Monday, November 29, 2010

The Rise

In film theory, the 1950s-era auteur theory holds that a director’s films reflect that director’s personal creative vision, as if he or she were the primary “auteur” (the French word for ‘author’). In some cases, film producers are considered to have a similar “auteur” role for films that they have produced.
A present day analogy would the ‘writer-director’ and having control over the final cut or director’s cut of a film.
Auteur theory has had a major impact on film criticism ever since it was advocated by film director and film critic François Truffaut in 1954. ‘Auteurism’ is the method of analyzing films based on this theory or, alternately, the characteristics of a director’s work that makes her or him an auteur. Both the auteur theory and the auteurism method of film analysis are frequently associated with the French New Wave and the film critics who wrote for the influential French film review periodical Cahiers du cinéma.”

The French New Wave officially kicked off in 1959 with the release of Truffaut’s The 400 Blows (1959) and immediately picked up with the release of Jean-Luc Godard’s Breathless (1960) which was co-written by Truffaut. These revolutionary feature film efforts were the product of experimentation with various short-films throughout the mid and late 1950s by these film critics-turned-filmmakers.
This was around the same time that the likes of Tony Richardson, Karel Reisz and Lindsey Anderson started the new wave in Britain, the result of several documentary film projects undertaken in the 1950s as part of the Free Cinema Movement. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960), A Taste of Honey (1961) and The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (1962) were the fore-runners of the British New Wave. Interestingly, 1959 was also the year when John Cassavetes, an established Hollywood actor started his own revolution of independent cinema with the film Shadows (1959).
These revolutions leaked into other parts of the world like Germany where the likes of Werner Herzog, Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Wim Wenders started the “New German Cinema” movement. Then the wave turned direction and headed eastwards through India with the likes of Satyajit Ray coming out as an established filmmaker with the closure of the “Apu trilogy” in 1959. The wave failed to rise to dizzy heights in the sub-continent but went onto generate a large following further east in Japan with the rise of the “Nuberu Bagu”, the localized name for the “Japanese New Wave”. Shohei Imamura is widely regarded as the key figure of this movement with a surprise association of the already established Seijun Suzuki’s certain works.
All these filmmakers mentioned above have been widely regarded as “auteurs” of their cinema by critics and audiences alike and suddenly the term had transformed the previously mechanical role of the film director into the most important and creative post on the crew. The producer’s prestige of the pre-new wave, industry-controlled era had come to a screeching halt and side-stepped to play second fiddle to the director.





2 comments:

  1. Great info and well researched. It was fun to read and I think I retained more info reading your blog - then the book. You're usually pretty quiet around me but you are very well written. I liked the pictures too, classics.

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  2. Great job on the blog! It's very well researched and focused. It's so interesting that the French new wave influenced Germany who influenced Japan.

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