The Documentary Art of Filmmaker Michael Rubbo

By D. B. Jones
Series: Cinemas Off Centre
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Paperback : 9781552388709, 262 pages, February 2017

Table of contents

 

Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Purpose and Method
1. Learning the Craft: The True Source of Knowledge These Days; Early Films at the NFB
2. Making it Personal: Sad Song of Yellow Skin
3. Nudging Things Along: Persistent and Finagling
4. Filmmaker Front and Centre: Wet Earth and Warm People
5. Family Matters: OK . . . Camera; The Streets of Siagon; Jalan, Jalan, The Man Who Can?t Stop
6. How it Works: Waiting for Fidel; I Am an Old Tree
7. Where the Action Isn?t: Log House; The Walls Come Tumbling Down; I Hate to Lose; Tigers and Teddy Bears
8. Something?s Happening: Solzhenitsyn?s Children . . . Are Making a Lot of Noise in Paris
9. Facial Expressions: Yes or No, Jean&ndsah;Guy Moreau; Daisy: The Story of a Facelift; Not Far from Bolgatanga
10. Long Shots: Margaret Atwood; once in August; Atwood and Family
11. A Break from "Realty": The Peanut Butter Solution; Tommy Tricker and the Stamp Traveller; Vincent and Met; The Return of Tommy Ticker
12. New Tools of the Trade: ABC; The Little Box That Sings; Much Ado About Something; All About Olive
13. Plein Air Documentary: YouTube Films; Bicycle Art; Painting with Film
Conclusion: Influince . . . Comparisons . . . Importance
Filmography
Selected YouTube Films
Notes
Works Cited
Index

Description

Michael Rubbo’s groundbreaking work has had a deep and enduring impact on documentary filmmaking worldwide, though his name has remained relatively unknown. In The Documentary Art of Michael Rubbo, author D.B. Jones traces Rubbo’s filmmaking from his days as a film student at Stanford, through his twenty years at the National Film Board of Canada, where Rubbo developed his distinct documentary style. Jones then describes Rubbo’s post-NFB venture into feature film directing, followed by Rubbo’s return to his native Australia, first as an executive with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, and later as a director of feature-length documentaries and maker of short, personal films for YouTube.

Exploring locales from Montreal to Vietnam, topics as diverse as plastic surgery and French Marxism, and from interviewing Margaret Atwood to documenting a failed attempt to interview Fidel Castro, Rubbo’s wide-ranging work establishes his innovative, personal, lyric, and spontaneous documentary style. In The Documentary Art of Michael Rubbo D.B. Jones reveals not only the depth of meaning in Rubbo’s films, but also the depth of their influence on filmmaking itself.

Reviews

Nobody knows the NFB like D.B. Jones, and nobody writes about documentary like him either. This is a terrific book: punchy, detailed, and eye-opening.
- Jerry White, Associate Professor & Canada Research Chair in European Studies, Department of English, Dalhousie University

Michael Rubbo brought to documentary filmmaking … the voice of a filmmaker who entered the reality he was recording - doing so with unfailingly intellectual curiosity, good humor, and compassion. Rubbo’s films … underscore the importance of cultural and political differences. But more importantly, they allow us to appreciate those profound aspects of our shared humanity.
-Karen Cooper, Director, Film Forum (NYC)