Saturday 9 November 2019

Peter Tammer writes on The Search for Truth in Documentaries - Part 2 - Frank Hurley and “The Endurance”

Editor's Note: Peter Tammer has now written three pieces for Film Alert 101 about the history of the documentary film. The first was about the first documentary ever made in Australia the 1896 Lumiere Bros film of the Melbourne Cup. The second was about Robert Flaherty and Frank Hurley. What follows are further thoughts on Frank Hurley and his filming of Ernest Shackleton’s expedition to the Antarctic in the ship Endurance. Click on the links to go the earlier essays.

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Recently I went looking for the TV movie Shackleton starring Kenneth Branagh in the lead role. I had not seen this film since its first release on Australian TV in 2003. It made a huge impression upon me. This film was bound to captivate audiences around the world because of the immensity of the ordeal suffered by the entire crew, including Shackleton himself as leader of the expedition, and also Frank Hurley who was the official photographer on this ill-fated adventure. The images which Hurley recorded from the first part of this expedition up until the men reached Elephant Island in April 1916 have remained powerful icons of polar exploration and failed expeditions since they were released to the public in 1919, although newspaper accounts of the entire event including the rescue had been available after August 1916.


Movie footage from this expedition was used to create films for release under two main titles: “South” and “In the Grip of the Polar Ice”.


In his NFSA essay  ‘AKA. Home of the Blizzard’, Quentin Turnour wrote:


Hurley shot footage to complete the film, but the work doesn’t see release until 1919. “IN THE GRIP OF THE POLAR ICE” is the title of the Australian lecture film; the UK release is called “SOUTH”.


As I could not locate a copy of the SHACKLETON” movie I watched the two hour Nova documentary called “ENDURANCE”  (click link) instead. I had not seen this doco previously, but I found it totally gripping. I won’t bother to list its few shortcomings. I was overwhelmed about this account of the expedition in so many ways! The ship was well named “Endurance” despite the irony of the fact it failed to endure the onslaught of the ice. Because the ship was so named, the name “Endurance” now stands for Shackleton’s entire mission from the beginning to end. It stands for the mighty effort of all the crew and team members, their heroic performance under the most trying, debilitating  circumstances; the fact that they survived as a team despite their different personalities and temperaments; and most of all, the astonishing qualities of leadership Shackleton provided throughout the whole crisis. Finally, Shackleton got every member of his expedition home alive, against all the odds which were stacked so heavily against them. 


I now return to the central throughline of my essay, “The Search for the Truth in Documentaries”. Here we encounter a singular conundrum… the veracity of the original films which were released about this the expedition compared with the truthfulness of any films which derive from those early films, including a documentary such as Nova’s, or a dramatised TV serial account such as “Shackleton”, featuring Kenneth Branagh and directed by Charles Sturridge.


Let’s go back to the rare film and photographic footage of the period 1914 - 1919. 


I begin in 1914 because that is when Frank Hurley joined the Shackleton’s expedition, and I will end with 1919 because that is when these early versions of the filmed footage were released as films. Near the end of that period Hurley was engaged as a photographer in action in WW1, from 1917 to March 1918.


From wiki: 
In 1917, Hurley joined the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) as an honorary captain and photographed many stunning battlefield scenes during the Third Battle of Ypres. In keeping with his adventurous spirit, he took considerable risks to photograph his subjects, also producing many rare panoramic and colour photographs of the conflict. Hurley kept a diary in 1917-1918 chronicling his time as a war photographer.[7] In it he describes his commitment "to illustrate to the public the things our fellows do and how war is conducted", as well as his short-lived resignation in October 1917 when he was ordered not to produce composite images.[8] His period with the AIF ended in March 1918.


I will return to many of the points raised in this summary from Wikipedia later in the essay, especially the issue of “composite images” which caused so much criticism of Hurley.


On YouTube I found an interesting video compilation, (click link) a “tribute” to Shackleton and his expedition. This is how it was described by its creator Pete Vassilakos:


In tribute to Sir Ernest H. Shackleton. Unique version of The Imperial Trans Antarctic Expedition of 1914 filmed and photographed by Frank Hurley. ~ WITH SOUND!  Centenary Celebration. Edited by Pete Vassilakos. Visit www.vassdesignpolarart.com


This tribute piece is created from some of the movie footage and some of the stills shot by Frank Hurley. Running only 21 min 36 secs it is accompanied by a soundtrack of music and sound effects, plus some human voices mumbling from time to time, but it is presented without any narration.


I draw your attention to this two minute sequence. Have a good look at the shots as they now appear, without audio, and see what conclusions you draw from them. 





I’ve made some notes concerning these images as one would do in an editing room when making a shot list:


0.00  A man playing with a dog, other dogs in kennels, still on board ship.
0.15  A wide shot with the ship in background, men and dogs running playfully in foreground.
0.26  Putting the dogs into harness for pulling sleds.
0.40  Dogs pulling sleds though crevices in the ice.
1.02  Dogs and sled on flat ice.
1.25  Man playing with a dog, lifting a dog off the ground. 
1.35  Four pups eating.
1.39  Happy man with PIPE, playing with four pups.


After you’ve thought about this mute assemblage of shots, and also my descriptive notes, consider what you might add to them. Then play the same sequence again 
with its audio track: Click on this link and think about the difference this audio makes to your comprehension. How does it alter your feelings in response to the sequence. What impressions are made by the sound effects and what feelings are generated by the music?


I think you will find that these two versions, the first without audio and the second with audio, have a substantially different impact upon you as observer, what you make of them, what you feel about them.


Let us take this one step further, these same images have been used in the Nova documentary called “Endurance”:   



This is almost the same sequence as shown in the mute images, but beginning with the shot of the man jiggling the puppies. Now we are told his name is Tom Crean, and we are told that he stole food for the pups!


If we skip on ahead we come to the shot of a man sitting in a kennel with a dog. His name is given as Frank Wild and he is followed by Frank Hurley bonding with ‘Shakespeare’ the “Holy Hound”.


Then we see images of the men and the dogs, the men working to disentangle the traces for the sleds. There is conjecture about Shackleton watching and musing. 


Later we see shots of the snow tractor with an interpretative ironic comment that it is “easier to pull it rather than to drive it”.       


What you have seen in these different versions are pretty much the same shots used in quite different ways. In the Nova doco they are “explained” or “contextualised” in some respects by the narration which was probably informed by diary entries of crew members, and also derived from recorded reminiscences or letters of crew members written to their family members.


Each way of presenting these events gives us different levels of information, and extremely different emotional responses to the visual material.


Now I want to add something which will distress animal lovers. This is not included in the “tribute” piece made by Pete Vassilakos, I only discovered it by watching the Nova doco:   




As you see, this extremely sad sequence gives us an altogether different take on everything which we have seen in the other clips. If you only watched Pete Vassilakos’s tribute piece, you would have no concept of what happens afterwards, although you may have noticed that at some point there are no further images of the dogs.


Another video compilation telling the Endurance story shows a man with a rifle going off to kill the dogs followed by a gunshot. I can't find that sequence now, it must have come from some other version of the great misadventure. However the Nova documentary does give important background information relating to this momentous event in the unfolding of the story.:

  This extra information given in the Nova documentary is intensely moving because we have already been told of the deep bond which has developed between the men and the dogs; that was also clearly established in the silent footage.


But this raises another issue when it comes to finding the truth in documentaries: the very same shots can be used over and over, in different combinations and sequencing.  Different producers, different script-writers and editors, will select bits and pieces of the original footage which best suit their own intentions, or agendas. How can we ever know what has been cut or what has been put in a different order? How can we ever be sure that they have not introduced some footage from a different event which is not the one they purport to display in its entirety? 


The answer is simply that we cannot be sure! Our experience of so many documentaries derived from newsreels shot during World War One and World War Two has shown that producers of compilation documentaries often plunder images from other events than the ones they are describing.


CONTEXTUALISATION


I think it’s clear from what I have shown so far that everything we see may suffer from lack of contextualisation or from placing things in a context which is unsupported by the material which has been selected. In the case of Hurley and fellow adventurers of his time, their images, both movie footage and still photographs were often presented in the form of “lectures” accompanied by still photographs and including moving pictures.


Depending on whoever was the presenter, e.g., Shackleton in England or Hurley in Australia, the same material might also have been used differently in each case, and it might have been altered between one presentation and any subsequent showing to improve it.  


Hurley was an inspiring person. From all accounts he had a lot of charisma and hutzpah! He was incredibly athletic and put himself in really difficult positions in order to get his images.


Let’s look at this first example of some scenes of the Endurance which were filmed on her way south to the Antarctic circle. You see the ship rolling in the big seas, the men high in the rigging on a spar, rocking from side to side. These images must have been filmed from a similar position in the rigging, high above the deck. 



This next photograph clearly shows the deck of Endurance viewed from high above, camera tilted slightly downwards, a mast clearly in foreground. Where was the camera and the photographer (Hurley) positioned to get this shot?  My guess is that he was stationed on a “spar”, the horizontal piece attached to a vertical mast which had to carry the sail. 

 


In the next photograph we see Hurley clearly perched on a spar high above the deck with his camera and his tripod quite far away from the mast, hanging over the sides of the ship. Why was he using a tripod way up there? Tripods are usually used to support a camera and to level it on the ground or on the deck, so why use a tripod up on a spar? My guess is that the incredibly brave and agile Hurley wanted the tripod up on that spar for the freedom to use his hands to crank the movie camera. It would also permit him to “pan and tilt” his camera, while secured to the spar and therefore freed from shaky handheld movements. I have never been brave enough to film off the ground more than a couple of metres and I’ve never put myself in such an uncomfortable place to get shots. I prefer to make films in safe places wherever possible so I could never have achieved the spectacular results Hurley got. He belongs to that tradition of photographers and cinematographers who would go to great lengths, risking their life and limb to get spectacular shots. 






In this image we see that Hurley has no tripod up on the spar. He’s clearly 
hand-holding his camera as he films from high on a spar overlooking Shackleton 
on the deck. Note how far that spar protrudes from the side of the ship.


The following clip presents a sequence which I’ve created from just a few shots selected from Vassilakos’s tribute footage: 


Here’s a  SHOT-LIST of that demonstration sequence, or its Edit log:


It begins with the ship having left Buenos Aires, now heading south to the Antarctic, the sea ice being split apart by the ship’s prow.


From 21 to 38 secs there’s a beautiful shot of the Endurance approaching camera, including camera stops, (jump-cuts). The ship is still moving through water but she’s not under sail, so she must be powered by engines at this time.


From 39 secs  the ship is now trapped in much thicker ice and men are using picks and crowbars, trying to open up a channel in the ice.


From 52 secs through to 1.20 we see men using long ice-saws, two men pushing down while four others are pulling on a rope to draw the saw upwards after each downstroke.


1.20 - 1.29  Some men are trying to push the ice away with long poles.


1.30 - 1.38  A long line of men pulling a rope coming away from the ship

It’s possible to form your own interpretation from these images which might be misleading. We now view many of these same images used in the Nova assembly, and we can see that they have been contextualised. They remain just as dramatic but they also are given new “meaning”: and “atmosphere”: 




From 2.32 - 3.04 there’s an explanation for making the square shaped cut into the ice and the chain of men pulling the rope which hoists up the scientist’s net. This context is rarely explained in other films which use the same shots.


Verisimilitude
  1. the appearance or semblance of truth; likelihood; probability:
“The play lacked verisimilitude.”


  1. something, as an assertion, having merely the appearance of truth.
I find it interesting that this word can be used both as praise or as a put-down!




Let’s compare the ending of the Vassilakos’s tribute film with the TV documentary “Shackleton's Voyage of Endurance”.


At 14.35 we saw Hurley bonding with his favourite dog “Shakespeare” the “Holy Hound” which I showed previously.


From the 15 minute mark to the end of the film (20 minutes) we see the arrival of the men in the boats at Elephant Island, farewelling the rescue team as they leave for South Georgia in the remodelled lifeboat boat the “James Caird”.

There are also shots of the the men on Elephant Island waiting for the return of a rescue ship. These are followed by Shackleton’s return in a steamship to rescue the men on Elephant Island.


This five minute section of the tribute film is mainly constructed from still photographs.


It’s lucky we have these five minutes because they certainly represent a most important part of the entire expedition. From what I have seen in all versions, I don’t think Hurley used his movie camera very often, if at all. No moving pictures since the time the dogs were put down!


This  “Elephant Island” period should contain three categories of images: 
  1. What occurs as Shackleton and his small crew sail to South Georgia and land on that island. 
  2. What happens with the men remaining on Elephant Island while Shackleton is away hoping to secure rescue for his men.
  3. And finally, seeing the men being rescued by Shackleton returning from South Georgia.

    At 20.10 we are shown images including information about Shackleton’s death, and credits. But the film’s coverage of the expedition has really come to an end by 20.10.


Here is a short breakdown of what is actually shown from 15 mins to 20.10:


15.10  Stills of the men landing the boats and pulling them onto the shore. Unloading the boats, setting up camp. Food and mugs of warm drinks?
16.34  Preparing the “James Caird” for launch after the re-modelling which raised the height of the hull by a few inches.
17.30  Waving farewell and “safe return” to the departing men of the rescue mission.
17.53  Making the camp more weather resistant, they have combined two boat hulls to form a hut with a sail covering, then we see shots of the men waiting.
19.04  TITLE: “August 1916” followed by steamship approaching.
19.16  A life-boat arrives at, or departs from shore, steamship in background.
19.38  The steamer arrives at a busy port? We are not told where that port it.
19.57  The rescued crew, all cleaned up, now a much happier looking group of chaps.

Now dear reader, please remember, as I stated earlier, my comments are not an attack on Pete Vassilakos’ work as his tribute film is very good. I’m merely pointing out that so much of what is important is not addressed by such a brief film, it simply cannot be addressed and I’m sure there are many significant reasons for that.


Anyone who stumbles upon that film but who does not see any other documentary works covering this same subject would be quite unaware of what a monumental and miraculous escape the crew lived to celebrate, and they would have no idea of the hardships encountered by the men who went to South Georgia, nor the men who remained on Elephant Island. 


This is where the Nova documentary called “Endurance” comes into its own:   


I will now show a few clips from this historical doco which will give you some idea of the incredible daring of the rescue mission as well as some experiences shared by the men who waited on Elephant Island.


What an extraordinary expedition this was in the period of the first part of World War 1. At the “other end of the Earth” so far removed from all the terrible things going on in Europe, a crew of 28 men fought for their lives against the great adversary, “Mother Nature” in the icy seas of the Antarctic. They also fought against the vagaries of temperament and idiosyncracies which would most likely be found in any group of 28 people. 


From Wiki:
The crew of Endurance in her final voyage was made up of the 28 men listed below:
The names highlighted in yellow are the men who sailed the “James Caird” to South Georgia.
Sir Ernest Shackleton, Leader      
Frank Wild, Second-in-Command,
Frank Worsley, Captain
Lionel Greenstreet, First Officer
Tom Crean, Second Officer
Alfred Cheetham, Third Officer
Hubert Hudson, Navigator
Lewis Rickinson, Engineer
Alexander Kerr, Engineer
Alexander Macklin, Surgeon
James McIlroy, Surgeon
Sir James Wordie, Geologist
Leonard Hussey, Meteorologist
Reginald James, Physicist
Robert Clark, Biologist
Frank Hurley, Photographer
George Marston, Artist
Thomas Orde-Lees, Motor Expert and Storekeeper
Harry "Chippy" McNish, Carpenter
Charles Green, Cook
Walter How, Able Seaman
William Bakewell, Able Seaman
Timothy McCarthy, Able Seaman
Thomas McLeod, Able Seaman
John Vincent, Boatswain
Ernest Holness, Stoker
William Stephenson, Stoker

Their extraordinary story really falls into two main parts, the first part ends when the entire crew arrived at Elephant Island, exhausted and starving. After a period of resting the crew is split into two groups: a rescue mission led by Shackleton with 5 other men, while 22 men remained behind on the island, including Frank Hurley. 


On board the “James Caird”: Frank Worsley, Harry McNish, Tom Crean, JohnVincent, Timothy McCarthy and Ernest  Shackleton. 


Now the story becomes two separate stories but the only images relating to the Elephant Island party are only still images captured by Hurley. I think he was using a small “hand camera” rather than a large-format plate camera.


The still photographic images showing the steamer arriving to rescue the men are mot “actualities” they were a set up: they were most likely re-enacted for the purpose of the film lectures which would follow on return to Europe.


So all that you could possibly see in Pete Vassilakos’s tribute film which run from the 15 to the 20 minute mark were stills taken by Hurley on Elephant Island. And there are not many of those used in that film. The incredible voyage to South Georgia and the crossing from one side of that island to the port is not covered by any footage of any sort. That is where a dramatised documentary comes into its own because it has so many ways of giving the viewer extraneous information. The most obvious ones are:


A narration, formed from research of all the records left by the men who were involved.


Interviews with descendants of the men.


Re-created footage standing in for missing actuality footage, but made to look like Hurley’s footage seen in the earlier part of the expedition.


Sometimes an editor will “pinch” footage from other events and splice them into a film where they do not belong. (Poetic licence?)


Interviews with historians.


Observational material featuring modern day adventurers demonstrating the difficult situations which would have faced Shackleton, e.g., taking accurate readings of the sun while at sea in heaving waters, huge waves and wind, and almost sunless cloudy skies. 


Animations of maps which indicate the trajectory to be sailed, but compared with the actual journey which got them to the island of South Georgia.


The Nova documentary Shackleton's Voyage of Endurance (2002) uses all of the above techniques and more, especially sound effects and music to heighten the drama of the events which are depicted. It’s a fine piece of television documentary. I place it right at the top when it comes to documentaries which present historical events for TV audiences. I can’t vouch for its absolute accuracy, but it certainly gives the impression that it has been rigorously researched and scripted and that it tries to depict the events “truly”, even when it uses dramatised reconstruction to represent what could not have been filmed at the time. It feels “authentic” all the way through.


Although I had seen “Shackleton” the film starring Kenneth Branagh previously, in many respects I preferred the Nova doco. Why do I think the Nova doc on Shackleton is so much better?


It’s more thorough, it gives overviews, it gives the viewer many important details. It is a bit sentimental and romantic in its portrayal of heroic status, but it does not wallow in sensationalism. It’s not mushy. It is also critical when it needs to be. But the overriding impression I took from it was it has the appearance of being as truthful as it could be to the subject, from small details to the broad scope of the whole endeavour and its place among the actions of the the world’s nations during WW1. The feature length drama Shackleton with Kenneth Branagh playing Ernest Shackleton is also a fine piece of work, but I won’t discuss it from here on because it is a fully dramatised film of an historical event, whereas I’m concentrating on the genre of “historical documentary” in this essay.


Another bit of important information I only got from the longer version of the Nova doco relates to Shackleton supervising Hurley smashing some of his photographic plates before their departure for Elephant Island. I was astonished to come across this material: click here and go to 44.10 to 47.00  


What a sequence this is! Shackleton knows how difficult the boats will be to move when fully loaded with necessities and like a good military commander he supervises the “culling”. He probably upset McNish deeply by refusing him permission to build a smaller boat. In any case these two had a rocky relationship that worsened at the the crisis deepened. 


Then there’s the trouble between him and Hurley. They both knew the importance of the images which Hurley had so painstakingly captured along the way but the plates would be just too bulky and too heavy. As a filmmaker I can imagine how distressing it must have been for Hurley, but really, so could anyone who has lost family photos and films which are destroyed by fire or some other catastrophe.


But what about Shackleton making sure by supervising the destruction of the plates which were to be left behind. What a vital piece of information! It speaks volumes. 


Trust: a centrepiece of the Nova documentary’s themes!


So, how many different sorts of documentaries are there? 


Do all the films and videos which go under that heading deserve to be there?


Which of those I’ve already mentioned really are documentaries? Or all they all just different types of documentary?


Is there a difference between a documentary and an actuality?


What constitutes an “actuality”?


I’ve tried to address this issue in two previous essays: the 1896 Melbourne Cup Film and my essay on Flaherty and Hurley


What do you do when something which purports to be a documentary may be nothing but a fictional piece of work which looks like a documentary?


Or when a film is truly observational, but when the subject matter changes under the scrutiny of the camera?

Let’s jump to some more recent examples which are well known. Take the Maysles Brothers. I’m selecting my two favourites now…Salesman and Grey Gardens. Are either of these films really documentaries? What I can say about each of them is that they are definitely observational films which “portray and intrude upon” the lives of their subjects. The subjects were compliant with the filmmakers, but in Salesman the central character starts to fall apart under the scrutiny of the filmmakers. There are also moments in Grey Gardens where elder Edie seems to be about to fall apart, out of the film, but she hangs in there. Younger Edie plays the filmmakers to the hilt. 


Getting back to Shackleton and Hurley… there are many images which Hurley took which are clearly “set-ups”. You can spot these images immediately, situations where it’s clear that he could only have got the picture if people performed for him upon request. There are others which are more “casual”... where action is happening, unfolding, the men are busy and all Hurley has to do is to be ready and on the ball to get the shot. And then there are some in which Hurley is being filmed as a crew member, which he probably set the camera for and asked another person to operate the camera for him. 


Should we make any distinction between these types of image as being more truthful or less so if they were set up for the camera, specifically performed for Hurley rather than occurring naturally? If we were to reject set-ups as “lacking validity” and not use them in an edited version of the work, the resulting movie would be extremely brief. Some events can only be represented if they are “performed upon request”. It would be virtually impossible for someone like Hurley to lug all the camera equipment around and always film things only as they occur. Even with modern highly portable equipment this is still the case.


Some events are premeditated… the camera operator knows that the dogs are going to be offloaded from the ship, sliding down a sail to the ice. So he selects the camera position knowing that this event will occur soon enough, he can capture it if he is prepared for the event. His only direct involvement in the action is in signalling that he’s ready to film before they release the dogs. 


Another example similar to this is when the men are sledding through crevices and you can see the dogs and the sled with the man behind it approaching camera. How can Hurley get such a front-on shot if he can only record what is already happening? Well, if there are three sleds going in a similar direction, if he’s quick enough he can see that the first one has done such and such, so he may hold up the second or third until he’s got the camera ready. With extremely cumbersome equipment in such harsh icy conditions these sort of images are always going to be difficult to capture even as still photographs, let alone as moving images which may require “following” i.e., panning and tilting while cranking the camera with a crank handle like a coffee grinder. These days when all our new technology is so light and so brilliant giving us superb images effortlessly, we still have the dilemma of how to capture events if they could not be “repeated for the camera”.

Another stream of criticism often levelled at Hurley is his “artifice” in tinting his images, giving them some sort of hue additional to the Black&White of the old film-stock. That is, he is considered by some people to be manipulating the viewer’s response by giving a picture a bluish tinge, or an orange tinge, rather than leaving it black, grey and white. These techniques were becoming more common among moviemakers of all classes at that time, indicating perhaps a “yearning” for colour and the emphasis of the moods
which such colour washes give, either a warmer or colder feel. 




Looking at those two images now, more than 100 years after they were created, I feel a deep sense of enjoyment, appreciating them for their beauty which I’m sure Hurley was striving for at the time. I’m also confident that he felt the “hue” gave the images a more “naturalistic” impression than monochrome could give.


Then we come to “superimposition” where the photographer can create an effect by combining two images in the same print. This is much more easily achieved with confidence when combining still images in a darkroom. But it can be done with movie film, either by optical printing or by staging a double exposure as Méliès did in his film “The India Rubber Head”. That would be extremely difficult for Hurley to do with his movie camera in those conditions unless he accidentally filmed over something he had already shot before developing the negative, or unless he used optical printing later in the post-production phase.


As I can’t find a clear example of this technique from his Antarctic expeditions I have chosen to represent it from his AIF images in WW1.




Hurley was castigated by many critics of his time for employing the whole range of “tricks” in what people expected to be “true” documentation, as if the truth could only exist without adornment or manipulation


My friend Andrew Pike has written about this here


In August 1917 Hurley joined the Australian Imperial Force as official photographer with the rank of honorary captain. Shocked by the carnage in France and Belgium, he showed his 'burning resentment' in such photographs as 'Morning at Passchendaele'. At the same time he found Ypres 'a weird and wonderful sight, with the destruction wildly beautiful'. He ran great risks to film exploding shells and clashed with Charles Bean, the official historian, over his desire to merge several negatives into one impressive picture: to Bean such composite pictures were 'little short of fake'.


This criticism of “FAKERY” has trickled down to our time and you can see that bias clearly in the following article published in The Guardian 2004. I regard the headline as seriously biased encouraging the reader to assume that Hurley was some sort of fraud. However the tone displayed in the headline is not the same as the tone of the following text: 


Shackleton expedition pictures were 'faked' | UK news | The Guardian

https://www.theguardian.com › World › UK News


Aug 21, 2004 - Shackleton expedition pictures were 'faked' ... They are the photographs that show what is perhaps the greatest story of endurance and valour ever told, the epic ... Hurley's frequent use of 'artistic licence' was confirmed this weekend by ... of the footage from Antarctica in Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide.


My own view is that Hurley felt he was entitled to do any and all of these things because they were all part and parcel of what a photographer could do and they were all viable techniques just like framing, panning or tilting. He would have had some familiarity with selective focus: either “pulling focus” or selecting one plane of focus so that only one part of a shot was sharp and the rest a bit soft and fuzzy.


Let me put a contentious argument here: if Hurley was to film a scene below deck on the Endurance before the ship became icebound and if he added some artificial light to enable the image to be caught, would we call that a fake?


In my own filming in Indonesia I was filming in a Batik factory in Java where two styles of Batik were being created. I had to resort to a “trick” to enable me to get the shots of the “stamped” Batik technique because the light level in that part of the factory was extremely poor and battery light had lost power. The only way I could achieve my images in that room was to record at 8 frames per second instead of 24 FPS. I asked the women to go very slowly, which they did, and I got a sequence which would otherwise have been impossible or very poor. Was that “faking it”? By the way, no-one ever picked my effort there and I never had to suffer any critical attack for employing that “trick”.


I’m also confident to assert that Hurley did not see himself as a “scientific recorder” like Muybridge with his “grids” placed within shots to register images with “precision”. I’m sure that Hurley viewed himself as an artist, a new kind of artist who had cameras and a wide range of photographic techniques available to allow him to create images which would have emotional impact upon the viewer, whether in a gallery, a cinema, or merely attending a “presentation” lecture which included slides and movie footage.


I’m full of admiration for Frank Hurley. I think his achievements were astonishing. As a filmmaker since about 1962 I’ve experienced many of the issues facing Hurley in far less demanding circumstances. I have never had to film in the harsh Antarctic environment with all its attendant physical demands, let alone the sheer dangers, the extreme hardships and exhaustion that these men endured. 


Hurley with two cameras he used in the different Antarctic expeditions:




It’s never easy getting shots to look the way you would like to have them. 


I often think of those intrepid people who make films of mountaineers… how in the 
world do they make a film in those situations when most of us could barely climb those rockfaces with the climbers who are the subjects of those films? Fortunately I have never been required to climb a mountain let alone film those events with climbers as they progress. I’ve also experienced the huge problem of large, heavy, clunky cameras such as were available to Hurley and his contemporaries. 



The worst movie camera I ever owned was a 
35mm Bell & Howell “Eyemo”. It was probably smaller and lighter to carry than Hurley’s movie camera but it was far too heavy and clumsy for me. I endured that camera for months and when I let it go it was “Good riddance!”

So we can’t deny the fact that Hurley staged many of his memorable stills and moving images, and that he embellished them with various techniques such as double exposure, adding hues, etc. These “tricks of the trade” were later called into question by people who rejected his right to create images that would intensify emotional responses in his viewers.


How dare he be so bold!


Peter Tammer 
9th November, 2019.



NOTES:

“In the Grip of the Polar Ice”. Pete Vassilakos’ “tribute” piece: 21 mins


The NOVA  DOCO: Shackleton's Voyage of Endurance (2002) This is the full length doco: 2 hour 30 min.


This link is for the Nova Doco, but only for the shorter 2 hour 6 min. Version.

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