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| Spanner in the works |
Franny Armstrong documented the longest running
trial in British legal history. She gives Kim Janssen some tips
on how to be a renegade filmmaker
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A scene from McLibel

Franny Armstrong

Dave Morris and Helen Steel The McLibel Two
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WHEN Franny Armstrongs dad told her, in 1994, that a case
starting that week at the High Court might make an interesting subject
for a film, she had no idea it would end up being the longest trial
in British history.
More than a decade later, McLibel, her film about burger giant McDonalds
disastrous attempt to sue Helen Steel and Dave Morris when they
handed out leaflets criticising the multi-nationals business
practices, has been broadcast by more than 50 million people throughout
the world.
As an advert for a new generation of do-it-yourself punk ethic zero-budget
film-makers, her story, like that of the McLibel two, could hardly
be more inspiring. Find a subject, buy a cheap consumer camcorder,
start shooting and you could end up on the BBC was the message any
would-be Armstrongs could take from her remarkable success.
Everyones got a book in them, they used to say could
it be that everyone now has a film?
Its not nearly as simple as that, of course.
If owning a pencil does not make you a poet, then possession of
a video camera does not make you an award-winning director, either.
As Frannys co-conspirator at Spanner Films, Lizzie Gillett,
points out: We go to a lot of film festivals and theres
a lot of crap out there.
But with thousands of home movie cameras gathering dust in cupboards
across Camden, its a reasonable assumption that among the
countless media studies graduates, wedding photographers and holiday
snappers there are a few frustrated filmmakers just waiting to be
discovered.
Youth worker Paul Perkins has already shown that a powerful film
can be made about a parochial Camden subject with Tower Blocked,
his take on the Chalcot Estate PFI scandal, which caused severe
embarrassment at Camden Town Hall earlier this summer.
Theres certainly a plethora of outlets for completed low-budget
films tackling subjects the mainstream media wont, including
FourDocs, Channel 4s new digital channel for four-minute documentaries,
and even media giants are taking an interest in leftfield subjects
now, after a string of independent anti-capitalist hits by the likes
of Michael Moore, Morgan Spurlock, Jennifer Abbott and Mark Achbar.
And thats the thinking behind Swots, or Spanners Weekend
of Tips and Secrets, Gillett and Armstrongs aim to distil
10 years experience into an intensive two-day-course and get
new British talent on its way.
Armstrong, sipping on coffee at Twins, her local café in
Camden Road, Camden Town, (a location so important to her it gets
a credit in her films) has an almost religious zeal for hard work
and forbearance. She explains: Making a film is 99 per cent
dealing with bullshit. Filling out forms and dealing with tax problems
before they stop your shoot.
You dont need a lot of money I saw a film that
cost £42.50 the other week but you probably will end
up in debt, and you shouldnt get into it expecting to make
any money.
You definitely need a thick skin and to be completely committed
because its not something you can do part-time and you will
be told, over and over again, that you are wasting your time or
that your idea is no good.
People, your parents in particular, will say: Why dont
you get a proper job?
Most people give up within six months of starting but our
aim is to explain to people what they can expect, so that they are
prepared when things go wrong, as they almost certainly will.
What their course will not do, she insists, is land students in
£30,000 worth of film-school debt, or teach them how to endlessly
chase TV commissions.
She said: A lot of people who come to us are people who already
work in the industry and are sick of making other peoples
films, but theres also people who havent got a clue
about making films and have never picked up a camera.
Of those who have already taken the course, several have gone on
to make their own films or secure jobs in the industry. What unites
those who do succeed, it seems, is a desire to make films which
change people; the commitment of the activist to see through rough
times for the promise of a better future is the essence of the McLibel
story.
Armstrong explains: Were lucky. Most people dont
get to work every day on something they believe in, or get to help
change the world for the better, which I honestly believe we are
doing.
If you are engaged in the struggle then you also dont
have time to be scared about all of the problems in the world that
everyone else is worried about; you are part of the solution.
If, like most revolutionaries, Armstrong appears at times to overestimate
the will or ability of an apathetic public to get involved, it is
because she sees conscience as a choice anyone can make, rather
than something she has a particular talent or privilege for.
She says: Not everyone can be a filmmaker, but everyone can
act out of conscience, absolutely; its a much more fulfilling
way to live.
To enrol on the course, which runs on September 3 and
4, call 0207 681 0394, or log on to www.spannerfilms.net. |
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