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Talk About Documentary Ethics

September 11th, 2007 Leave a comment Go to comments


The documentary film “The Bridge” is just begging to be criticized (this may be exactly what the director counted on but it’s hard to tell just where this guy is coming from). The film is about suicide and those that choose San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge as their point of departure. In interviews, the film maker speaks about mixing the beauty of the bridge with the darkness of suicide and such discussions – that’s all fine and well. But what is contentious is the fact that there was a group of camera men and women who sat around the bridge filming in hopes of catching the exact moment when someone jumps {why?}. Considering that jumping from the Golden Gate Brdige is an all too common event it’s kind of like shooting the proverbial fish in a barrel. In this case though you just have to have the perciverance and time. {what value does this capture add to such a film?}

In watching the special features included on the DVD, the people behind the cameras remark that they had cell phones programmed and walkie talkies ready and would immediately call bridge authorities when a jump occurred {uh, but isn’t that a little late}. Did they ever call when they “thought” a jump would occur? That isn’t clear. What is confusing is that they say that they didn’t ever know when a person would jump {this was their kind of ‘defense’} AND that “you could just tell.” My question is, if you could just tell then why not “just call” before the actual jump? Even if you are wrong what’s the harm – obviously, no movie (at least as the director sees it). Is this not taking cinema verite (fly on the wall style) to an extreme limit {beyond limit}? And do you really need to capture someone jumping to make this a compelling story? I personally don’t think that it adds any more than if they had filmed some actors standing around the bridge in comteplative moods (that’s essentially what much of the film is and the most dramatic footage…not the actual jumping).

I never felt any attachment to the subjects and so the film always feels “distant.” One might say that a person would have trouble relating because many of the subjects have some sharp mental disabilities and can therefore be capable of anything. But I don’t think so. I feel like the director took a conscious path about how his movie would be made and it is this path that will keep it from truly being succesful.

While overall the film lacks integrity there are some very strong statements made by a couple of the friends and family members of people who died in the film. The father of one of the bridge’s vitctims is especially compelling. But does that and some pretty cinematography justify the selfish style in which the film was made? I don’t think so…

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  1. Anonymous
    September 12th, 2007 at 20:33 | #1

    The creator of the film had the courage to bring into the open the horror of
    Suicide happening weekly at the Golden Gate Bridge. No one dared speak of
    It openly for the last 70 years !

    The police and Bridge authorities admit that they
    stop at least one person each week from killing themselves there.

    However, each week someone is successful and dies a horrible death.

    Conservatively that means that 100 people a year attempt death
    with one tragically dying each week leaving behind families forever
    devastated. Suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem
    92% of those stopped never try again.

    The rails on the Golden Gate Bridge are so low you can lean
    over and fall.

    May I respectfully suggest that you investigate the carnage taking place weekly and if you agree help spread the word about the needless deaths occurring at the Golden Gate Bridge?

  2. Dr.C!
    September 13th, 2007 at 09:49 | #2

    Dear Anonymous,

    My comments were from the perspective of a person creating documentary work and I respectfully disagree with you that the filmmaker had any courage in making this film. The issue you are speaking of in your post is the specific act of suicide and at the rate in which it is occurring on the GGB – I was not addressing that problem. I believe that if a person is interested in the issue of suicide on the GGB then one might look at the issue of: if a person is sitting at the bridge day-in and day-out and has any hint that person is going to jump, why the heck don’t you put down your camera and call the authorities? Watch the film, there is a person in the film that addresses this exact point.

  3. Anonymous
    November 20th, 2008 at 22:27 | #3

    I have not viewed this documentary yet but I am all too familiar with its storyline. I have a close relative who works on the Delaware Memorial Bridge, and like the Golden Gate Bridge, it too serves as a diving board to death for many. According to the bridge workers, the holidays seem to draw the biggest number of those seeking to end it all, contrary to popular reports of this being a myth. Many do not follow through with their plan to jump, either by divine intervention from God or an intervention by a concerned onlooker. Those who do however always meet their fate, their maker, in their watery grave they have chosen. This is certainly not a form of suicidal attention seeking such as slitting ones wrists is deemed. This type of suicide leaves no room for error.

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