made use of pseudo-documentary elements in his work.
Orson Welles gained notoriety with his
radio show and
hoax War of the Worlds which fooled listeners into thinking the Earth was being invaded by Martians. Film critic
Jonathan Rosenbaum says this is Welles' first pseudo-documentary. Pseudo-documentary elements were subsequently used in his
feature films. For instance, Welles created a pseudo-documentary
newsreel which appeared within his 1941 film
Citizen Kane, and he began his 1955 film,
Mr. Arkadin, with a pseudo-documentary prologue.
Peter Watkins has made several films in the pseudo-documentary style.
The War Game (1965), which reported on a fake nuclear bombing of England, was seen as so disturbingly realistic that the
BBC chose not to broadcast it. The film won the
Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Watkins' other such films include
Punishment Park (1971) and
La Commune (2002). The film
Mad Max 2 first frames the story by showing a staged documentary-style sequence of images designed to inform the viewer that what follows is the aftermath of an apocalyptic global war.
Fake-fiction Related to, and in exact opposition to pseudo-documentary, is the notion of “fake-fiction”. A fake-fiction film takes the form of a staged, fictional movie, while actually portraying real, unscripted events. The notion of fake-fiction was coined by
Pierre Bismuth to describe his 2016 film
Where Is Rocky II?, which uses documentary method to tell a real, unscripted story, but is shot and edited to appear like a fiction film. The effect of this fictional aesthetic is precisely to cancel the sense of reality, making the real events appear as if they were staged or constructed. Unlike the related
mockumentary, fake-fiction does not focus on satire, and in distinction with
docufiction, it does not re-stage fictional versions of real past events. Another filmmaker whose work could be associated with the concept of fake-fiction is
Gianfranco Rosi. For example,
Below Sea Level uses the language of fiction cinema in its rendering of unscripted, documentary material. Of his own work, Rosi said, "I don’t care if I'm making a fiction film or documentary — to me it's a film, it's a narrative thing."
Found or discovered footage The term
found footage has sometimes been used to describe pseudo-documentaries where the plot involves the discovery of the film's footage.
Found footage is originally the name of an entirely different genre, but the magazine
Variety, for example, used the term "faux found-footage film" to describe the 2012 film
Grave Encounters 2. The film scholar
David Bordwell has criticized this recent use because of the confusion it creates, and instead prefers the term "discovered footage" for the narrative gimmick. ==Television==