

How to Watch a Movie
36 snips Aug 21, 2025
Richard Brody, a seasoned film critic at The New Yorker, dives deep into the evolution of auteur theory from its French origins to its modern significance. He explores how directors like Spike Lee have shaped their unique voices amidst Hollywood's creative constraints. The conversation highlights the tension between artistic vision and commercial pressures, punctuated by Lee's upcoming film 'Highest to Lowest.' Brody emphasizes that in great films, style and substance are inseparable, inviting listeners to rethink their viewing experience.
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Director As Invisible Presence
- The French critics felt an immediate communication with an invisible director and treated directors as artists.
- They saw Hollywood filmmakers working within constraints as artistic equals to art-house directors.
Cahiers Crowd And Their Favorites
- Cahiers critics admired Alfred Hitchcock and Howard Hawks and included Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut among their writers.
- These critics were young future filmmakers who later made films that validated their ideas.
Films Became A Floating Film School
- Truffaut's The 400 Blows and Godard's Breathless validated the politique des auteurs by becoming models for filmmakers.
- They created a 'floating film school' where the movie theater served as training for future directors.