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The Errol Morris Interrotron.

“Interrotron”

Published in the Winter, 2004 issue of FLM Magazine

THE FOG OF WAR: 13 Questions and Answers on the Filmmaking of Errol Morris by Errol Morris

Q: Is it true that you interview people using a machine?

A: Yes, the (patent pending) Interrotron. It’s a machine that uses existing technology in a new and novel way. When I made my first film, Gates of Heaven, I interviewed people by putting my head right up against the lens of the camera. It seemed as though they were looking directly into the lens of the camera, but not really. Almost, but not quite. Of course, they were looking a little bit off to the side.

Q: What’s wrong with that? What were you trying to achieve?

A: The first person. When someone watches my films, it is as though the characters are talking to directly to them… There is no third party. On television we’re used to seeing people interviewed sixty-minutes-style. There is Mike Wallace or Larry King, and the camera is off to the side. Hence, we, the audience, are also off to the side. We’re the fly-on-the-wall, so to speak, watching two people talking. But we’ve lost something.

Q: What?

A: Direct eye contact.

Q: Eye contact?

A: Yup. We all know when someone makes eye contact with us. It is a moment of drama. Perhaps it’s a serial killer telling us that he’s about to kill us; or a loved one acknowledging a moment of affection. Regardless, it’s a moment with dramatic value. We know when people make eye contact with us, look away and then make eye contact again. It’s an essential part of communication. And yet, it is lost in standard interviews on film. That is, until the Interrotron.

Q: I don’t get it.

A: I got tired of sitting so close to the camera. (In my early films, my cameraman would grab the back of my head and pull me back because you could see the side of my head in the lens. When he yanked me back, it often hurt.) And I started to wonder, what if I could become one with the camera. What if the camera and myself could become one and the same?

Q: You’re losing me.

A: Well, not literally. Are you familiar with Teleprompters?

Q: Not really.

A: Well, Teleprompters are used to project an image on a two-way mirror. Politicians and newscasters use them so that they can read text and look into the lens of the camera at the same time. What interests me is that nobody thought of using them for anything other than to display text: read a speech or read the news and look into the lens of the camera.

Q: OK.

A: I changed that. I put my face on the Teleprompter or, strictly speaking, my live video image. For the first time, I could be talking to someone, and they could be talking to me and at the same time looking directly into the lens of the camera. Now, there was no looking off slightly to the side. No more faux first person. This was the true first person.

Q: It sounds like Buck Rogers. Were people willing to tolerate this?

A: I worried at first. Would it frighten people? Would they run out of the studio screaming? Who could say? I used it for the first time in Fast, cheap and out of control. And it worked like a charm. People loved the Interrotron.

Q: The Interrotron? Did you make up the name?

A: No, it was named by my wife, Julia Sheehan. She liked the name because it combined two important concepts — terror and interview.

Q: But doesn’t the device intimidate people?

A: Oddly enough, no. It doesn’t. People, if anything, feel more relaxed when talking to a live video image. My production designer, Ted Bafaloukos, said, “The beauty of this thing is that it allows people to do what they do best. Watch television.” We often think of technology as working against the possibility of intimacy. But there are so many counter-examples. The telephone is a good counter-example. There are things we can say to each other on the phone that we would never say if we were in the same room. You know, “Being there is the next best thing to using the phone…” The Interrotron is like that. It creates greater distance and greater intimacy. And it also creates the true first person. Now, when people make eye contact with me, it can be preserved on film.

Q: Have you used it much?

A: Whenever I need to. I used it in a film that introduced the Academy Awards in 2002. Gorbachev, Laura Bush, Iggy Pop, Al Sharpton and Walter Cronkite have all been on the Interrotron.

Q: Did McNamara like it?

A: Well, you have to remember that we are talking about someone who has been interviewed a thousand times. He walked into the studio and said, “What is that?” I smiled and said, “The Interrotron.” He said, “Well, whatever it is, I don’t like it.” But then he sat down, and we proceeded to record over twenty hours of interviews. I guess he came to like it, too.


Interrotron vs Interociter

INTERROTRON

from Planet Earth

INTEROCITER

from Planet Metaluna

eye-contact through the use of video
screens (adapted Teleprompter
technology)
eye contact through the use of screens
employing unknown technology
screen shape: rectangular (4 x 3) screen shape: equilateral triangle
(1 x 1 x 1)
associated hardware: two cameras associated hardware: a massive floor unit
camera hidden camera hidden, if there is a “camera”
facilitation of inter-species communication, homo sapiens to homo sapiens facilitation of intra-species communication, Metalunans to homo sapiens
successfully tested with orangutan
(Bam-Bam, please see Quaker Oats commercials)
untested with orangutan
underlying purpose: subvert earth scientists and others for my own ends underlying purpose: subvert earth scientists for Metalunan ends
black & white, color Technicolor only
following “interview,” subjects go home following “interview,” subjects go to Metaluna
subject comes to the Interrotron Interociter comes to the subject
some assembly required, but not much many parts, complex assemby

What’s a Presidential Prompter and Why Have They Become So Popular?

A presidential teleprompter (also known as a speech prompter) is a pair of semi-transparent mirrors mounted on two narrow stands placed at a 45 degree angle. There is a monitor underneath which is reflected off the mirror, but the text is only visible from the speaker-side due to the anti-reflective coating on the backside of if.
As the speaker does not need to look down to consult written notes, he or she appears to have memorized the speech or be speaking spontaneously, without distraction.

Presidential teleprompters are useful both with and without cameras.  It’s helpful in situations where the speaker is addressing an audience and does not need to be speaking directly into the camera. The cameraman is able to capture the speaker from all angles, especially angles where the speaker is not facing the mirror.

But more and more frequently presidential prompters are used to simply give confidence to the speaker that he/she will say exactly what he/she wishes without looking down at a their printed notes and loosing eye contact with the audience.


What are Presidential Teleprompters? How are they different from “Down Stage Monitors”?

What is a Presidential Teleprompter?

Presidential Teleprompters prompters look a bit like twin glass music stands positioned on each side of the speaker. Copy is projected from a screen placed below and out o sight of the audience. The speaker can view the copy as it unfolds seen on both panels to his/her right and left. The view of the audience is unobstructed and while the audience may see the glass panels, they cannot see the copy displayed. Unseen is a professional prompter operator whose job it is to synchronize the moving copy with the confortable pace of speaker.

What are down stage monitors or as they are often called floor monitors or confidence monitors?

These are big video monitors or projection screens positioned in the presenter’s line of sight as he/she addresses the audience.

How dos one decide between using presidential prompters, conference monitors and down stage monitors?

If the speaker uses a lectern, he/she would use presidential teleprompters. If he/she wants to roam about the audience use down stage monitors.


When Prompters Fail!

What happens when teleprompters fail? On air talent, whether in news or entertainment, rely on professional teleprompters to enable them to, not only get the story exactly right, but to look straight into the camera and deliver their dialogue with sincerity and total believability. When the prompter fails, they are left to their ability to improvise on the spot. Some do this far better than others. Witness the poor news anchor whose prompter fails in the midst of a story while he’s live on air:

The take away? Make sure your teleprompter is totally reliable and your operator is a professional. Just give The American Movie Company, a call during office hours at 212-952-1800 or anytime at 917-414-5489. We’ll get you the right prompter and a professional operator at the best price in town. We also supply Presidential Prompters and the new Earl Morris Interritrons either at your location or in one of our green screen sound stages at 50 Broadway, Manhattan.