
Frank – Stories from the South: Jacob Bryant, a polite menace
And he is great. Having filmed in Iraq, Sudan, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan and beyond, Bryant's work with leading documentary makers has been nominated for multiple screen awards.
Bryant attributes his success to skills he wasn't taught at school. Rather, it seems the kids who cannot sit still in a classroom are often perfect for the jobs that rely on instinct more than instruction.
At a young age, Bryant inherited his father's .22-gauge rifle. 'I could only carry two or three possums at a time because I was so little,' says Bryant, 'but that physicality – running around these hills, climbing, walking, building things – that stuck with me my whole life.'
Sitting still was (and continues to be) almost impossible for Bryant. He struggled with academics and his secondary education ended after his first year of high school.
'It was deeply unpleasant – the idea of just sitting in one place,' he says. 'I was really driven to do as much as I could in my life, and school really got in the way of that.'
By the age of 18, Bryant had written off eight cars, was barred from every pub on Banks Peninsula and had been arrested.
'I had such a reputation. For being a f***wit actually,' he says.
But as Bryant's mother puts it, while he had a knack for causing trouble, he was always polite. Bryant realised while sitting in the holding cells of the Christchurch Central Police Station at the age of 18 that it was not his place.
'If this was my future, this was absolutely not who I was,' he recalls thinking.
Bryant moved to London in his early 20s and bought a Super 8 camera from Portobello Market. From there, he forged a career in cinematography, working on stories for the BBC, CNN, TWI and Insight during his first three years of work.
'That's all I ever wanted to do,' says Bryant. 'To shoot pictures and be able to show the world – the world that I was experiencing – to other people.'
'He certainly has an eye for beauty,' says McKay. 'He has empathy for people that he feels are being treated wrongly.'
Countless times, across three decades, Bryant has visited the world's trouble spots and put himself at risk to tell the stories of others. The most notable occasion, perhaps, was in 2015.
Māori Television was pursuing a story on the Israeli blockade of Gaza. A flotilla of vessels was trying to break through the blockade and Bryant was employed as the cameraman.
'There were definitely risks attached to that,' says Bryant. He had heard of instances where Israeli military had boarded flotilla vessels and shot several activists on board.
'We were gonna have to do some pretty drastic things to get those pictures off [the boat].'
In Frank – Stories from the South episode three, Bryant divulges how he smuggled his SD card off the boat, into an Israeli prison, and back out again, for the world to see the footage.
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