Auteur is the French word for “author”- the word used for the “author” of the story (the filmmaker). Filmmakers have recognisable visual style in their films. Therefore, you would know when it is one of their films. Some filmmakers work in many different forms and styles such as Brian De Palma and Takashi Miike, but others have more identifiable styles. For example, Alfred Hitchcock, Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, Wong Kar-Wai all have their own distinct style that is easily recognizable.
The problem with this is that there cannot really be one single author for a film as they are more collaborative projects- more people are involved such as cinematographer, set designers, actors, etc. However, generally the director is the person who would fit into the auteur status as they are the ones who have the most control over the film. But it could be a writer like William Castle or Val Lewton who made a series of low budget horror films in the 1940’s.
WILLIAM CASTLE: director, producer and overall showman.
Castle had a unique way of getting to his audience when presenting his film to them. For example, at his 1959 film, ‘The Tingler’ he brought hundreds of little electric motors at $3 each and sent them to cinema theatres and told them to put them under their seats. So, at some points during the film, the motors would go off, sending mini bolts of electricity through the audience- and they just accepted this without complaining. Electrocuting his audience was mild compared to some of the other ways he would manipulate them.
He would appear at the beginning of the films to warn the audience of the terror that they were about to receive. He took our insurance policies against people dying from fright during his film ‘Macabre’ (1958). All of this was a deliberate attempt to put the audience into a frame of mind in which they were already unnerved and disconcerted before even watching the film.
The auteur theory became a method of evaluation which enabled people knowledgeable about film, film history and individual directors to show their knowledge and superiority over the uneducated masses. Those who did not know what John Ford’s cavalry trilogy was or the importance of cigarette lighting in the films of Howard Hawks.
- In 1951, Andre Bazin founded ‘Cahiers du cinema’. He is often seen as the father of auteurism because of his appreciation of the world-view and style such artists as Charlie Chaplin and Jean Renoir. Younger critics at the magazine were the ones who developed the idea further, drawing attention to significant directors from the Hollywood studio era as well as European directors.
François Truffaut was one such critic. He was someone who became one of the greatest filmmakers of the French New Wave. Truffaut created the phrase ‘politique des auteurs’ to refer to the policy of venerating (treating with great respect and honour) directors.
- The French critics were responding to the belated influx of American films in France after World War II- they had been previously held back by import restrictions. Therefore, directors like Howard Hawks, Alfred Hitchcock and John Ford were hailed as major artist of cinema.
- Critics like Truffaut was aware that American filmmakers were working within the restrictions of the Hollywood system and that the types of films were often decided for them by studio executives.
- However, they believed that such artists could still achieve a personal style in the way that they shot a film.
EXAMPLE: STEVEN SPIELBERG
Steven Spielberg has a great history of filmmaking is quite a reputable example of an auteur. He is mainly known for his Jurassic Park films; however, you will find the same filming techniques in a lot of his other work.
These include:
- The supernatural among the normal– his films always include creatures that do not necessarily exist, such as prehistoric creatures such as megalodons, dinosaurs, giants, aliens, etc.
- The Spielberg face– the character reacting to something off camera with a shocked expression on their face.
- Ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances– the events in the movie feel even more momentous due to that fact that the people stuck in them have never experienced anything like it before- making the audience feel like it could be them in that situation too.
- Emphasis on childhood– the adults are out of touch with what really matters. For example, In ET, no adult faces are seen besides Elliot’s mother until the end of the film. The children always seem to be the ones stuck in the extreme circumstances whereas the adults remain oblivious.
- Reflection shot- it is theorised that Stevens often used reflection shot could be a ways for the characters to visual symbolise their own self-reflection.
Therefore, whenever we see these common traits in a movie- it is often tied to Steven Spielberg as he never seems to lose touch with his filmmaking traits.
With this auteurist approach, the French critics showed their appreciation of the Hollywood films that they loved.
However, the auteur soon gained recognition in America in the 1960’s through Andrew Sarris. He devised the notion of auteur theory (the French critics had not claimed the concept to be a ‘theory’) and used it to tell the history of American filmmaking through the careers and works of individuals. But Hollywood was wary of the idea that it produced art and not entertainment, therefore many Hollywood directors rejected the notion completely. They saw themselves as people who just made movies; they were craftsmen or hired hands, part of the production line.
Sarris’s approach led to the formation of a canon of great directors and, consequently, some filmmakers like Alfred Hitchcock cultivated their persona. Hitchcock was seen as the star of his own films; also known as the “master of suspense”.
This did have a negative impact on the people he worked with. According to biographer Donald Spoto in a book of interviews with Truffaut, Hitchcock hurt and disappointed just about everybody who had ever worked with him because the interviews diminished the contribution of the writers, the designers, the photographers, the composers, and the actors. These people became little more than elves in the master carpenter’s workshop.
Today, auteurism is not limited to filmmakers but can also be linked to actors. Because of todays marketing campaigns which heavily promote the stars of the film, more auteuristic than they ever were. The key things is the recognisable imprint that is left on a film.
Problem with the Theory:
- It might even be possible for a director to personally carry out every aspect of the production. If the director doesn’t fulfil all production functions- the ‘author’ of a film really identified and established?
- Film is collaborative- each person working on it also brings their own creative elements- not just the director.
- The auteur theorists weren’t interested in the historical context of the film- but the context of film within the total body of the directors’ work. It wasn’t known if the films related to the others made by the director.
- The auteur theory isolates films from their social and historical contexts from audiences- it treats filmmakers as being beyond time and being untouched by society or the industry that surrounds them.





























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