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Clearly, he had no issues turning a good book into an even better movie, but even Hitchcock had to draw the line somewhere. Fyodor Dostoevsky has tripped up many writers, directors, and producers over ...
Flemish collective tg STAN presents Que sera sera from September 10 to 21, 2025 at the Théâtre du Rond-Point, a theatrical ...
“It was a very bad movie,” he told Francois Truffaut. “The producers were always trying to break into the American market, so ...
This book, originally published in 1966, grew out of that encounter. In 1962 Truffaut — by this point also a filmmaker — interviewed Hitchcock in great detail over a space of eight days.
I was depressed over the death of my Father in 1966, the year the book was published. I was one of those kids, picked on and bullied in school, very few friends, left to my own devices I took to ...
This book contains transcripts of eight days of interviews conducted in 1962 between the French film director François Truffaut and Alfred Hitchcock. As a film critic with the influential ...
The project had its basis in fandom. In 1962, Truffaut, still young and radiant with technical discovery, interviewed Hitchcock about his work, using a translator.
Fifty years ago, Francois Truffaut published a book of interviews with Alfred Hitchcock. Film directors have been cribbing from it ever since. And now there’s a movie!
The resulting book, Hitchcock/Truffaut, ultimately changed the perception of the director for many American critics and has become a necessary resource for filmmakers. Filmmaker and critic Kent ...
David Fincher talks about his relationship to the book – as do Martin Scorsese, Paul Schrader, James Gray, Richard Linklater and, yes, Bogdanovich (who never mentions his own Hitchcock interview).