How do you make people care about your documentary?
Facts alone rarely make an audience care. The emotional core of a documentary lives somewhere else. In this episode of Documentary First, filmmaker Christian Taylor tells the story of how she found the heartbeat her film about the Battle of Carentan was missing. It was not in the archives. It was in the memories of a man who was six years old when the war came for his town.
For months, Christian’s film Heroes of Carentan felt stuck in what one WWII veteran called the “data of history,” the maps, the dates, and the military maneuvers. Everything shifted when she met Yves Marchais. In June 1944, Yves was a small boy living under German occupation in Carentan, France. This year he sent Christian thirteen letters recording what he remembered, and those letters gave the historical record a soul.
It comes down to a lesson every documentary filmmaker learns the hard way: audiences do not connect to issues or information, they connect to people. Anchored by a line from Pfc. John E. Fitzgerald, a runner for Medal of Honor recipient Lt. Col. Robert Cole, this episode argues that the essence of history is not its record but its heartbeat. Yves calls his own account his “hummingbird’s share,” not the whole war, but the small, vivid pieces that passed before a child’s eyes. His story becomes a lesson in telling a big historical event through one small, personal one.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
Why facts and figures alone rarely move an audience
How to find the emotional core, or heartbeat, of a documentary
Why audiences connect to people, not to issues or information
How to tell a big historical story through one small, personal one
What Pfc. John E. Fitzgerald meant when he warned that history can lose its heartbeat
Why one person’s story can carry an entire historical event
What the “hummingbird’s share” is, and why small memories matter more than big ones
How the Battle of Carentan looked through the eyes of a six-year-old boy
How Yves Marchais and his family survived the occupation and liberation of Carentan
Why the story a filmmaker starts with is often not the story worth telling
What the series Band of Brothers has to do with the real Battle of Carentan
How to know when your film has finally found its emotional core
Chapters:
00:00 Meeting a survivor of Carentan
01:15 13 letters and Band of Brothers
02:26 Life under German occupation
04:01 D-Day and the kitchen sink
05:27 Fleeing an empty Carentan
06:59 The trench and liberation
08:45 Colonel Cole and the runner
10:57 The lesson: find your heartbeat
Frequently Asked Questions:
How do you find the emotional core of a documentary?
Facts and chronology rarely move an audience on their own. The emotional core, what host Christian Taylor calls the heartbeat, usually lives in one person’s specific, lived experience rather than in the broad historical record. In this episode she describes finding it in the memories of Yves Marchais, a French civilian who was six during the Battle of Carentan, and building the film’s meaning around his point of view.
How do you make an audience care about a documentary subject?
Audiences connect to people far more than to issues or information. The most reliable way to make viewers care about a large subject, a war, a movement, a crisis, is to tell it through one specific person whose experience makes the bigger story personal. In this episode, Christian Taylor builds her film about the Battle of Carentan around a single child’s memories rather than the broad military record.
What was the Battle of Carentan?
The Battle of Carentan was a June 1944 fight for the town of Carentan in Normandy, France, a key objective linking the American forces landing at Utah and Omaha beaches. The 101st Airborne Division, including units later made famous by Band of Brothers, fought to take the town, which was liberated on June 12, 1944.
Who is Yves Marchais?
Yves Marchais is a French man who, as a six-year-old boy, lived through the German occupation and the 1944 liberation of Carentan. Decades later he recorded his childhood memories of the war in a series of letters, which became the emotional core of Christian Taylor’s documentary. He calls his account his “hummingbird’s share,” the small, true pieces of history he witnessed firsthand.
What did Pfc. John Fitzgerald mean about history losing its heartbeat?
Pfc. John E. Fitzgerald, who served as a runner for Medal of Honor recipient Lt. Col. Robert Cole, wrote that the data of history should not lose its heartbeat as it becomes information, or all that remains is the record without the essence. Christian Taylor uses that idea as the key to her film: the facts of a battle matter, but the human story is what makes people care.
About the Film and the Story:
Heroes of Carentan is Christian Taylor’s in-production documentary about the 1944 liberation of Carentan, Normandy, told through the people who lived it. Yves Marchais was six years old during the battle. His firsthand account of the occupation, the bombing, his family’s escape through a deserted town, and the moment of liberation forms the emotional center of the film. This episode is the second part of Christian’s story about finding that center.
About Documentary First:
Documentary First is a weekly podcast about the craft, business, and truth of documentary filmmaking. Host Christian Taylor is a documentary filmmaker (The Girl Who Wore Freedom), actor, voice actor, and podcast host based in the United States. Each week she explores what it takes to tell true stories that move people, through interviews with filmmakers and solo episodes drawn from her own work.
Resources Mentioned:
The Colonel and the Runner, by Pfc. John E. Fitzgerald (a recollection of Lt. Col. Robert G. Cole, 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division)
Band of Brothers (Episode 3 follows the Battle of Carentan)
The Girl Who Wore Freedom, Christian Taylor’s award-winning D-Day documentary
Watch or Listen to Part 1:
https://pod.fo/e/4405a5
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YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@documentaryfirst
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Connect:
Documentary First on all platforms: https://linktr.ee/doc1st
Connect with Christian Taylor on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/meetchristiantaylor