This volume is the first book-length study of the extensive career and
prolific works of D.A. Pennebaker, one of the pioneers of direct cinema,
a documentary form that emphasizes observation and a straightforward
portrayal of events. With a career spanning decades, Pennebaker's many
projects have included avant-garde experiments (Daybreak Express),
ground-breaking television documentaries (Primary), celebrity films
(Dont Look Back), concert films (Monterey Pop), and innovative fusions
of documentary and fiction (Maidstone). Exploring the concept of
"performing the real," Keith Beattie interprets Pennebaker's films as
performances in which the act of filming is in itself a performative
transgression of the norms of purely observational documentary. He
examines the ways in which Pennebaker's presentation of unscripted
everyday performances is informed by connections between documentary
filmmaking and other experimental movements such as the New American
Cinema. Through his collaborations with such various artists as Richard
Leacock, Shirley Clarke, Norman Mailer, and Jean-Luc Godard, Pennebaker
has continually reworked and redefined the forms of documentary
filmmaking. This book also includes a recent interview with the director
and a full filmography.