Richard Leacock

Richard Leacock (born July 18, 1921, London) is a documentary film director and one of the pioneers of Direct Cinema. He grew up on a banana plantation in the Canary Islands till shipped off to School in England. He attended Bedales, then Dartington Hall Schools from 1929 to 1938, where he helped form a student film unit, and made his first film, Canary Bananas, an eight minute silent film. To know more about the technical basis of filmmaking, he studied physics at Harvard University. During the war he was a photographer for the U.S. army. In 1946 Robert Flaherty hired him as cameraman for Louisiana Story. In the early sixties Leacock, Robert Drew, D.A. Pennebaker and others founded Drew Associates. Pennebaker had also a technical background and Drew worked as Producer. Together they developed a new style of filmmaking based on synchronous sound and the use of lightweight cameras. Leacock left Drew Associates in 1963 and founded his own production firm, together with Pennebaker. In 1969 he became head of the film department at MIT which he chaired until 1988. In the eighties he was still interested in the technicality of filmmaking and produced videos for French television. In its most naive formulation direct cinema was an attempt to film "live as it is". But Leacock is not a naive filmmaker. In 1988 he concluded an interview with the following remarks: "Q: Would you say that your general attitude towards fillmaking has changed? A: I habe been starting to think about documentary filmmaking instead of just doing it, and I think that for a long time I have been teaching things that I don't really believe in. My thinking has changed a lot. I'm not sure how to teach documentary filmmaking, I'm even not sure what documentaries are. I think that for me I'm beginning to pay more attention to what I want and less attention to what people want me to do. In many respects I begin to think that most of my live I have filmed the wrong things and more and more I am beginning to regret it." (Leacock 1988)

Filmography

  • Canary Island Bananas (1935)
  • Brussels loops (1957), codirected with Shirley Clarke, Wheaton Galentine and D.A. Pennebaker
  • A Happy Mothers Day (1963), codirected with Joyce Chopra
  • Lambert, Hendricks & Co. (1964), codirected with D.A. Pennebaker
  • A Stravinsky Portrait (1966), codirected with Rolf Liebermann
  • Tread (1972)
  • Community of Praise (1982), codirected with Marisa Silver
  • Lulu in Berlin (1984), codirected with Susan Woll - Louise Brooks talks about her collaboration with Georg Wilhelm Pabst
  • Les Vacances de Monsieur Leacock(1992),codirected with Valrie Lalonde
  • Rehearsal: The Killings of Cariola (1992), codirected with Valrie Lalonde
  • Gott sei Dank - Ein Besuch bei Helga Feddersen (1993)
  • Flix et Josephine (1993)
  • A Celebration of Saint Silas (1993)
  • A Hole in the Sea (1994)
  • A Musical Adventure in Siberia (2000), codirected with Valrie Lalonde

Films about Leacock

Literature

  • Leacock (1988), Interview in: Mo Beyerle, Christine N. Brinckmann (editors), Der amerikanische Dokumentarfilm der 60er Jahre. Direct Cinema und Radical Cinema, Frankfurt am Main, New York: Campus, 1991, p. 124-133
*Mamber, Stephen (1974), Cinma Vrit in America. Studies in Uncontrolled Documentary, Cambridge, Mass.

 

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