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    Some people may say that body worn cameras are a violation of privacy because it records anyone the lens are facing. When police are wearing the cameras, the recordings will capture everyday civilians that aren’t necessary to be captured. Although it is true that it records everyone in the camera's sight, it allows police to have more witnesses if a crime or complaint has been made against them. These people contribute to more evidence in court that will ultimately make the verdict fairier. If their

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    This Critique will be going over five different aspects, I will be covering the roles adopted during the project by each group member, I will present an argument on one aspect of the project that I believe was strong, and I will be identifying aspects of my project that I think could have been strengthened and how these could have been changed to improve the work. I will also be providing a rationale for the final cut of the project and discuss how the peer review did or did not help in the development

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    Raw Documentary Analysis

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    an unbiased viewpoint; endeavour to tell a truthful story. However, this goal is rarely achieved. Directors create documentaries in such a way they can never portray the entire truth. Filmmakers manipulate numerous techniques such as interviews, footage, and editing to construct their version of the truth. They depict reality in their perspective about the topic they wish to exploit. A remarkably influential tool filmmakers utilise to portray a version of reality is their assortment of interviewees

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    wear cameras to protect the privacy of everyone. States have laws for what footage can actually be released. These laws are for videos recorded in the police car or any other form of recording (Sullivan). This law should apply the same for body camera footage. If the government were to make policies for the releasing of body camera footage, there would be no purpose to have the cameras. Why this is, is because releasing footage

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    Clock Tower Film Analysis

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    Texas campus hostage for 96 minutes. Tower (2016), a documentary by Keith Maitland, sheds light on America’s first modern gun massacre. The documentary retells this story through archival footage of the event, animations, and interviews. The animations are rotoscoped, meaning they are traced over motion picture footage, frame by frame. In addition, the interviews are modern-day recollections from survivors, officers, and several bystanders who risked their own lives to

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    identify the offenders that recorded by the cameras because the cameras can provide the high quality images .Besides that, they can speeding up to solve the criminal cases investigations and bringing the criminals to justice because the surveillance footage can be the strong material evidence in police investigation. For

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    point of view, art is life that brings joy and happiness. Tony Conrad’s life and art have been integrated. I would consider this film as a found footage documentary which has been stocked in decades ago, was redeveloped by Tyler Hubby, show in nowadays. As the title, Completely in the Present, since the story of Tony is almost forgotten, Tyler selects old footage from Tony, reshoots new interviews of younger musicians, material of Tony contemporary life, composes together into a new documentary form presenting

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    demonstrators and journalists. Early in the summer of 2015, cell phone video footage of NYPD officers in Staten Island, NY placing a man in a fatal and illegal chokehold surfaced. According to officers, 43-year old Eric Garner was selling illegal cigarettes and resisting arrest. Medical examiners ruled Eric Garner’s death a homicide, based on the chokehold and health related causes, because he was asthmatic. In the cell phone video footage released, Eric Garner can be heard yelling and gasping, multiple times

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    still in the middle of the road, with his hands above his head. Crutcher then reaches in towards the driver’s side door of the abandoned vehicle. At this point, one officer deploys his taser, and Shelby fires one round from her duty pistol. Video footage from several different angles show Terence Crutcher fall to the ground, and has audio of a woman’s voice on the radio shouting, “Shots fired.” Crutcher was then transported to a local hospital where he died from a single gunshot wound to the chest

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    Police brutality and police militarization have become a hot topic in the United States of America. There are many cases where police officers motives are being questioned, leading the public into an uproar. Just to name a few of these cases, we have Micheal Brown from Fegurson, Missouri, that started it all, which took place on Augest 19th, 2014. We also have Eric Garner from New York, taking place July of 2014. July of 2016, Alton Sterling of Baton Rouge and Walter Scott from South Carolina in

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