20 Best Mockumentaries
Because fiction is stranger than fact...
The Last Broadcast (1998)
The Setup: DIY filmmaker David Leigh sets out to probe the fate of another documentary team, slain while shooting a cable TV spot on the Jersey Devil legend.
Why It Rules: Although it touches on the old 'found footage' cliché (banned from this list, hence no Blair Witch ), it's scaffolded by a well-constructed 'live' doc to prevent any air of detached voyeurism. It beat Blair Witch to the punch by a year - better PR might've seen this genre rival triumph.
Exit Through The Gift Shop (2010)
The Setup: Street-art royalty Banksy purports to tell us the curious tale of graf superstar Thierry Guetta's rise from LA wannabe to bona fide urban legend.
Why It Rules: Well, is it a mockumentary or not? Tough call, which probably makes it the most spurious entry here, but there's enough speculation to justify a place on the list. And, almost uniquely, it doesn't really seem to matter - it's a thoroughly absorbing ride either way.
Interview With The Assassin (2002)
The Setup: An elderly ex-Marine with terminal cancer asks a neighbour to tape his startling confession - that he was the much-theorised second 'grassy knoll' gunman in the 1963 shooting of JFK.
Why It Rules: Not a high-profile entry, but it offers a fresh twist on the familiar 'unemployed friend with a camera' contrivance, putting an old-timer front and centre of an intriguing story powered along by some superbly natural dialogue.
Incident At Loch Ness (2004)
The Setup: Werner Herzog is filming a sceptical Nessie doc, while another crew is shooting one on Werner. Ever in each other's way, tensions lurk both above and below the surface..
Sign up for the Total Film Newsletter
Bringing all the latest movie news, features, and reviews to your inbox
Why It Rules: Herzog mugs along gamely with the faintly wacky premise, apparently taking it all über-seriously. In fact, some scenes are so deadpan, you do wonder what the original project might've been before it segued into this little oddity.
Bob Roberts (1992)
The Setup: Writer/director/lead Tim Robbins plays the titular conservative folk singer, whose Pennsylvania senatorial race is followed to the tape by a British documentarian.
Why It Rules: Although over-reliant on political tropes of the Reagan era, it neatly satirises both the system and the media clamouring to critique it - never more so than when the frequent handycam shots put us right in the mouth of the feeding frenzy.
The Magician (2005)
The Setup: An intimate portrait of Melbourne's lesser-spotted seedy underbelly, courtesy of the alarmingly affable Ray Shoesmith. Who, y'know, just happens to be a hitman.
Why It Rules: Scott Ryan writes, directs and stars in a grimly amusing, tragicomic murder romp. He deserves much credit for the ominously volatile relationship between mercurial Ray and his incredulous young cameraman, Italian neighbour Max.
A Mighty Wind (2003)
The Setup: Having already found parody nirvana with Spinal Tap , Christopher Guest puts in another solid shift down the mock-doc mines with a somewhat less scabrous peek at the world of folk music.
Why It Rules: It may not boast quite the minutes-to-belly-laughs ratio of his other work in the genre, but it inserts a valuable seam of maturity into Guest's stellar CV. Tap devotees' mileage will vary, but this is well worth a slot on your satire shelf.
Death Of A President (2006)
The Setup: Slick, Brit-made 'future mockumentary', asking us to imagine (and witness) events surrounding a successful assassination attempt on George W. Bush.
Why It Rules: Far from critiquing Dubya's administration, this impressively apolitical thought experiment instead sets its sights on the likely social and media reactions to such a high-profile murder. The tech skills on display are pretty nuts, too - it must've made for deeply eerie viewing in the Oval Office.
Kenny (2006)
The Setup: Portable toilet engineer Kenny Smyth is the focus of this gently bathetic, curiously moving paean for the virtues of blue-collar working life.
Why It Rules: Although packing a septic tank full of dryly observational wit, it's Kenny 's colossal heart that sets it apart from the crowd. Writer/director Clayton Jacobson takes key credit for that, but brother Shane is tremendously likeable in the title role.
Forgotten Silver (1995)
The Setup: Bad Taste and later LOTR prankster Peter Jackson is our guide in this stone-turning foray into the overlooked life of pioneering early NZ director Colin McKenzie. Who never actually existed.
Why It Rules: It's played so poker-straight that many viewers didn't realise they'd been taken for a ride at first. Jackson's real coup was in securing talking head cameos from the likes of movie mogul Harvey Weinstein - it's genuinely hard to spot the fakery here.
Sonic 3 director explains the thinking behind picking those new post-credits arrivals: "It's always 'which character is going to give us something new?'"
The Inside Out 2 panic attack scene is one of the best depictions of anxiety ever – and something Pixar director Kelsey Mann is incredibly proud of: "I couldn't be happier"