Los Angeles Times

‘Rat Film’ doc connects the dots

- By Steven Zeitchik steve.zeitchik@latimes.com

Of all the creative types grappling with their role in the Donald Trump era, documentar­ians face possibly the trickiest scenario. They’re expected to respond to the world around them with relevant nonfiction stories.

But they also have to take their time to craft those stories, in a news cycle that often can rush quickly past. And on top of that, they’re facing a culture in which truth jostles with fake news and alternativ­e facts.

These dilemmas were sized up in a March 12 Sunday Calendar story, as we covered the True/False Film Festival out of Columbia, Mo. True/False is an epicenter of documentar­y trends, and we found artists and experts seeking new ways to confront this era.

Theo Anthony, a Baltimore-based filmmaker, 27, has just made a film about rats. Well, sort of about rats. His “Rat Film,” a formally abstract piece, examines his home city’s rodent crisis through the lens of history, science and assorted modern-day characters. While the film, which Cinema Guild will release this year, never explicitly tells us what to think about Baltimore’s approaches to handling the pest, it also soon becomes an allegory of race-relations in the city.

We caught up with the director shortly after his film played True/False.

The Times: You said at the screening that you’re not really a rat guy, that this is just a vehicle. Were you attracted to them for any particular reason, or …

Theo Anthony: I’m fine with rats. I just don’t want to be the rat guy forever. They’re really just an incredible vector across so many different people, places and history. It’s not so much what that thing is — it’s just a common side to all of those things. I could have made a film about public transporta­tion. Buses: how do buses link us? Anything that links places and time could have been the subject of the film. It’s just a thing that has direction and momentum that you can tag along and see what it bumps into.

But you saw in them some allegorica­l meaning, right? Otherwise why make a film particular­ly about them?

I don’t think I ever saw rats as equal to humans. I try to bait people into that interpreta­tion, only to show them how much fuzzier it is the closer you get to it. Specifical­ly with race relations: Rats don’t just happen anywhere. If you look at rats, they thrive where humans don’t. To me that was really interestin­g. I’m never placing an equal sign — “Rats are the pest symbols of the underbelly of society.” But they have been tested on, and blacks in the American city have been tested on, in terms of redlining. You learn a lot about how we treat humans by how we treat rats. One of the joys of watching the film is also one of the confusing aspects of watching this film — figuring out the shape of it. Did you consciousl­y want to disorient viewers?

I think it’s a film that teaches you how to watch it as you go along. For the first 20 minutes you pop around without really knowing what’s happening. And then at a certain point you return to the characters. I put a lot in the first cut. And then the edit became about taking away. Just seeing what the least I could have in there and still convey the most accurate picture of the story.

The question of how to approach a documentar­y feels especially relevant now with an aggressive set of policies from the current White House.

I have problems with a lot of documentar­ies about social issues. I think they put forth this really hierarchic­al understand­ing of the world that just replaces one hegemony of power with another, to the point that, even the most socially conscious political documentar­ies, their progressiv­e messages are betrayed by really conservati­ve forms that don’t lead us to question how things are structured or delivered. You can’t just be focused on a “good” message. If you’re just watching an incredible piece on a Syrian refugee on the nightly news and you’re consuming it like you consume your take-home dinner, it’s not doing anything, it’s not bringing us closer to anything. It’s a bait-andswitch, an illusion of intimacy when it’s really just a slick consumer package.

And you think a lot of filmmakers and journalist­s are guilty of this?

The very means by which the Trump administra­tion is succeeding, in this reality landscape, is the same means as CNN’s ecosystem. And there’s no investigat­ion of this. CNN will make more money this year than they ever have before on the backs of Trump headlines. They’re profiting from the same system. And there’s no discussion about it, no self-awareness, no selfreflex­ivity about how we fundamenta­lly engage with news and media. That’s the biggest political dilemma. It’s not a left or right issue.

Of course documentar­ians do have points of view and probably should be able to use other techniques besides obser vation. Or do you disagree with that assumption?

The barometer for me when I watch is “How aware is the person of that boundary.” It’s one thing of you know it when you know it. You know a documentar­y because it happened, and you can feel it. And narrative didn’t happen. And interchang­ing that is a slide into nihilism and really dangerous. Yes, things are subjective. But I try to be as transparen­tly subjective as possible.

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