from Brown University and, a few years later, earned a master's in filmmaking from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he studied under Richard Leacock, one of the pioneers of the cinéma vérité movement. Between degrees, McElwee lived in Brittany, where he attempted and failed at various money-making schemes. He next lived in Paris; it was there, in the midst of trying to discern his niche in life, that he attended a showing of Orson Welles' Touch of Evil. The powerful drama inspired him to become a filmmaker. While growing up, he had wanted to become a writer and a photographer. During his studies at MIT, McElwee made a few short films, notably Charleen (1978) and the medium-length documentary Space Coast (1979). The former looked at the life of one of his most interesting friends, a charismatic school teacher. As with several other important people and family members, Charleen would put in regular appearances in his films, thereby creating an unforgettable portrait of the highs and lows of her life. The latter film examined the lives of three eccentric families who lived on Cape Canaveral in the late '70s. Backyard was filmed at his family home, as they carefully prepared to celebrate McElwee's brother's imminent departure to a prestigious medical school, and offers a look at a dying way of Southern life.

In March 1981, McElwee obtained a special grant and began a documentary travelogue that was originally to trace the route of the famed Yankee General across the South, but just before filming began, his girlfriend broke up with him. Devastated, he returned to his family home to regroup. It was his sister who suggested he use his camera to help him meet girls. He took it a few steps further and, over a five-month period, indeed retraced General Sherman's steps, but along the way, filmed his encounters with a half-dozen women, some of them old girlfriends and some of them strangers. The result was a funny, bittersweet study of romantic rejection punctuated by McElwee's periodic musings, spoken directly to the camera while he lay alone in various low-rent motels. Sherman's March received wide theatrical distribution and was one of the most popular documentaries ever made. Time Indefinite is almost a sequel to it and represents a more mature and structured film. It is a highly personal chronicle of McElwee's engagement and marriage to Marilyn Levine. In many ways, it marks McElwee's transition into adulthood, with all its responsibility. It is also a profound rumination on life and death, both occuring during the course of the film.

In addition to the aforementioned personal themes, McElwee's work concerns itself with larger issues, too. For example, one undercurrent running strongly through Sherman's March is the fear and the threat of nuclear war that seems to subconsciously affect relationships between men and women. His Something to Do With the Wall (1991) looks at the lives of those living in the shadow of the Berlin Wall. In the late '90s, he was idly watching the evening news when he came upon the idea of documenting the long-term effects upon a few people who survived natural disasters and then described their experiences on television. The result was the provocative Six O'Clock News (1997). ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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Ross McElwee

McElwee shooting a scene from Bright Leaves
Born (1947-07-21) July 21, 1947 (age 64)
Charlotte, North Carolina[1]
Occupation Filmmaker, Professor
Website
rossmcelwee.com

Ross McElwee (born July 21, 1947) is an American documentary filmmaker and cinematographer, and Harvard professor, known for his autobiographical films about his family and personal life, usually interwoven with an episodic journey of some sort. Many cultural aspects of his southern upbringing are present in his humorous and often self-deprecating films. Other themes include personal relationships, parody, failure, introspection, and historic parallelism. He is largely credited with having mainstreamed the cinéma vérité movement. He received the Career Award at the 2007 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival.

McElwee is a 1971 graduate of Brown University, and received his MS from MIT in 1977.

Contents

Early life and education

Ross McElwee grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina, in a traditional Southern bourgeois family. His father was a well- respected surgeon, and appears often as a character in McElwee's early films. From an early age he nurtured an interest in writing. He later attended Brown University and graduated in 1971 with a degree in creative writing. A turning point in McElwee's life occurred when he undertook a self-discovery voyage to Brittany, France and began practicing photography. Soon after, he enrolled as a student at MIT's filmmaking program. He studied under documentarians Richard Leacock and Ed Pincus, both pioneers of the cinéma vérité movement, with whom he refined his first person narrative approach. "It was a new way of making films, to eliminate the film crew. You lose some technical polish, but it's much more intimate and less intimidating to your subjects. It allows you to shoot with the autonomy and flexibility of a photojournalist."[2]

Career

McElwee's career began in his hometown of Charlotte, North Carolina where he was a studio cameraman for local evening news, housewife helper shows, and "gospel hour" programs. Later, he freelanced, shooting films for documentarians D.A. Pennebaker followed by John Marshall, in Namibia. McElwee started filming and producing his own documentaries in 1976.

Ross McElwee has been teaching filmmaking at Harvard University since 1986 where he is a professor in the Department of Visual and Environmental Studies.

Recognition

Ross McElwee has made eight feature-length documentaries as well as several shorter films. Most of his films were shot in his homeland of the American South, among them the critically acclaimed Sherman's March, Time Indefinite, Six O'Clock News, and Bright Leaves. Sherman's March won numerous awards, including Best Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. It was cited by the National Board of Film Critics as one of the five best films of 1986. Time Indefinite won best film award in several festivals and was distributed theatrically throughout the U.S. His latest film, Photographic Memory, was completed in 2011.

McElwee's films have been included in the festivals of Berlin, London, Vienna, Rotterdam, Florence, Sydney, and Cannes. Retrospectives include the Museum of Modern Art; the Art Institute of Chicago; and the American Museum of the Moving Image, New York; McElwee has received fellowships and grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the American Film Institute. He has twice been awarded fellowships in filmmaking by the National Endowment for the Arts. Sherman's March was also chosen for preservation by the Library of Congress National Film Registry in 2000 as an "historically significant American motion picture."

McElwee's film Bright Leaves premiered at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival's Directors' Fortnight, and was nominated for Best Documentary of 2004 by both the Directors Guild of America and the Writers Guild of America. In 2005, complete retrospectives of McElwee's films were presented at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and at the International Festival of Documentary Cinema in Lisbon. Photographic Memory, in competition at the 2011 Venice Film Festival, will have broken new ground in McElwee's contributions to Cinéma Vérité, not only in its fully digital process, but in its open development and production structure.

Filmography

Director

References

Notes
  1. ^ "Ross McElwee - Biography". ROSS MCELWEE / HOMEMADE MOVIES INC.. http://rossmcelwee.com/biography.html. Retrieved 2009-11-24. 
  2. ^ Ken Gewertz. "The world according to McElwee: A documentary filmmaker's unique personal vision" by Ken Gewertz, Harvard News Office, Harvard Gazette, Apr 21, 2005.
Further reading

External links


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Copyrights:

Mentioned in

Backyard (1984 Culture & Society Film)
Always a Bridesmaid (2000 Culture & Society Film)
Something to Do with the Wall (1992 History Film)
Time Indefinite (1993 Culture & Society Film)
Six O'Clock News (1997 Culture & Society Film)