Auteur theory, theory of film making in which the
director is viewed as the major creative force in a motion picture. In film
criticism, auteur theory holds that a director's film reflects the director's
personal creative vision, as if they were the primary "auteur" (the
French word for "author"). In spite of the production of the film as
part of an industrial process, the auteur's creative voice is distinct enough
to shine through all kinds of studio interference and through the collective
process. In law, the film is treated as a work of art, and the auteur, as the
creator of the film, is the original copyright holder.
Auteur theory has influenced film criticism since
1954, when it was advocated by film director and critic François Truffaut. This
method of film analysis was originally associated with the French New Wave and
the film critics who wrote for the French film review periodical Cahiers du
Cinéma. Auteur theory was developed a few years later in the United States
through the writings of The Village Voice critic Andrew Sarris. Sarris used
auteur theory as a way to further the analysis of what defines serious work
through the study of respected directors and their films.
The championed
filmmakers such as Akira Kurosawa, Satyajit Ray, Alfred Hitchcock, Howard Hawks,
and Jean Renoir are known as absolute 'auteurs' of their films. Although André
Bazin, co-founder of the Cahiers, provided a forum for Auteurism to flourish,
he explained his concern about its excesses in his article "On the Auteur
Theory".






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