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Essay-Books Review: On François Truffaut, his films and his writing - by James Campbell, biographer and essayist

Essay-Books Review: On François Truffaut, his films and his writing - by James Campbell, biographer and essayist | Writers & Books | Scoop.it

A critic before he became a filmmaker, Truffaut had launched an attack on the establishment in the March 1954 issue of the journal Cahiers du Cinema, dismissing in aggressive terms the tradition de qualité in the French film industry. His main targets were the presiding directors and screenwriters, so inferior, in his account, to their American counterparts. In the work of Orson Welles, Howard Hawks, John Ford and, above all, Alfred Hitchcock, the personality of the “film-author” – the auteur – beamed through the screen. “I know that many Americans are surprised that European cinephiles – and the French in particular – regard Alfred Hitchcock as [an auteur], in the sense that the term is applied to . . . Jean-Luc Godard”, Truffaut writes in the introduction to Hitchcock, a heavily illustrated series of conversations recorded in 1962 (Truffaut’s French questions were relayed in English by his faithful assistant, Helen Scott). First published in France in 1983, it is issued in the UK for the first time in a “revised edition”. Thus the auteur came to prominence in France as a stray kid with a dubious background, rather like Truffaut’s own, who had drifted in from Hollywood. Truffaut would have been happy to make the kid communicate solely by mood, light and movement (“I believe in Charlie Chaplin”). Films, to his mind, originated in images rather than ideas. Since the kid had to speak, he spoke in French, but throughout his career Truffaut founded his films on goods imported from across the Atlantic, periodically indulging a desire to make them wholly or in part in English.

bobbygw's insight:
(From Wikipedia): The essayist James Campbell James is a Scottish writer, a former editor of the New Edinburgh Review and works for The Times Literary Supplement, where he writes the weekly "NB" column under the pen-name J.C. His own books include: Country: A Journey Through Scotland, 1984 Gate Fever: Voices from a Prison, 1986 Talking at the Gates: A Life of James Baldwin, 1991 Paris Interzone: Richard Wright, Lolita, Boris Vian and Others on the Left Bank, 1994 Exiled in Paris: Richard Wright, James Baldwin, Samuel Beckett and Others on the Left Bank (US edition of above title), 1995 The Picador Book of Blues and Jazz (editor), 1995 This Is the Beat Generation: New York, San Francisco, Paris, 1999 Thom Gunn in Conversation with James Campbell, 2000 Syncopations: Beats, New Yorkers, and Writers in the Dark, 2008
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10 Essential Films About 20th Century Writers

10 Essential Films About 20th Century Writers | Writers & Books | Scoop.it
10 Essential Films About 20th Century Writers
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And not forgetting, most recently, the fascinating movie 'Genius' (2016) about the relationship between the novelist Thomas Wolfe and his long-suffering, patient editor Max Perkins
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