Mockumentary: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
Replaced redirects
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 7:
The BBC did a lot of Mockumentaries in the late 2000s (to the point of two or three a month). One BBC newsreader commented he did news reports for these programmes about twice a month.
 
Due to the miracle of computer-generated animation, the [[Discovery Channel]] has also taken to making mockumentaries about wildlife that no longer exists, such as dinosaurs, or has never existed, such as dragons, in the "filmed in their natural habitat" format.
 
See also: the [[Documentary Episode]], a [[Framing Device]] or [[Plots|plot]] used for certain episodes on a drama or comedy series. Meanwhile, the [[Faux Documentary]] is what a Mockumentary becomes when it often discards the constraints of a supposed documentary crew. Also see [[Left It In]], when people in the documentary directly request (to the camera) that something be cut or edited out, a request that is denied, since you, the viewer, still get to see it. [[Fictional Document]] is a more generic case that isn't used to tell the whole story.
Line 87:
* The three main series ''[[Dinotopia]]'' books were mostly written in the format of the journals of Arthur Denison as found by James Gurney.
 
== [[Live -Action TV]] ==
* Entire show examples:
** ''[[Reno 911!]]'', a specific parody of the ''[[COPS (series)|COPS]]'' style reality-documentary.
Line 140:
* Harry Enfield starred in ''Norbert Smith: A Life'', about a fictional actor (with plenty of clips from horribly plausible bad British films) and ''Norman Ormal: A Very Political Turtle'', about a fictional Conservative cabinet minister.
* Many, if not all of the ''[[Top Gear]]'' Challenges. Crossing a dessert in Africa or a reaching the North Pole in a car appear as very genuine documentaries about cars in extreme environments. But then you have others that include things like Jeremy hilariously rolling over a car in the background of a live news broadcast or the Stig falling with a car from the deck of an aircraft carrier and dying. Or the one in which they tried to test cars for their usefulnes as getaway cars and robbed a bank in Croatia and got in a chase with the police during which James died by jumping of a cliff, only to be back the next episode.
* The [[Animal Planet]] documentary ''[[Mermaids]]'', about the fictional discovery of a mermaid-like body and the supposed science behind it.
* ''[[X-Files]]'' had the episode ''X-Cops'', which was an episode done in the format of the ''[[COPS (series)||Cops]]'' show that purported to be footage of an X-Files case.
 
Line 147:
* ''[[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue]]: In Search of Mornington Crescent'', in which BBC reporter Andrew Marr talks to great players of the Game from Humphrey Lyttelton to Dame [[Judi Dench]] in order to learn why the rules are [[Calvin Ball|so hard to discover]].
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
* The cutscenes from ''Urban Chaos: Riot Response'' are filmed like an actual news report. My mom thought there was an actual terrorist attack for a few seconds until I told her it was my game.
* ''[[Michigan: Report From Hell]]'' is a ''playable'' Mockumentary, where you're trying to get the scoop at what's happening in Chicago. {{spoiler|[[Shaggy Dog Story|Nobody survives]].}}
 
== [[Web Original]] ==
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9do_Hr3NaWY This Campus Movie Fest best comedy winner] uses the Mockumentary approach, detailing the careers of a fictional comedy duo from the early twentieth century—the ''first'' comedic film duo, as it happens. The doc is presented without irony, but the content of it is [[Rule of Funny|so absurd]] and it turns [[Inherently Funny Words]] [[Up to Eleven|up so high]] that you can't help but laugh.
* The "Trope Of The Week" series ''[[Echo Chamber]]'' is a [[Show Within a Show]] - the characters are creating a vlog for [[TV Tropes]], and ''[[Echo Chamber]]'' details the process the characters go through in order to make that vlog happen. {{spoiler|It doesn't.}}
Line 157:
* ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dj8UOdFs5Go&context=C3de6871ADOEgsToPDskKNlqODDsL4mW0GosRCicuu Hearts of Dorkness]'', which has a [[Web Original]] page in progress, is a mockumentary akin to ''[[Tropic Thunder]]''{{'}}s ''Rain of Madness'', a satire of ''Hearts of Darkness'', in this case being a teenager-produced shoestring-budget short that chronicles four geeks and their catastrophic efforts to create a 200 million dollar Skyrim film. .on a budget of their pocket change.
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* ''[[Surf's Up]]''—a rare animated example. Your basic sports story done in documentary fashion... [[Everything's Better with Penguins|with penguins!]]
** Which obviously owes something to the Eighties-era animated sports mockumentary ''[[Animalympics]]''. With the major difference being that ''Animalympics'' had no central character, no unifying narrative, and was loaded to the brim with celebrity and pop culture references of the day. In contrast, ''Surfs Up'' follows a limited cast of characters on a definite story arc, with cultural references being narrowed to the archetypes often seen in sportsdocs.
Line 164:
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Formats]]
[[Category:Infauxmation Desk]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]