(The Tennessean) Frank Daniels–Famed director Howard Hawks preferred a simple approach to success

As biographer Robin Wood pointed out in his eponymous book on the director, that when the British film journal Movie compiled its ranking of great directors in its inaugural 1962 issue, only two directors received its highest rating, “Brilliant”: Alfred Hitchcock and Howard Hawks. The two directors were polar opposites; Hitchcock was as masterful at generating self-publicity as he was directing his fabulous films, while Hawks epitomized the laconic and self-deprecating protagonists he often featured in his stories.

Hawks said a good movie consisted simply of “three great scenes, no bad ones,” and described a good director as “someone who doesn’t annoy you.”

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One comment on “(The Tennessean) Frank Daniels–Famed director Howard Hawks preferred a simple approach to success

  1. Adam 12 says:

    Three great scenes, no bad ones…maybe that explains why The Big Sleep is so hard to follow!