W_Z wrote:
that's a horrible analogy, since the latter 2 documentaries actually shed some light on things that many people didn't consider, and in the case of "super size me", actually changed the way mcdonald's did business (and changed legislation in school lunches and vending machines). but i don't think they're true documentaries, either. they're muckracking exposes. they're classified as documentaries but they're biased, which isn't what a true documentary is.
a good example would be the first "paradise lost" film. only the first. the next two are incredibly biased.
I'm only a casual viewer of documentaries but they seem to fall into a few categories.
1) Ones where the director is the star like mentioned above.
2) Ones about animals
3) Ones about pop stars
4) Everything else
The ESPN ones can be hit and miss but I'll put the Allen Iverson, Marcus Dupree, and some of the other ones up against just about any of the documentaries I know about. A sports documentary isn't going to be as hard hitting as something about unfair legal activity or people getting sick because of drilling.