Video Essay: Una Mirada a los Invisibles
The assignment was to show visual culture and as filmmakers we were to work within communities with whom we were already working. For this reason I thought of the jornaleros (day laborers) I teach English and computers to on the a local street corner.
Near the end of the film, one of the jornaleros who I will just call Jose, asks me why I am interviewing them. I found the question a little uncomfortable, which is what I was hoping for. Filming a population that is in constant danger if made visible is a tricky thing, and though many of the guys were happy to help me just because we trusted each other, being asked “why are you filming us?” is a more than appropriate question. Of course I had explained to everyone by email and in person what the project was, and Jose already knew, but asking me again I believe was his way of reminding me that I (whether I was holding the camera at the time or not) was indeed filming them. By answering, I was literally “writing” my thesis statement, but instead of placing it at the beginning so the audience knows what I am attempting to convey I placed it at the end. I am then reversing the standard essay form and explaining my intent as a filmmaker which erases or at least influences the interpretive possibilities. This will challenge “readers” to “see” what they saw, see my intent as the filmmaker, and to question my privilege along with the subjects in the film.
Aside from the form change, creating a visual essay rather than a written one enabled me to create something to be shared among a wider audience. This is one way that the theory is able to turn into practice. This video can be used for educational purposes or promotional purposes (i.e. volunteer recruitment), and the actual act of making the film created a dialogue among the corner community. Were this to be a written essay, even if it were in Spanish, it would only be accessible to those who speak the language of academia. This video, being in English and Spanish, can be shared with a larger population of people. Another thing about making a video essay rather than a written essay is that it is a lot of work, but the work is very different. In being different, I was motivated to learn in a fresh sort of way. Putting this video together has already given me incredible appreciation for film form and peaked my interest in being more playful the next time around.
Aside from the form change, creating a visual essay rather than a written one enabled me to create something to be shared among a wider audience. This is one way that the theory is able to turn into practice. This video can be used for educational purposes or promotional purposes (i.e. volunteer recruitment), and the actual act of making the film created a dialogue among the corner community. Were this to be a written essay, even if it were in Spanish, it would only be accessible to those who speak the language of academia. This video, being in English and Spanish, can be shared with a larger population of people. Another thing about making a video essay rather than a written essay is that it is a lot of work, but the work is very different. In being different, I was motivated to learn in a fresh sort of way. Putting this video together has already given me incredible appreciation for film form and peaked my interest in being more playful the next time around.
Catching the uncomfortable was an important part of capturing the humanity of all of us. Just as Jose made me uncomfortable, I believe I made who I will call Pancho uncomfortable when I talked about sexual harassment, and our interaction is meant to make the viewers feel a twinge of something as they wonder what will happen when he defensively says he wasn’t trying to make me uncomfortable when he called me pretty and when he brushes off sexism meanwhile taking racism seriously.
Though I explained the concept of the video to the guys, the conversations were organic and I took a lot of footage to be able to select the parts of conversations which were appropriate for the film. Many times I asked questions expecting certain answers and was reminded that this is a naive method of research. For example when I asked one of the men if he feels that he is in a community, I was expecting him to talk about the jornalero community, the immigrant community, or something like that and he instead saw community as the dominant and himself as on the outside. His answer was a teaching moment and forced me to think about the terms we use in grad school and the meanings attached to them "on the outside."
The title of my film was created by Jose, as he is a poet. It literally means “a look at the invisible.” The title is the thesis, in short. However, the title doesn’t quite convey my role as subject in front of the camera. As I stated in the film I am sometimes too visible, and my presence as a filmmaker is also visible. However, the title is also about power-the truly invisible character which we attempted to make visible in this movie. One may literally and corporally see the men and me: see our gender expressions, the color of our skins, interpret our class positions. But what I hope to bring “into the visible” is the power relations that decide these divisions. As one of the (anonymous) men said in the movie: we as human beings all feel the same emotions, “the same pain,” and ending these divisions would ultimately mean ending the power structures which aim to victimize and separate us.
After "finishing" the film it went through a series of peer reviewers (Dr. Juhasz and a Pitzer professor) and I ended up making several edits and moving footage around. Since my brother, his partner and I invited Jose to see Machete (for another blog post I'm ruminating on) I showed the video essay to Jose afterward and asked him what he thought about it. He thought it was very interesting and was adamant about taking all my footage and all the other footage that people have taken over the years and making a documentary and we had a long talk about the complicatedness of making a film for a a wider audience. I included footage of his viewing practice and his reception to indicate the participatory and consensual nature of the film as well as the agency of the subjects. I just hope that the setting-change isn't too distracting.