The Auteur Theory was developed by French cinephiles in the 1940s and 50s according to
Wallis
. This theory suggests that the director is the main creative factor to a film and
demonstrates the director’s outward perspective of the world. This theory came to be due to the
practice of French film makers writing or co-writing the films they directed.
Alexandre and other cinephiles of the times, considered and Auteur to be a director who used
film as a medium for personal expression and transforms the material provided into something
unique to them. This theory has understandable reasoning, but according to Pauline Kael it
completely dismisses the other roles of filmmaking that contribute to the overall production of a
film. Even still, Auteur Theory is a respected in film research.
Jordan Peele is an American actor and filmmaker known for comedy and horror. His films
discuss relevant issues within American culture through film. Peele’s breakout film was in 2017
with the film Get Out. In the following years, Peele released more films that highlighted Black
stories with BlacKKKlansmen in 2018 and US in 2019. Peele’s film style can be described by his
narrative structure, aesthetics and visual style, and his use of comedy and fear to tell the stories
of Black Americans.
Peele’s narrative structure is common throughout his film. Instead of telling a story from
beginning to end in chronological order, Peele has a tendency to start in the middle of a story and
then start from the beginning. In 2017 film Get Out, Andre Logan, played by LaKeith Stanfield,
is shown in the opening scene. In this part of the film not only do we get an understanding of the
Black experience, but a look at where the film is going from this point. Andre Logan is not
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