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A pseudo-documentary or fake documentary is a film or video production that takes the form or style of a documentary film but does not portray real events. Rather, scripted and fictional elements are used to tell the story. The pseudo-documentary, unlike the related mockumentary, is not always intended as satire or humor. It may use documentary ...
The 1 Up Fever (2013), mockumentary about Bitcoin and augmented reality video games.; 2gether (2000), spoof of boy bands like N*Sync and The Backstreet Boys.; 7 Days in Hell (2015), a fictional documentary-style exposé on the rivalry between two of the greatest tennis players of all time who battled it out in a 2001 match that lasted seven days.
Humans are living in a reality in which post-humans have not developed yet, and current humans are actually living in reality. [11] Humans will have no way of knowing that they live in a simulation because they will never reach the technological capacity to realize the marks of a simulated reality. [13]
A few of the characters are still alive—the rest met death by violence." Reportedly, a justice in the case told MGM that not only was this claim damaging to their case, but that their case would be stronger if they had incorporated a directly opposite statement, that the film was not intended as an accurate portrayal of real people or events.
William Karel had just completed Hollywood, a film based on lying, when he and the documentary unit of Arte had the idea of making a mockumentary, to play with the serious tonality of Arte but also for pleasure, and to make a funny film based on the idea that one must not believe everything that one is told, that witnesses can lie, archives can ...
Walsh’s documentary also featured him crashing a high-dollar Race2Dinner, in which he cajoled liberal white women at the table to raise their glasses and toast to “being racist.” Show ...
In fact, it was their first grade teacher, Julie Paiva, who initially shared the seeds of a story with her: a (fictional) tale about a woman so eager to get pregnant that she wears a fake baby ...
GBTimes writes that with having seen his own "film hundreds of times in different movie theaters, sometimes with ten people, other times with 500 people in the audience," [31] Till Nowak loves to watch audience reactions as they watch the film, and is bemused that "some people have perceived it as a real documentary of real amusement parks."