“When I say that, that’s most of my friends,” he says. “I recognize all the steps. When you take a contact sheet, I see myself.”
For some four decades, Peck has made some of the most urgent films, in both fiction (including 2000’s Lumumba, about the exiled Congo leader) and non-fiction (including last year’s Silver Dollar Road). But he has rarely not employed both narrative and documentary elements in films that take their own shape — movies less interested in genre distinctions than they are pursuing unexamined truths.
That’s made Peck an increasingly exceptional figure in a documentary world that’s become more and more dominated by glossier, less probing films for streaming platforms.
“It’s gotten worse. There’s less money so young people are desperate and accept stuff that my generation would never accept,” Peck says. “The whole industry has changed. I knew another world, and I recognize it’s not that anymore.”
Peck is currently editing a documentary on George Orwell. Like Ernest Cole: Lost and Found, it will be told totally in Orwell’s words. A few days after the U.S. election, Peck was working to update a moment in the film that touches on President-elect Donald Trump. Peck has been astonished at how prescient Orwell was on so many current issues — misinformation, AI, social media, the refugee crisis.
“He was a really incredible critic of history and how history is even told,” says Peck. “Before plunging into it, I did not realize how sharp he was about what’s going on today.”
“To me,” he adds, “a film has value if it’s talking to us today.”
‘Ernest Cole: Lost and Found’ is released nationwide on Nov. 22, 2024.