OT is an interesting documentary because it is a very unexpected subject. I’m pretty sure the filming started taking place after the fact that it is well established that the school is going to be doing this play. The film combines sit down interviews with active interviews with stock footage from an Our Town televised play. It explores the social dynamics of life in theater and at home. One of the things that the film tries to do, as some of the students state, is that it tries to break the stereotypes that has been established around Compton.
One of the great things of this film is the uncertainty and the payoff in the end. I really can’t tell if things are going to work out in the end. Even the night before the show, I wasn’t sure if the play was still going to go through in the end. But even though there uncertainty, it makes me think whether if reality was as uncertain and tense as the film depicted it to be. One thing that I have learned from watching documentaries is that not everything is what it really seems. Through being selective on what is used and then juxtaposed with other images, film create its own story. Of course something had to be there such as people not knowing their lines, people not showing up. But I find it hard to imagine that with so many problems right before the play that everything worked out so nicely. A possibility is that some of theses problems occurred earlier in the year but the movie just edited it so all the problem are jammed together in the end.
There are a couple limitations of the film that maybe there was nothing that the film makers could nothing about, which is who can be interviewed. I noticed that the “other” teacher was never interview. There was also no very many perspectives of what the rest of the student outside of the play and other teachers. I felt the sources of where we got our information was pretty limited. But this limitation would have simply been theses people just didn’t want to be film.