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Home  /  Uncategorized  /  Documentary, at its best, makes us our best selves.
28 March 2026

Documentary, at its best, makes us our best selves.

Written by Paul Moon
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My recent chats with Marcie Hume and Matt Wolf, plus this piece I wrote about Mistress Dispeller for Criterion (go watch it!), reminded me that the practice of documentary, at its best, can be an act of love, faith and devotion to the objects we love — the people, the stories, the ideas, the audience, the textures of the fabric of reality itself.

Documentary, at its best, makes us our best selves.

We artists collect all of this material — sometimes against all common sense, urged on by something inside of us that tells us to keep going — and we organize it. We try it this way and that way until we’ve reached an arrangement that feels like we are getting the right feeling matched the right idea at the right time. Until we’ve reached something that feels true, and is true (or true enough).

And all of this is achieved through play. How wonderful! What a gift!!!
Let’s never forget that love, and play, are at the heart of what we do.

The problems come when we have so much fun playing that we forget what’s actually at stake: real people in the real world living with the consequences of our artistic choices.

I learned this the hard way, on a film I eventually had to pull from distribution.


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Paul Moon
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H. Paul Moon is a filmmaker based in New York City and Washington, D.C. whose works concentrate on the performing arts. Major films include “Sitka: A Piano Documentary” about the craftsmanship of Steinway pianos, “Quartet for the End of Time” about Olivier Messiaen’s transcendent WWII composition, and an acclaimed feature film about the life and music of American composer Samuel Barber that premiered on PBS. Moon has created music videos for numerous composers including Moondog, Susan Botti and Angélica Negrón, and three opera films set in a community garden. His film “The Passion of Scrooge” was awarded “Critic's Choice” by Opera News as a “thoroughly enjoyable film version, insightfully conceived and directed” with “first-rate and remarkably illustrative storytelling.” Further highlights include works featured in exhibitions at the Nevada Museum of Art and the City Museum of New York, PBS television broadcasts, and best of show awards in over a dozen international film festivals.

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