2018 Norton Lectures in Cinema:
Frederick Wiseman
It was first as a teacher of criminal law that Frederick Wiseman (b. 1930) ventured down the shadowy corridors of the institutions he would later conscientiously illuminate on film. His inaugural foray into documentary cinema, the seminal Titicut Follies, proved so shocking in its unadorned rendering of a state mental institution that it remains the only American film to have been completely censored for reasons other than obscenity or national security. Yet the controversy in no way deterred Wiseman from continuing to maneuver through similar halls, uncovering the unruly humanity and institutional psyche within them.
From court, hospital, school, public housing development and military base, to monastery, meat-processing plant and even the entire town of Belfast, Maine, most of his films comprise a dramatic social chronicle of the American Institution—in all of its variously rigid and amorphous manifestations. Whether revealing corners of society hidden from view or enlarging the perspective on those too familiar to be seen, Wiseman’s panoramic views of social microcosms offer both vital records of American lives and ideologies and artful expositions of the human condition.
In line with the “direct” and “observational” movements in documentary filmmaking, Wiseman invented his own technique of what he half-jokingly calls “reality fiction”—acknowledging his subjective, yet remarkably evenhanded, act of interpreting reality. Exceptional even among his like-minded contemporaries, Wiseman keeps dramatic manipulations, filmmaker intervention and judgment to an absolute minimum and includes no narration, music, explanatory intertitles or interviews. Recording sound while longtime collaborator John Davey (and before him, William Brayne) shoots 16mm film, Wiseman then spends a long, intensive and monastic period editing the footage—abandoning standard narrative structure in favor of a more intuitive, dynamic placement around the accurate portrayal of his central protagonist: the place.
Time seems to unfold naturally, patiently immersing the viewer into the middle of the drama on the same footing as those filmed. Lengthy scenes expand into a comprehensive yet undefined view where multiple, minute revelations can erupt within the most mundane of situations. Apparently guided by a moral obligation to both his subjects and his viewers, Wiseman refuses exploitive manipulation and voyeuristic titillation. Instead, all are respectfully invited to navigate humanity’s complex web on their own. Steering clear of the sensational, saccharine, and patronizing tone of “expert” commentaries, the audience is activated into paying attention to the nuance and details where the critical questions, arguments, laughter, anxiety, silence, discomfort and heartache reside.
Wiseman’s cinema is a consummate and caring witness to the full spectrum of human heroics and follies – from the inarticulate to the eloquent, the convoluted to the beautiful, dark to light, the ordinary to the extraordinary. Drawn to both the well-worn stage of everyday life and that of the professional performance, Wiseman later traveled across the Atlantic to document the dancehalls and theaters of Paris, where he also filmed The Last Letter (2002), a fictional excursion—and an exhaustive contemplation of London’s National Gallery. Returning to his ongoing mosaic on American life, Wiseman has recently completed In Jackson Heights (2015), At Berkeley and his latest, much acclaimed epic Ex Libris about the New York Public Library. In these, as in all of his work, Wiseman gently wrings the heart of the most unassuming situations in order to reveal the myriad constellations of beliefs, laws and lifestyles that together comprise the soul of a nation. – Brittany Gravely
The Harvard Film Archive welcomes Frederick Wiseman back to accompany a second retrospective after his first here in 2011. Joining Agnès Varda and Wim Wenders as 2018 Charles Eliot Norton Professors in Poetry, he will deliver two of this year’s Norton Lectures on January 29 and February 5 at Sanders Theatre.