FRED
WISEMAN RETROSPECTIVE
TITICUT
FOLLIES

USA,
1967, 84 min.
Director:
Frederick Wiseman
Cinematography: John Marshall
Editing: Frederick Wiseman
Production company: Zipporah
Films
Print Source:
Zipporah Films
One Richdale Avenue, Unit #4
Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02140
USA
Tel.: 617.576.3603
Fax: 617.864.8006
e-mail: info@zipporah.com
www.zipporah.com
Titicut Follies
In
his eye-opening masterpiece, Frederick Wiseman chronicles
the daily activities of the staff and inmates at the State
Prison for the Criminally Insane at Bridgewater, Massachusetts.
From psychological evaluations, to recreation time and from
treatments to impromptu concerts, this evocative film shows
with gritty clarity the way in which the inmates are treated
by guards, social workers and psychiatrists.
Frederick
Wiseman was born in 1930 in Boston, Massachusetts. He initially
studied law at Yale University. A member of the Massachusetts
Bar, Wiseman was a Lecturer-in-Law at Boston University and
a Research Associate in the Department of Sociology at Brandeis
University before becoming a filmmaker. He started his career
by producing a fiction feature film about Harlem teenagers,
The Cool World (1963), adapted from the novel by Warren Miller
and directed by New York filmmaker Shirley Clarke.
In
1967 Fred Wiseman made his debut as a documentary filmmaker
with Titicut Follies, an expose that chronicled the various
ways the inmates at the State Prison for the Criminally Insane
at Bridgewater, Massachusetts are treated by guards, social
workers and psychiatrists. Due to its revealing nature, Titicut
Follies became mired in lengthy litigation with state authorities,
and the ensuing controversy resulted in Wiseman garnering
the inaccurate reputation as a muckraker. Though has gone
on to examine the ins and outs of hospitals, high schools,
army basic training, a welfare center and a police precinct,
his films have also been concerned with the institution of
American culture. And though his initial films did seem to
be motivated by a desire for social change, recent films lack
an ardent activist drive and instead are about the film experience
itself, about finding narrative themes and exploring symbolic
potential in the everyday through editing. They are also longer.
Wiseman’s recent films can run into the three and four
hour mark, a drastic increase from the 84 minute running time
of Titicut Follies.
In
1971 Fred Wiseman founded a distribution company, Zipporah
Films. Though his works have been shown on PBS, Zipporah Films
is committed to preserving, promoting and funding Mr. Wiseman’s
body of work through rentals, screenings and lectures.
During
his expansive career, Wiseman has received numerous awards
and accolades including Emmy Awards, the FIPRESCI Prize at
the Berlin International Film Festival, the Silver Hugo at
the Chicago International Film Festival, the Grand Prix at
the Marseille Festival of Documentary Film and a personal
Peabody Award.
SUNDAY,
APRIL 1 AT 7:00 PM./FACETS CINEMATHEQUE 
THURSDAY,
APRIL 5 AT 6:00 PM./THE WILMETTE THEATRE 
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