Inaccuracies?


And I quote, "The influence of films like 'Primary' was immediate. In his film 'Shadows', New York director John Cassavetes followed three fictional African-American siblings just as Drew had followed Kennedy."

I'm not necessarily suggesting that Mark Cousins made a mistake here and suggested that 'Primary' (1960) influenced 'Shadows' (1959), which would be impossible as the latter was released the year before the former and Cousins said "like 'Primary'..." I'll give him more credit than that.

However, I am stating that this struck me as a poorly structured segue due to the aforementioned possibility of misinterpretation, as well as arguably inaccurate, since the shaky camera, 'Use any light that's available' aesthetic of 'Shadows' seems to have been more dominated by restraints and legitimised by neo-realism rather than the influence of this novel fly-on-the-wall documentary style.

But most of all and the real reason I'm posting this new topic: I'm interested in any outright inaccuracies anyone's spotted in the series.

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I laughed when he suggested Primary had influenced Hitchcock's "Psycho"! Fecking plum!

I just checked the dates on that one: pretty impressive feat of time travel from Hitch, since he started shooting Psycho on 11th November 1959 and finished on 1st February 1960 and the Wisconsin Primary was held on 21st January 1960 - which means that not only was the documentary not finished until after Hitchcock made Psycho, but the events in it didn't even happen until Psycho's final week of shooting!


"Security - release the badgers."

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Hitchcock himself said that the major influence on Psycho was the success of Les Diaboliques which he felt made his own recent, colourful, glossy, films look too safe and old-fashioned.
I know that Hitchcock isn't always the most reliable source but this rings a hell of a lot more true than any influence from recent documentaries. He had after all, long before Psycho, made a far more documentary-like film in The Wrong Man.

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As I've noted elsewhere on this board, he makes a similar howler when he states that film noir (a movement he says started in 1941, but is generally regarded as beginning with 1940's Stranger on the Third Floor) was influenced by the Italian neo-realist movement, illustrating it with an extract from Rome: Open City (a film not seen in the US until 1946). He also states that Hollywood was only interested in making Betty Grable-style entertainments in the mid-40s - contradicting his own previous cmment about film noir - and that 'adventurous' American directors were going to Europe to make films (what, during the war?). Many of the more absurd moments in the show are down to his misunderstanding of what words actually mean - like his bizarre confusion of the word classic and classical to support his belief that Casablanca is too formally unbalanced to be a classic - but at times his series warps not just the English language or history but time itself to try to make some of his more bizarre notions stick.


"Security - release the badgers."

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As I've noted elsewhere on this board, he makes a similar howler when he states that film noir (a movement he says started in 1941, but is generally regarded as beginning with 1940's Stranger on the Third Floor) was influenced by the Italian neo-realist movement, illustrating it with an extract from Rome: Open City (a film not seen in the US until 1946).

That's not a howler. The first major noir cycle continued right to the end of the '50s, and was influenced by neo-realism. Certainly Aldrich's KISS ME DEADLY, and, in particular, Dassin's THE NAKED CITY and Stanley Kubrick's two noir efforts (KILLER'S KISS and THE KILLERS) were saturated with it (among others). It's often strange to see this coexist with the German strain in the same films (as the two seem so contradictory), but bringing such influences together and making them work is one of the beauties of American cinema.

There is at least one other noteworthy connection between the two genres. Visconti's OSSESSIONE, developed completely independently of the American noir genre, was, nonetheless, a noir picture (an adaptation of James Cain) and was also the first neo-realist picture.

---
"The Dig"
http://cinemarchaeologist.blogspot.com/

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It's an inaccuracy when you claim, with typical hyperbole, that it's responsible for the creation of a pre-existing genre (which had been in existence before America's involvement in WW2) rather than its future direction. It's also overlooking the role of post-war disillusionment on the genre, which is often confused with neo-realis influence.


"Security - release the badgers."

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This mistake is not essential, except to some one like me who has written books about where Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, and Harold Lloyd filmed their great comedies.

Los Angeles used to have many tunnels - several were removed 60+ years ago when the hills were graded flat, but during episode 2 he says Buster Keaton filmed a stunt from Three Ages overlooking the Third Street Tunnel. It was filmed instead near the Bradbury Mansion overlooking the Hill Street Tunnel. The Third Street Tunnel is still around, so maybe he just assumed it had to be the spot, as the other tunnels are long gone. You can read about using the Hill Street Tunnel to film stunts in this blog post of mine.

http://silentlocations.wordpress.com/2012/01/20/the-artist-locations-p art-4-bradbury-chaplin-and-lloyd/

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Granted I only watched the first two episodes, but one inaccuracy I caught was he showed a scene from The Empire Strikes Back. It lists the director as George Lucas. Seemed like poor research to me on the filmmaker's part. Maybe I should watch the rest, but I probably won't.

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in episode 2 he talks about the gliding camera in the famous Gone with the Wind sunset shot he says something like "the camera glides away from the two lovers and the sunset." except the scene is of Scarlett O'Hara and HER FATHER. it's one of the most iconic shots in the film, father and daughter appreciating their homestead.

I like this documentary but it is very subjective.

"It's hard for me to watch American Idol because I have perfect pitch."
-Jenna, 30 Rock

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One obvious inaccuracy occurred when he was discussing Gone with the Wind's camera pullback on Scarlett O'Hara and her father looking at Tara, and he refers to them as "lovers".

"It's too late... too late. There's no bringing her back.

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Maybe he confused Tara with Chinatown.



It ain't easy being green, or anything else, other than to be me

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That's good. I like that!

"It's too late... too late. There's no bringing her back.

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An unquestionable error is that the narration states that, only when Charles Bronson looks into the eyes of Henry Fonda at the end of ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST does Bronson's character realize that Fonda's character had been the one who killed his brother, when, in fact, Bronson knew Fonda was the killer all along. The entire film, in fact, was built around this point.

---
"The Dig"
http://cinemarchaeologist.blogspot.com/

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Besides saying Scarlett and her father were lovers, which is like saying Charles Foster Kane put a lot of money into his daughter's opera career and calling yourself a film scholar -- even if you're like Leslie Howard and say, "Heaven help me if I read the book," you have to pay some attention to Gone With the Wind -- he also says the youngest daughter of the aging couple in Ozu's "Tokyo Story" is the most attentive, but she's their daughter-in-law. That's the point -- their biological children don't want to have anything to do with them, but a relative stranger shows them as much hospitality as she can, given she's living in poverty (husband, old couple's son, died in WWII).


Sh-it's a secret!

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OK, here's another one: he says Cary Grant's character in "Bringing Up Baby" "is trying to buy a bone."

??

David, Cary Grant's character, works for a museum who sent an expedition to Utah, who are mailing David the last bone he needs for his brontosaurus skeleton.



Sh-it's a secret!

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He really needs a visit from this chap:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czWLEbNwjCI


"Security - release the badgers."

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