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Vol. 2, Issue 3 Jan-Feb 2007
SIS Profiles

SOC/SIS's Aufderheide wins
career achievement award

By Matt Getty

(From American Weekly, Dec. 5, 2006)
1 of 2 pages
SOC and SIS professor Patricia Aufderheide’s documentary film scholarship has earned her one of the International Documentary Association’s (IDA) top career achievement awards. But it’s earned scores of documentary filmmakers much more.

Patricia Aufderheide

“Pat has effected real change for documentarians,” says entertainment lawyer Michael Donaldson, who will formally present Aufderheide with the IDA’s 2006 Preservation and Scholarship Award in Los Angeles this Thursday. “Just this week I was talking to an Oscar-winning filmmaker—Arthur Dong. He said to me, ‘It’s like a huge weight lifted off my shoulders. I never thought I’d get to finish this film, and now I can.’ He was talking about Pat’s work.”

Dong’s documentary, The Chinese in Hollywood Project, explores Hollywood’s portrayal of Chinese Americans. Like many documentaries critiquing or analyzing the media, it would be almost impossible to produce without one of two things—a multimillion-dollar budget or the Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use, which Aufderheide helped produce last year.

According to copyright law, filmmakers can freely use copyrighted material in their films “as the object of social, political, or cultural critique,” to “illustrate an argument,” incidentally “in the process of filming something else,” or within a “historical sequence.” The problem is often those who control whether a documentary ever reaches the screen don’t know that. As a result, fears of lawsuits have driven producers to pay thousands just because one of their subjects sang “Happy Birthday” on camera. Such fears could be even more damaging to a film like Dong’s, which uses numerous clips from copyrighted films to discuss how movies perpetuate stereotypes about Chinese Americans.

“In my law practice every week there are dozens of clips where I say to the filmmaker, ‘This is fair use,’” says Donaldson, who serves as general counsel to the IDA. “But the gatekeepers, the people who are in charge of being sure they don’t get sued, the insurance companies . . . [They] are unwilling to take that risk.”

 

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