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Mark Jonathan Harris

Mark Jonathan Harris is a U.S. documentary filmmaker probably best known for his films Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport[?] and The Long Way Home[?]. Educated at Harvard, Harris co-directed the short The Redwoods for the Sierra Club with Trevor Greenwood[?]; the short won the 1967 Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject.

Harris started out as a crime reporter for the Chicago City News Bureau[?], and reports that on his first story he went into a police station and had his car stolen from in front of it. The police called him a few weeks later to ask if he'd found his car. Harris tried investigative journalism next but quit after realizing he didn't like to embarrass people.

Harris believes that filmmakers can construct a cinema verite film beforehand by considering repeatable events--that is, by determining which events are likely to recur frequently, and being there to film those events when they do. He tested this theory on a film on the Peace Corps in Colombia, in a small village 50 miles outside Bogotá. The film was not especially positive about the Peace Corps experience; the Peace Corps decided not to use it for recruiting, but to use it for training people who have been in for about a year. Harris has also directed a film on migrant farmworkers and their dismal wages and living conditions;one of the "stars" of his documentary was Luis Valdez[?], who went on to direct the film La Bamba[?].

Harris' film The Long Way Home deals with the experience of Jewish refugees after World War II. Spike Lee condemned the second half of the film as propaganda for the state of Israel; nonetheless the film won the 1997 Oscar for documentary. Harris next directed a film less complimentary towards the state, which had been commissioned specifically for the 50th anniversary of Israel. Harris intended the film, A Dream No More, to reflect Israel, "warts and all"; he spent 15 months and nearly $1.5 million U.S. making the film, which went over deadline as he tried to determine final structure for the film. He turned in a final print and had the film flagged the next day; it was never shown. Harris considers this film the second of his "Jewish trilogy". Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport, the third part of the trilogy, tells the stories of several people whose parents sent them on the kindertransport[?] to escape the Germans, as well as one woman who was meant to go and did not because her father pulled her off the train. The film won the 2000 Academy Award for Documentary Feature.

As a documentary filmmaker, Harris casts his films carefully, talking to people beforehand and deciding who has an interesting story and who tells it well on camera. He also refuses to start filming immediately, but prefers to talk with the subjects for about an hour beforehand.

Harris is also the author of various children's books, a side career he stumbled into the mid-1980s: he returned to journalism because he could not find funding for a documentary he wanted to make. After writing an article about a young child, he was contacted by an agent who asked him to write children's literature and has since written several children's books.



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