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Moore, S., 2017.

Who said that? The dispensability of original sound in animated documentary

Output Type:Journal article
Publication:Animationstudies 2.0

There came a point in The Beloved Ones, the film I made in 2007 for the UK Film Council, when it became clear that the indexical sound recorded in the field, in Uganda, was not going to be able to be used in the final sound edit. The film is about how two women, one mother and one daughter, deal with the repercussions of the HIV/AIDS pandemic on their families. Although they are not related their stories are interwoven in the film to talk about the same situation from different perspectives. The original sound footage was recorded using the built in microphone on a video camera in windy external locations and the poor quality of the sound meant that, watching the rough cut, it was very hard to hear what they were saying. The film rests on their testimony and the audience's acceptance of it as a truthful document of the women's experience. There came a point near the end of the production process where a decision had to be made whether or not to cut and replace the edited original field-recorded sound with a re-reading of the words by actors.
Jonathan Rozenkrantz talks about sound in animated documentary "fill[ing] the gap that the non-indexical image has left" since he perceives this 'void' as a major omission in the genre. He argues that it is not the content of the sound track that is the primary point of using it but its authenticity as an indexical document relating to what the image iconically represents (2011).
However, framing the issues within the term 'indexical' in this way is not helpful here. As Tom Gunning argues in his essay 'Moving Away from the Index: Cinema and the impression of reality', Charles Sanders Pierce's original idea of the index as part of an interconnected triad of signs (index, symbol and icon) has been abstracted from its richer signifying context and been simplified to become a "diminished concept", used to describe and solve several arguments about the way that cinema works (2007:30).
The producer of The Beloved Ones, Joshka Wessels[1], and I discussed my fear that the documentary status of the film would be compromised by this jettisoning of original sound. The words are the document, she said, and the document is what they are saying, not the sound of their speech. This broader reading of what constitutes indexical fits in more responsively with Gunning's reading of Pierce's definition the word; he says that Pierce "by no means restricts the index to the impression or trace". Nea Ehrlich talks about animated documentary's ability to facilitate "a convergence of exposure and concealment" (in her discussion about masking, 2011[2]), and that intersection is the place I find so fascinating to work in. I fundamentally disagree with those who say that animated documentary's claim to documentary status rests entirely on its link to a truncated version of the indexical through sound. The choice between using original but partially inaudible sound or authentic but re-voiced sound is not aided by an argument about which is more genuine - they both carry the indexical trace of the words - it is aided by a discussion about which will connect an audience to the material better.