Five great Film Directors

A close-up shot shows a film clapperboard being held by two hands against a blurred background of a desert landscape under an overcast sky.

From 1920 to 1970, five film directors dominated the cinematic landscape: John Ford, Frank Capra, Howard Hawks, Charlie Chaplin and Alfred Hitchcock. With one exception they were all immigrants, outsiders who from that perspective held up a mirror that showed Americans their own society. What made them so distinctive? What elements of film-making did they have in common? How well did they succeed in adapting to the shifting sands of social and political change as they struggled to remain at the top of their ultra-competitive profession?

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