'Looking for truth in fiction': How an almost-lost film transformed Charles Officer's storytelling

Charles Burnett's 'Killer of Sheep' opened Officer's eyes — and changed the course of his life

Media | How one film changed the way Charles Officer approached his own work

Caption: Charles Burnett's 'Killer of Sheep' greatly influenced how Officer distinguished between fiction and non-fiction filmmaking.

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Charles Burnett's film Killer of Sheep(external link) was made back in 1977, but it was extremely difficult to find for decades because it took over 30 years to be widely released. Then-budding filmmaker Charles Officer managed to get a hold of it anyway, writing to Burnett and asking if he could get a print. Burnett sent him one — and it drastically altered the course of Officer's life.
"It was probably one of the most beautiful things I'd ever seen," Officer says of Killer of Sheep. "It was lyrical, moving...It had a sense of very calm urgency in terms of the desperation that the people were facing and continue to face as black people."
Officer said the film also "opened his eyes" to a blending of fiction and non-fiction in filmmaking, something present in his own work. In the video above, Officer talks about this influence on both his career and his new film, The Skin We're In (which premieres March 9 on CBC Docs(external link), and which CBC Arts profiled last week).
Watch Exhibitionists(external link) Sundays at 4:30pm (5 NT) on CBC.