"Auteurs" and Collaboration
Saturday, July 30, 2011 at 11:16AM Name-checking one of my all-time favorite movies is a sure way to get me to read your article. Teaching me something new about it and using to brilliantly distill a very important argument is icing on a particularly contentious cake.
For instance, on North by Northwest, a classic Cary Grant thriller, Hitchcock insisted on working with Ernest Lehman, a screenwriter best known for Sabrina. It was, at first glance, a peculiar choice: Sabrina was a romantic comedy, and Hitchcock had been hired to create a dark suspense movie. But Hitchcock knew what he was doing. In fact, he gave Lehman a tremendous amount of creative freedom. (Hitchcock’s only requirement was that the plot contain three elements: a case of mistaken identity, the United Nations building and a chase scene across the face of Mt. Rushmore.)
Turns out, everything truly brilliant about North by Northwest's script--the banter, the plot twists, the bottomlessly complex characters--grew not from Hitch the auteur, but from his unconventional choice of collaborators and the fertile negative spaces between the bones of his almost imperceptible outline.
(via ClickNothing)
Art,
Clint Hocking,
Hitchcock in
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