Ken,
Do you require that the “expressive dramatizations” come from the maker of the 
documentary? That’s important. There’s a doc about the history of class 
struggle in America that Link TV has been showing in the past few months which 
is illustrated entirely with clips from feature films, but it’s not a critique 
of those films, and the viewer is not supposed to receive them as such. You’re 
supposed to understand them as “expressive dramatizations” of the documentary’s 
subject and ignore where they came from. There are a lot of them, from 
"Matewan” to “The Age of Innocence” (they are not identified) and it works, 
more or less. I qualify it because it’s like telling someone “don’t think of an 
elephant.” Especially people like us; maybe an “average filmgoer,” whatever 
that means, would not be as aware. I’m losing the name of the doc right now. 


> On Aug 29, 2016, at 11:42 AM, Ken Paul Rosenthal 
> <kenpaulrosent...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I'm researching docs that feature expressive dramatizations, either as brief 
> interstitial moments or extended scenes such as 'The Act of Killing'. I look 
> forward to any and all suggestions. 
> 
> Thanks, Ken
> www.kenpaulrosenthal.com
> www.whisperrapture.com
> www.maddancementalhealthfilmtrilogy.com
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