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Adventurer, filmmaker, inventor, celebrity and conservationist: the life of Jacques-Yves Cousteau is a rich tale for any documentarian.
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/a-life-aquatic-diving-into-the-life-of-jacques-yves-cousteau/
Becoming Cousteau from National Geographic tells the
story of the French marine explorer who became a huge star on American
television with his ABC series The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau,
which ran from 1966-76.
It was that show that Liz Garbus remembers watching as a
child and inspired the filmmaker to spend the six years gathering archive
material for her new film.
“I was very familiar with him as a child who grew up
watching his TV show, but that means I was familiar with a certain facet of him
which was that outward-facing explorer,” she told Science & Film. “As we talk about in the film, his shows lost audience as time went on, as he
became more alarmed and more committed to sounding the alarm about the
environment he saw in distress.”
In 2019, after years of negotiating, the Cousteau Society
granted Arbus exclusive access to 500 hours of archival video and audio
footage.
“It was a long process; six years working with the Cousteau
Society to get access to all of his archive, outtakes, notebooks, and
journals,” Arbus explained. “Much of his work has been seen before on
television and films, and that was widely available. But I really wanted to
focus on the behind-the-scenes man to the extent I could and open up that
archive to a generation of people who were unfamiliar.
“Cousteau himself said: ‘if one person has the
opportunity to live an extraordinary life, they have no business keeping it to
themselves.’ I tried to continue to refer back to his own words as I was
working with the family to get access to the archives.”
Cousteau co-created the Aqua Lung, won both the Palme d’Or
and the Oscar for his 1956 film The Silent World and became a
world-renowned conservationist. Plenty of material to make a Ken Burns-style
mini-series you would think.
“I wanted it to be a complete experience,” Arbus told
Variety. “I also wanted it to be something that would introduce new people to
[Cousteau] and for those of us who knew and loved him, it would be a walk
through memory lane that ends up giving you more than you knew [about him]. So
the doc needed to be a film you consume in one sitting.”
Becoming Cousteau is directed and produced by Garbus (Oscar nominated for docs The Farm:
Angola, USA and What Happened, Miss Simone?) and written and edited
by Pax Wassermann.
“He was one of the early voices to connect the dots” on global warming, Wasserman said https://deadline.com/video/becoming-cousteau-tiff-documentary-director-liz-garbus-editor-pax-wasserman-natgeo-interview-news/, “and to popularize that argument in a way that people could listen to.”
Cousteau also developed the first hand-held underwater
camera and a form of diving saucer submersible. “He was very influenced by
space exploration,” Wasserman noted. “He sort of fashioned himself as also
being like an ‘astronaut of the sea.’”
IndieWire says
Garbus’ feature will make you want to seek out the films that Cousteau himself
made. Footage of 1930s trips contain “outstanding underwater cinematography
that, at times, looks hand-tinted. Seeing a purple stingray glide under the
water, and knowing the material is nearly a century old, gives everything a
beautiful, eerie quality.”
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