Documentary Motion Pictures

The Unsustainability and Origins of Socioeconomic Increase

January 25, 2001
By

This paper was written as a masters thesis for the City University of New York Graduate Center’s Master of Arts in Liberal Studies program. It describes the unsustainable nature of our civilization and suggests ways to achieve sustainability. It won the Liberal Studies department’s first Annual Thesis Prize for best departmental thesis. William Kornblum served faculty advisor for the paper.

Read the The Unsustainability and Origins of Socioeconomic Increase .pdf.

Read in Portuguese!

Janos Biro took it upon himself to create abridged translations of this thesis in Portuguese so that the material would be available for a Brazilian audience.

Changing the Economic Paradigm
Human expansion and the theory of r-K selection

Based on…

This thesis was in great part based on the following papers, written earlier in Mark’s masters studies:

Spinoffs

From the completion of the thesis until the birth of his daughter in mid-2003, Mark did a large amount of additional research as part of developing a general audience book which expands on this paper. A full book proposal was completed though without accompanying sample chapters. For this reason and other more dramatic ones (described in Mark’s essay Forcing the Balance), the book project has not yet made further progress since the writing of the proposal. Mark sincerely hopes that the right circumstances will evolve one day to allow him to write the book, as well as to develop companion projects in other media, most notably a website and a documentary motion picture.

The Unexplainable Bonefish

March 17, 1999
By
Created by Edwin & Tami Budd, Mark S. Meritt and Alex Diehl; Music by Mark S. Meritt

This was a proposed television series in which host Dr. Wiley Bonefish and a crew of puppet lab assistants would humorously help kids explore paranormal science using the scientific method.

Read the The Unexplainable Bonefish – Series Proposal .pdf.

© 2000 Edwin Budd, Tamara Budd, Mark Meritt and Alex Diehl

Read the The Unexplainable Bonefish – First Episode Abridged Teleplay .pdf.

Listen to The Unexplainable Bonefish – Theme.

The blend of strangeness and fun that was to define the series led to the scores of Danny Elfman as inspiration for the theme music. Learn more about Potluck’s custom instrumental composition service which uses Appreciative Inquiry to draw out your needs and desires as the basis for an original instrumental composition.

You can listen to the whole piece via this YouTube video by just pressing the Play button immediately below. Or, you can visit YouTube to see the video or post a comment.

Music Circle P - Phonorecord Copyright & © 2007, 1999 Mark S. Meritt

Seriously Gratuitous: The Making of Gratuitous Violence

May 22, 1992
By
Direction and Editing by Paul Matz and Mark S. Meritt; Videography by Paul Matz; Music by Mark S. Meritt; 29 minutes, color, VHS

This documentary short motion picture is a behind the scenes look at the making of Gratuitous Violence. It was shot on a VHS camcorder and edited with the camcorder and VHS VCR. True to its name, it is notable for being longer than the movie that is its own subject.

View the YouTube Video

The digital video was captured by Allan Meritt in January 2007 and posted by Mark on YouTube on January 22, 2007. You can watch the entire video right here by just pressing the Play button immediately below — all parts will automatically play in order. Or, you can visit YouTube to see the video or post a comment.

The Score

  • You Could’ve Been Something Special (Love Theme from Gratuitous Violence) (Instrumental) — An extended instrumental version created especially for this documentary — Listen to .mp3 sample from Original Soundtrack Recording:

Music © & Circle P - Phonorecord Copyright 2007, 1992 Mark S. Meritt

Kornell Kinema

March 31, 1992
By
Direction, Production, Cinematography, Editing and Music by Mark S. Meritt

This documentary motion picture short was produced for a course in filmmaking with filmmaker Marilyn Rivchin at Cornell University during Mark””s undergraduate studies. A study in contrast, the piece plays with filming techniques to explore the Cornell University campus through different kinds of motion. The title is also a play on the name of the school’s film exhibition program, Cornell Cinema.

View the YouTube Video

The video was created by projecting the film on a wall and playing the soundtrack on a stereo system while recording with a VHS camcorder. The digital video was captured by Allan Meritt in January 2007 and posted by Mark on YouTube on January 22, 2007. You can watch the video right here by just pressing the Play button immediately below. Or, you can visit YouTube to see the video or post a comment.

The Score

  • Kornell Kinema – Complete Score — Listen to .mp3 sample:
  • Kornell Kinema – Main Theme — Listen to .mp3 sample of the main theme from the score, with no “slow parts” to break it up:

Music © & Circle P - Phonorecord Copyright 2007, 1992 Mark S. Meritt

Makin’ Magic

June 9, 1990
By
Developed by Mark S. Meritt and Ed Budd; Assisted by Rob Gianotti, Rich Hack and Adam Hurst

In 1990, the Masque and Mime Society celebrated its 25th anniversary as the drama club of Roy C. Ketcham High School in Wappingers Falls, NY. A gala celebration was held, including dinne and a nearly 4-hour live retrospective of selected scenes from the organization’s past performances. Made for the event and shown at the beginning of the dinner, this documentary motion picture short was produced over several months during the 1989-1990 school year, tracking the entire process of creating the 1990 Spring musical production of 42nd Street. The piece was shot with only a VHS camcorder and edited using two home VCRs and a basic editing deck.

View the YouTube Video

The digital video was captured by Allan Meritt in March 2007 and posted by Mark on YouTube on April 23, 2007. You can watch the entire video right here by just pressing the Play button immediately below — all parts will automatically play in order. Or, you can visit YouTube to see the video or post a comment.

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