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  • 00:17

    This FilmmakerIQ lesson is proudly sponsored by Rode Microphones. Premium microphones and

  • 00:22

    audio accessories for studio, live and location recording.

  • 00:27

    Welcome to Filmmaker IQ.com, my name is John Hess and today we’ll look at the origins

  • 00:32

    and implications of auteur theory while systematically butchering pronunciation of several French words.

  • 00:42

    Simply put - the Auteur Theory holds that a film is a reflection of the personal creative

  • 00:48

    vision of the director - that he or she is the author of the film like a writer is the author

  • 00:55

    of a novel. The natural line of thinking from this in film criticism is that a film’s

  • 01:01

    quality is tightly intertwined

  • 01:03

    with the film director. As Truffaut said, “There are no good and bad movies, only

  • 01:09

    good and bad directors”

  • 01:12

    But to really understand the impact of this idea which doesn’t seem all that controversial

  • 01:16

    on the surface especially in today’s media environment, we must consider it in a historical

  • 01:23

    context. And to do that we must look at early 20th century French cinema.

  • 01:29

    France has always had a special place in filmmaking history - from the first public film exhibition

  • 01:35

    in the Grand Cafe in Paris in 1895 by the Lumiere brothers to the works of Georges Melies.

  • 01:43

    Though Hollywood and American films would quickly dominate international cinema even

  • 01:48

    in the early silent

  • 01:49

    era, the French film industry was an important artistic force through the 1920s with Paris

  • 01:56

    a major cultural center of Europe cultivating avante garde films like Un Chien Andalou by

  • 02:03

    Spanish director Luis Buñuel and coauthored by Salvador Dali - to The Passion of Joan

  • 02:08

    of Arc by Danish director Carl Theodor Dreyer.

  • 02:13

    The arrival of sound in French film spelled the end of this experimental avante garde.

  • 02:20

    This new technology sort of caught French filmmakers with their pants down as they had

  • 02:25

    developed sound technologies but held no patent rights. Instead the French would have to license

  • 02:31

    this technology from American and German companies which came with heavy fees.

  • 02:37

    Until Sound, most French filmmakers were small artisan operations. Sound changed that and

  • 02:44

    powerful organized Foreign studios began to move in. In 1930 Paramount opened a studio

  • 02:52

    in Joinville to make films into different languages. A year earlier in 1929, German

  • 02:58

    sound film company Tobis-Klangfilm opened studios in the Parisian suburb of Epinay.

  • 03:05

    From this Epinay studio would come one of the first internationally recognized artistic

  • 03:09

    triumphs of the sound era - Sous les toits de Paris - under the Roofs of Paris in 1930

  • 03:17

    by René Clair.

  • 03:19

    As French theaters converted to sound, Musicals and “filmed theater” became the rage adapting

  • 03:26

    literary and dramatic works for movie going audiences. The grandiose musical films would

  • 03:33

    start to see artistic pushback in 1934 with the rise of a movement called Poetic realism - those were studio

  • 03:41

    shot films with a fatalistic view of life: focusing on disappointment, bitterness and

  • 03:48

    nostalgia. Perhaps the most prominent Poetic Realist was Jean Renoir whose films enjoyed

  • 03:54

    much international success, with La Grande Illusion in 1937 being the first foreign film

  • 04:01

    to be nominated for an Oscar in the Best Picture Category - then called Outstanding Production.

  • 04:07

    But war, especially a World War, disrupts everything. When the Nazis marched into Paris,

  • 04:14

    many filmmakers, including Renoir, fled. Those that stuck around continued working under

  • 04:20

    German occupation - making “escapist” films and adapting literary works under the

  • 04:25

    watchful eye of German and Vichy Censorship. British and American films were outright banned,

  • 04:32

    so French cinema took off, even more heavily reliant musicals and stage plays as a light pleasant

  • 04:40

    distraction to the grim realities of war.

  • 04:44

    When hostilities ceased, French cinema was actually quite strong and a source of national

  • 04:50

    pride - culminating in 1945’s Les Enfants du paradis- The Children of Paradise by Marcel Carne.

  • 04:57

    A National center for Cinematography was founded in 1946 to support a strong national cinema.

  • 05:05

    But when the ban on American films was lifted, Hollywood films rushed in even encouraged

  • 05:11

    in generous quotas in exchange for French luxury items in the Blum-Byrnes trade agreement

  • 05:17

    to pay off war debts, French film production went back to a pre war average of 100-120

  • 05:25

    films annually. The difference now was they were more highly organized, more polished,

  • 05:31

    and better crafted than ever before.

  • 05:34

    But the French output was lacking something in artistic quality - at least to a group

  • 05:40

    of young men who desperately wanted to be filmmakers themselves. Against this old guard

  • 05:46

    “Tradition of Quality” a new generation of outsiders - film critics - would establish

  • 05:53

    a new way of thinking about cinema as art.

  • 06:00

    The liberation of France also saw the rise of a the cinephile movement - this was a generation

  • 06:06

    of people who had grown up with film and had access to a huge library of French and American

  • 06:12

    films available at the Cinematheque Francaise in Paris. Their forum would be The Cahiers

  • 06:18

    du Cinema - the Cinema Notebooks - a magazine started by Andre Bazin and Jacques Doniol-Valcroze

  • 06:24

    with a group of young French film critics including Francois Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Claude Chabrol,

  • 06:31

    Jacques Rivette, and Eric Rohmer.

  • 06:34

    One of the central principles of Cahiers, derived from Andre Bazin, is a rejection of

  • 06:40

    montage editing in favor of mise-en-scene - the long take and deep focus - allowing

  • 06:47

    the audience to take in the scene as it unfolds.

  • 06:51

    The other principle, derived from film critic Alexandre Astrucs, is the concept of camera-stylo-

  • 06:58

    an idea that a director should wield his camera like a writer uses his pen and that he need

  • 07:04

    not be hindered by traditional storytelling.

  • 07:08

    Combining these two ideas in an essay in 1954: la politiques des auteurs, Truffaut attacked

  • 07:15

    the French “Cinema of Quality” with their heavy emphasis on plot and dialogue. These

  • 07:21

    contemporary French directors, he claimed, added nothing to the script beyond pretty

  • 07:26

    pictures they were Metteur en scène - stage setters not true cinematic auteurs like Jean

  • 07:33

    Renoir and Hollywood filmmakers like Orson Welles, Alfred Hitchcock and Howard Hawks

  • 07:38

    - directors who managed to imprint a personal style into their work. It also happened that

  • 07:45

    these auteur directors were very established masters of mise-en-scene.

  • 07:51

    To Truffaut, there could be no peaceful co-existence between the “Tradition of Quality” and

  • 07:57

    the “Cinema d’auteurs” - even the best film of the old guard would be less interesting

  • 08:03

    than the worst film of a true auteur of cinema

  • 08:07

    In his subsequent writings Truffaut would continue to attack established French commercial

  • 08:13

    cinema as lacking ambition and imagination and preventing young men from making films

  • 08:19

    without long drawn out apprenticeships. Kinda sounds familiar…

  • 08:24

    There were certainly economic barriers in place. In the early 50s, Government money was only

  • 08:30

    available to filmmakers with established track records but by the end of the decade, laws

  • 08:35

    would change to provide funding based on the quality of the submitted script regardless

  • 08:41

    of the filmmaker's track record.

  • 08:43

    By the time Truffaut made it big internationally with his 1959 film Les Quatre cents coups

  • 08:50

    (400 Blows) which turned a $75,000 budget into a $500,000 American distribution rights

  • 08:57

    deal, more private money found its way into independent French Production - establishing

  • 09:03

    the financial groundwork for the French New Wave that put many Cahiers film critics into the directors’ chair.

  • 09:12

    Ultimately Truffaut’s call for the Cinema d’auteurs may not have been a universal

  • 09:17

    plea for cinema -but a manifesto for against the French commercial films that would ultimately

  • 09:24

    lead to the French New Wave. But film critics across the Atlantic Ocean would take Truffaut’s idea and run with it.

  • 09:35

    Mid century American filmmakers didn’t exactly receive the concept of Cinema d’auteur well.

  • 09:42

    Unlike French cinema which had always been small artisan like productions, Hollywood

  • 09:48

    and the studio system was an assembly line with films produced on a large scale collaborative

  • 09:53

    effort.

  • 09:54

    But one film critic would really bring Auteurism into the American public eye - Andrew Sarris.

  • 10:00

    Sarris, writing for Film Culture, created the term Auteur Theory in his landmark essay

  • 10:06

    “Notes on The Auteur Theory in 1962”

  • 10:11

    Heavily influenced by Andre Bazin and Caheirs du Cinema, Sarris puts forth Auteur Theory

  • 10:17

    as a way to judge films by way of their director. In the essay he outlines three premises as

  • 10:23

    a series of concentric circles for determining whether a director is an auteur or not.

  • 10:30

    The first premise of auteur theory is the technical competence of a director as a criterion

  • 10:37

    of value - that is a great director must be at least a good director - at least holding

  • 10:43

    elementary skills in craft and technique.

  • 10:48

    Moving inward the second premise is a director must have a distinguishable personality that

  • 10:54

    can be seen over and over again in his body of work.

  • 10:59

    Lastly- an auteur imbues his films with an interior meaning - which is extrapolated from

  • 11:05

    the tension between between the director’s personality and the material he has to work

  • 11:11

    with.

  • 11:11

    At the time 1962, Sarris listed Ophuls, Renoir, Mizoguchi, Hitchcock, Chaplin, Ford, Welles,

  • 11:19

    Dreyer, Rosellni, Murnau, Griffith, Sternberg, Eisenstein, von Stroheim, Bunuel, Bresson,

  • 11:27

    Hawks, Lang, Flaherty, and Vigo as true auteurs of cinema - masters of film who’s body of

  • 11:35

    work must be studied to appreciate their career spanning genius.

  • 11:40

    Although much further would be written about auteur theory by film theorists and historians,

  • 11:45

    there would be a popular backlash from another famous American film critic: Pauline Kael.

  • 11:56

    Writing for Film Quarterly in 1963, Pauline Kael rips apart Sarris’s premises of auteur

  • 12:03

    theory in her essay Circles and Squares: the Joys and Sarris.

  • 12:08

    On the subject of a director needing to be competent, Kael argues that it’s pointless

  • 12:13

    distinction to make. If a film is works, who cares if the director meets some standard

  • 12:18

    of proficiency. How are we really to judge?

  • 12:22

    On the second premise of an auteur’s signature style being unmistakable in his work, Kael

  • 12:27

    asks the question, “Why?” - why is a consistent signature style across films important at

  • 12:32

    all? Why not judge a film on it’s own merit.

  • 12:48

    To Kael Ignoring a film’s quality based on the authorship indicates that you are incapable

  • 12:55

    of judging either - A film is a film, does it make it better if you have to watch all

  • 13:00

    the other works by a particular director to get the style?

  • 13:04

    Finally on the last premise, Kael argues that the auteur theory glorifies trash. A piece

  • 13:10

    of art is a medium of expression, why does it need some additional hidden meanings. There’s

  • 13:16

    subtext of course, but what really is to gain from further obscure meanings?

  • 13:34

    Instead Kael argues that we judge the artist by the movie, not the movie by the artist.

  • 13:41

    This spat between two film critics sparked off a culture war- with two seemingly ideologically

  • 13:47

    opposed camps: The Paulettes and the Sarristes

  • 13:51

    But in reality, conflict is best used to sell papers. Outside a jab back and a snarky line

  • 13:58

    here and there, there was not a lot of gunfire exchanged. Sarris himself said in 2009:

  • 14:20

    Perhaps Sarris’ greatest mistake was to call Truffaut’s politique du auteur a "theory".

  • 14:26

    The idea that there is a central figure in a film’s production whose creative vision

  • 14:32

    is translated on the screen is a easily accessible way to talk about film as works of individuals

  • 14:39

    especially after the end of the old Hollywood studio system.

  • 14:43

    But authorship in a such a collaborative medium can be tough to discern. Consider Tim Burton’s

  • 14:50

    The Nightmare Before Christmas. Burton wrote the original poem, came up with much of the

  • 14:56

    concepts and design, but he only spent 8-10 days total on set during it’s laborious

  • 15:01

    3 year production schedule because he was busy with Batman and Ed Wood. The directorial duties

  • 15:07

    fell on his friend Henry Selick who directed the film in the style of Burton. It may have

  • 15:13

    the signatures look of a Tim Burton film, but Selick was the one in charge. And Nightmare shares a lot

  • 15:20

    of similarity with Selick’s later films like James & The Giant Peach and Coraline.

  • 15:24

    It gets even more complicated with franchises. George Lucas is closely associated with Star

  • 15:30

    Wars and he did direct the first film: A New Hope. But directorial duties fell on Irving

  • 15:35

    Kurshner for The Empire Strikes Back and Richard Marquand who directed Return of the Jedi.

  • 15:40

    Many fans disappointed at the prequels point to Lucas’ over involvement - that the original

  • 15:45

    trilogy had more balanced input from his collaborators.

  • 15:51

    The fact is, filmmaking is complex: In his later years Andrew Sarris said:

  • 16:29

    Though proponents of the auteur theory weren’t the first to recognize the director’s importance

  • 16:34

    to cinematic arts, Truffaut and others placed it first and foremost above the plot and dialogue

  • 16:40

    - shaping in many ways the way we talk about films and film history. Acting, Cinematography,

  • 16:47

    Editing, music - all are ultimately in service to the director’s vision.

  • 16:53

    But some influences shine above others and an auteur doesn’t necessarily have to be the director

  • 16:59

    - it can be the writer, an actor, a producer, even the special effects artist. If you study

  • 17:05

    modern cinema, you will be hard pressed not to find at least one individual or even a

  • 17:09

    group of people whose vision and persistence were key to birthing a wonderful piece of

  • 17:16

    motion picture history. So the question is:

  • 17:19

    Why can’t that person be you?

  • 17:21

    Go out there and make something great.

  • 17:24

    I’m John Hess and I’ll see you at FilmmakerIQ.com

All

The example sentences of CINEMATIC in videos (15 in total of 245)

pictures verb, 3rd person singular present they personal pronoun were verb, past tense metteur proper noun, singular en proper noun, singular scene noun, singular or mass - stage noun, singular or mass setters noun, plural not adverb true adjective cinematic adjective auteurs noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction jean proper noun, singular
and coordinating conjunction we personal pronoun already adverb got verb, past tense that preposition or subordinating conjunction nice adjective cinematic adjective look noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner very adverb nice adjective very adverb nice adjective colors noun, plural
quantum proper noun, singular break proper noun, singular proper noun, singular xb proper noun, singular 1 cardinal number / noun, singular or mass april proper noun, singular 5 cardinal number , 2016 cardinal number quantum proper noun, singular break proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present being verb, gerund or present participle called verb, past participle a determiner cinematic adjective ,
incredible adjective real adjective world noun, singular or mass instruments noun, plural that wh-determiner can modal be verb, base form great adjective for preposition or subordinating conjunction cinematic adjective music noun, singular or mass or coordinating conjunction whatever wh-determiner you personal pronoun want verb, non-3rd person singular present
being verb, gerund or present participle able adjective to to use verb, base form these determiner powers verb, 3rd person singular present he personal pronoun became verb, past tense a determiner superhero proper noun, singular of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner marvel proper noun, singular cinematic proper noun, singular universe proper noun, singular .
in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner case noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction these determiner cinematic adjective conjectures noun, plural , fans noun, plural were verb, past tense able adjective to to figure verb, base form out preposition or subordinating conjunction certain adjective connections noun, plural
the determiner color noun, singular or mass palette noun, singular or mass the determiner way noun, singular or mass it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present told verb, past participle it personal pronoun has verb, 3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction cinematic adjective look noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun .
in preposition or subordinating conjunction theory noun, singular or mass , film noun, singular or mass critics noun, plural help verb, non-3rd person singular present us personal pronoun separate adjective the determiner cinematic adjective cream noun, singular or mass from preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner emoji proper noun, singular movie proper noun, singular crop noun, singular or mass .
meanwhile adverb , the determiner cinematic adjective peter proper noun, singular parker proper noun, singular has verb, 3rd person singular present crammed verb, past participle a determiner whole adjective lot noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction living verb, gerund or present participle into preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner very adverb
get verb, base form some determiner letterboxing proper noun, singular when wh-adverb watching verb, gerund or present participle a determiner cinematic adjective video noun, singular or mass - unlike preposition or subordinating conjunction most adverb, superlative other adjective modern adjective phones noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction
augmented verb, past tense reality noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction has verb, 3rd person singular present enough adjective power noun, singular or mass to to check verb, base form each determiner frame noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction cinematic adjective mode noun, singular or mass on preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner
merges verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner bouncy noun, singular or mass fun noun, singular or mass stop noun, singular or mass motion noun, singular or mass feel noun, singular or mass with preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner cinematic adjective feel noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction you personal pronoun get verb, non-3rd person singular present this determiner
the determiner marvel proper noun, singular cinematic adjective universe noun, singular or mass , let verb, base form s proper noun, singular take verb, non-3rd person singular present a determiner look noun, singular or mass back adverb and coordinating conjunction look verb, base form through preposition or subordinating conjunction his possessive pronoun comic adjective book noun, singular or mass
they personal pronoun re noun, singular or mass all determiner eventually adverb leading verb, gerund or present participle up preposition or subordinating conjunction to to a determiner cinematic adjective climax noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner movie noun, singular or mass theatre noun, singular or mass either determiner way noun, singular or mass .
pretty adverb great adjective cinematic adjective experience noun, singular or mass with preposition or subordinating conjunction cinematic adjective color noun, singular or mass so preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun get verb, non-3rd person singular present 10 cardinal number bit noun, singular or mass colors noun, plural not adverb 12 cardinal number - bit noun, singular or mass like preposition or subordinating conjunction

Use "cinematic" in a sentence | "cinematic" example sentences

How to use "cinematic" in a sentence?

  • 'Sweet Valley High' is fantastic, fabulous, a little bit campy, and - dare I say it - cinematic.
    -Diablo Cody-
  • When working on a period, it is the finer details that evoke imagery that helps in cinematic adaptations.
    -Ashwin Sanghi-
  • I love it when television is shot in a cinematic way and I think to aspire to that is no bad thing.
    -Matthew Rhys-
  • The actors are the greatest executors of tone in a film. They're the most important cinematic component.
    -Alexander Payne-
  • I don't make the best movies in the world, but at times, I do feel like I'm adding something to the cinematic community.
    -Seth Rogen-
  • My heroes among filmmakers would be people like Buñuel and Pasolini, who were of very high cinematic intelligence, but tread on a lot of toes.
    -Peter Greenaway-
  • I go to a very visual place when I'm singing. It's very cinematic and I get this feeling of space. I love when music does that.
    -Dave Gahan-
  • My songs are cinematic so they seem to reference a glamorous era or fetishize certain lifestyles, but that's not my aim.
    -Lana Del Rey-

Definition and meaning of CINEMATIC

What does "cinematic mean?"

/ˌsinəˈmadik/

adjective
relating to cinema.