American documentary television series
Carrier |
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Title card |
Genre | Documentary |
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Created by | Mitchell Block and Maro Chermayeff |
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Developed by | Mitchell Block |
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Directed by | Maro Chermayeff |
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Theme music composer | Edward Bilous |
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Country of origin | United States |
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Original language | English |
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No. of episodes | 10 |
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Executive producers | Mel Gibson Bruce Davey Nancy Cotton Mitchell Block Maro Chermayeff |
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Producers | Deborah Dickson Jeff Dupre |
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Cinematography | Axel Baumann, Robert Hanna, Wolfgang Held, Ulli Bonnekamp, Mark Brice |
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Editors | Howard Sharp, E. Donna Shepard, Jay Keuper, Maeve O,Boyle, Pam Scott Arnold |
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Camera setup | Multi-camera |
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Running time | 10 hours, 1 hour each episode |
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Network | PBS |
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Release | April 27 (2008-04-27) – May 1, 2008 (2008-05-01) |
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Carrier is a PBS documentary television series about the six-month deployment of the United States Navy aircraft carrier USS Nimitz in 2005 from the United States to the Middle East and back.[1] There are ten episodes, and the series is supplemented by a 90-minute companion documentary film called Another Day in Paradise.
Synopsis
Carrier follows the deployment, from May 7, 2005, to November 8, 2005, of the supercarrier USS Nimitz (commanded by then-Captain Ted N. Branch), along with Carrier Air Wing Eleven, from her home port at North Island in Coronado, California to the Persian Gulf during Operation Iraqi Freedom. This character-driven, dramatic non-fiction series includes extensive footage shot aboard as well as interviews with many of the crew about their various experiences, personal concerns and fears.[1][2] During the deployment, the Nimitz makes stops in Pearl Harbor, Hong Kong, Guam, Kuala Lumpur, Bahrain, and Perth.[3][4]
Production
The miniseries was produced by Icon Productions and Carrier Project, Inc. It was co-created by Mitchell Block and Maro Chermayeff, and directed by Chermayeff. The executive producers were Block and Chermayeff for Carrier Project, Inc. and Mel Gibson, Bruce Davey and Nancy Cotton, for Icon Productions.[5]
Seventeen filmmakers, including producers Deborah Dickson and Jeff Dupre as well as field producers Matthew Akers, Michelle Smawley and Pamela Yates, shot 1,600 hours of footage to create the series.[6] The series and its companion film were the first documentaries to ever be produced on a U.S. Naval warship on active duty over an entire mission. This was accomplished by David Kennedy (Captain, US Navy, Retired) and Block who spent two years obtaining permission to embed on the Nimitz.[5] In 2008, the series was awarded the Emmy for Outstanding Cinematography Reality Programming by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences in recognition of the work cinematographers Axel Baumann, Ulli Bonnekamp, Mark Brice, Robert Hanna, and Wolfgang Held did on the episode Rights of Passage.[7]
Events
During filming in the Persian Gulf, Seaman Apprentice Robert D. Macrum of the escorting cruiser USS Princeton (CG-59) fell overboard sometime during the night of September 12, 2005, or the early morning of September 13.[8][9] Despite a five-day search that covered a 360-square-mile (930 km2) area, Macrum, who was 22 and from Sugarland, Texas, was never found.[10]
Episodes
A 26-minute preview of the series was aired by PBS on April 13, 2008.[11]
The ten 60-minute episodes began airing on April 27, 2008, with two episodes being shown each night for five straight nights. All episodes were directed by Chermayeff.[12]
Another Day In Paradise
This 90-minute film was created from the same pool of footage used for the series. It covers many of the same themes touched on in the series, but narrows the focus to three men: a pilot, a marine, and a sailor. Not only are all three connected by the fact that they are serving on board the same ship, they are all also struggling with various family issues and the different phases of fatherhood. The film was released in the U.S. on June 16, 2008, and was directed by Deborah Dickson.[13][14]
Disc releases
- Series
A 3-disc, 600-minute region 1 DVD version of the documentary was released by PBS on May 6, 2008. Special features include scene selection, the preview episode, deleted and extended scenes, closed captioning and 16:9 anamorphic widescreen.[15][16]
- Film
A 90-minute region A1 Blu-ray Disc version of Another Day In Paradise was released by PBS on March 10, 2009.[17]
See also
References
External links