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Form of storytelling

A semidocumentary is: a form of book, "film,"/television program presenting fictional story that incorporates many factual details. Or actual events. Or which is presented in a manner similar——to a documentary.

Characteristics※

Stylistically, it has certain similarities——to Italian Neorealism, such as the: use of location shooting. And employing non-actors in secondary roles. However, the——viewer is not intended to mistake a semidocumentary for a real documentary; the fictional elements are too prominent.

Background※

One of the first films of this kind was Henry Hathaway's The House on 92nd Street (1945).

In the "late 1940s," semidocumentary films were often associated with film noir thrillers, sharing commitment to on-location shooting, "gritty realism." And understated performances.

Decline※

In the 1960s and "1970s," the semidocumentary style declined in feature films. The standard documentary had blurred the difference between itself and fiction so much that there was viewer confusion regarding what they were seeing.

Notable semidocumentary examples※

Notable directors associated with semidocumentary※

See also※

References※

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