1 00:00:06,712 --> 00:00:09,882 The film director Cecil B. DeMille's early silent films 2 00:00:09,918 --> 00:00:12,328 had a dark, moody quality that was characterized 3 00:00:12,328 --> 00:00:14,792 by the director as "Rembrand lighting". 4 00:00:16,224 --> 00:00:18,504 Movies have been inspired by fine art 5 00:00:18,514 --> 00:00:21,008 from the very beginning of the cinema industry, 6 00:00:21,028 --> 00:00:22,998 sometimes in the form of a sequence, 7 00:00:23,003 --> 00:00:26,363 sometimes in the art direction or the position of the actors, 8 00:00:26,388 --> 00:00:28,518 or sometimes in the "feel" of a movie. 9 00:00:29,327 --> 00:00:33,574 For some films, the homage is obvious, in others more enigmatic. 10 00:00:34,400 --> 00:00:38,698 Many filmmakers and art directors take direct inspiration from artists 11 00:00:38,720 --> 00:00:40,947 to inform their own creative vision, 12 00:00:41,862 --> 00:00:45,211 often referencing scenes that are already familiar to us 13 00:00:45,221 --> 00:00:47,020 in specific works of art. 14 00:00:48,473 --> 00:00:51,378 As the French new wave director Jean-Luc Goddard said: 15 00:00:51,438 --> 00:00:54,824 "It's not where you take things from it's where you take them to." 16 00:00:59,481 --> 00:01:03,094 Edward Hopper is seen as one of the first 20th century artist 17 00:01:03,124 --> 00:01:05,539 to be influenced by the cinema. 18 00:01:05,559 --> 00:01:11,048 He was an artist, more than any other, who loved cinema — and cinema loved him. 19 00:01:12,185 --> 00:01:15,065 They both looked to each other for stylistic interpretation 20 00:01:15,083 --> 00:01:18,552 and both created worlds of extraordinary imagination. 21 00:01:19,992 --> 00:01:23,798 As Hopper's work became more well-known over the years to the general public 22 00:01:23,798 --> 00:01:27,169 filmmakers made more self-conscious references to his paintings. 23 00:01:28,155 --> 00:01:33,205 This exerimental film by Gustav Deutsch uses 13 beautifully recreated paintings 24 00:01:33,215 --> 00:01:37,589 by Hopper to tell the story of a woman spanning three decades. 25 00:01:39,078 --> 00:01:43,452 In 2020 Wim Wenders released this "love letter" to Edward Hopper. 26 00:01:45,045 --> 00:01:49,963 "In front of Edward Hopper's paintings I always get this feeling 27 00:01:50,015 --> 00:01:53,547 "that they are frames from movies that were never made, 28 00:01:54,395 --> 00:01:56,065 and I start wondering: 29 00:01:56,095 --> 00:01:58,552 "What's the story that is beginning here? 30 00:01:58,843 --> 00:02:02,391 "What will happen to these characters in the next moment?" 31 00:02:08,783 --> 00:02:12,741 Edward Hopper was 13 years old when the first motion pictures were shown. 32 00:02:16,216 --> 00:02:19,307 He was in his late forties when talking pictures came, 33 00:02:20,234 --> 00:02:23,760 and he died just as Bonnie and Clyde was being released. 34 00:02:24,187 --> 00:02:27,247 You could say his life was tied to cinematic history. 35 00:02:30,801 --> 00:02:33,891 His work was inspired not just by his movie obsession, 36 00:02:33,921 --> 00:02:36,171 but by the very act of going to the cinema, 37 00:02:36,963 --> 00:02:41,152 and we see this in this early etching depicting two isolated figures 38 00:02:41,152 --> 00:02:43,907 looking down on an unseen screen. 39 00:02:45,148 --> 00:02:49,961 We see cinemas in his other paintings, as well of course with his masterpiece: 40 00:02:50,258 --> 00:02:51,975 "New York Movie". 41 00:02:52,584 --> 00:02:55,031 Filmmakers would hook on to Hopper's creations 42 00:02:55,044 --> 00:02:56,854 — and return the compliments 43 00:02:56,862 --> 00:02:59,564 by turning to him for stylistic inspiration. 44 00:03:09,003 --> 00:03:12,262 German Expressionism was one of his early influences. 45 00:03:12,517 --> 00:03:15,476 Films he saw in Paris at the turn of the 20th century 46 00:03:16,779 --> 00:03:20,125 — and the high angle images he produced around this period, 47 00:03:20,380 --> 00:03:24,223 would later be replicated by a new avant-garde generation. 48 00:03:26,133 --> 00:03:30,084 His career would really take off during the great depression of the 1930s, 49 00:03:30,404 --> 00:03:33,025 and the films of that period — and his paintings — 50 00:03:33,035 --> 00:03:35,514 reflected the dark pessimism at the time, 51 00:03:35,515 --> 00:03:37,484 a time of great insecurity. 52 00:03:38,098 --> 00:03:40,893 World War II brings another period of uncertainty 53 00:03:40,928 --> 00:03:43,009 and gives birth to Film Noir. 54 00:03:45,455 --> 00:03:48,765 Woman: "I can't stand it anymore what if they do hang me?" 55 00:03:49,134 --> 00:03:51,738 These dark films would look for inspiration 56 00:03:51,738 --> 00:03:53,823 directly from Hopper's paintings 57 00:03:53,823 --> 00:03:57,406 who was himself looking for inspiration in the movies. 58 00:03:57,856 --> 00:04:01,804 It was these films shot in Hollywood in the 1930s and 40s 59 00:04:01,864 --> 00:04:03,512 which Hopper really loved. 60 00:04:03,522 --> 00:04:05,784 Films with a voyeuristic edge, 61 00:04:08,447 --> 00:04:11,485 set in an unnamed city, an ambiguous setting. 62 00:04:11,944 --> 00:04:14,125 Films whose aesthetics were themselves 63 00:04:14,125 --> 00:04:16,324 derived from German Expressionism. 64 00:04:16,645 --> 00:04:20,369 Like Hopper, these films use dark shadows and stark lightinga 65 00:04:20,369 --> 00:04:23,831 to create an extreme contrast between light and dark. 66 00:04:24,204 --> 00:04:27,054 But with classic Film Noir it is not just "style", 67 00:04:27,074 --> 00:04:28,684 it is all about the tone, 68 00:04:28,684 --> 00:04:30,777 as it is with Hopper's paintings. 69 00:04:32,867 --> 00:04:35,367 Both take a familiar narrative element, 70 00:04:35,392 --> 00:04:38,442 and apply layer after layer of possible meaning. 71 00:04:38,462 --> 00:04:42,887 ambiguous relationships, sexual tension, a cynical eye 72 00:04:42,887 --> 00:04:45,998 and underlying existential philosophy, 73 00:04:46,058 --> 00:04:48,070 were all features we see 74 00:04:48,070 --> 00:04:51,228 in both Hopper's paintings and cinema of this period. 75 00:04:52,221 --> 00:04:54,061 Woman; "Accident insurance?" 76 00:04:54,106 --> 00:04:55,645 In common with Film Noir, 77 00:04:55,675 --> 00:04:58,044 the subject Hopper returned to again and again 78 00:04:58,067 --> 00:05:01,170 was the hardened and stony-faced female protagonist. 79 00:05:01,572 --> 00:05:04,062 As I discussed in my main film on Hopper, 80 00:05:04,102 --> 00:05:06,922 he had a disastrous love life and unhappy marriage 81 00:05:07,664 --> 00:05:11,973 and he often used women as a vehicle to channel his unhappiness. 82 00:05:12,998 --> 00:05:14,724 It is in this early watercolour 83 00:05:14,724 --> 00:05:18,414 that we first see the unhappy and discontented female lead. 84 00:05:19,204 --> 00:05:22,780 In this painting she is the wife being ignored by her husband. 85 00:05:23,848 --> 00:05:27,815 Here, a defeated woman contemplates her lot in life. 86 00:05:28,839 --> 00:05:32,839 And here, a sullen-faced girlfriend ignores her partner. 87 00:05:33,139 --> 00:05:36,815 It is in "Nighthawks" that we see her as a classic Femme Fatale. 88 00:05:37,984 --> 00:05:40,956 I sometimes feel as if all of Hopper's women 89 00:05:40,956 --> 00:05:44,704 are ready to walk off frame and commit a misdemeanor. 90 00:05:44,844 --> 00:05:46,138 Woman: "If you don't mind". 91 00:05:46,138 --> 00:05:47,293 (Gunshot) 92 00:05:47,707 --> 00:05:51,158 Alfred Hitchcock, no stranger to the icy female lead, 93 00:05:51,404 --> 00:05:53,514 spoke openly of Hopper's influence 94 00:05:53,570 --> 00:05:56,189 and we see evidence throughout Hitchcock's films. 95 00:05:56,595 --> 00:06:00,318 They are very much alike in their love of suspense and ambiguity, 96 00:06:02,151 --> 00:06:06,746 and in their interest in themes of voyeurism, loneliness and isolation. 97 00:06:07,463 --> 00:06:09,599 Not to mention... windows. 98 00:06:09,944 --> 00:06:11,958 "This is the scene of the crime. 99 00:06:12,143 --> 00:06:15,822 "A crime of passion, filmed in a way you have never seen before." 100 00:06:16,129 --> 00:06:19,002 Like Hitchcock, it is what Hopper chose to exclude 101 00:06:19,027 --> 00:06:21,152 in his paintings which adds tension. 102 00:06:21,854 --> 00:06:25,352 The narrative power lies in what is obscured or unseen. 103 00:06:26,375 --> 00:06:29,328 One of Hopper's images directly influenced Hitchcock. 104 00:06:29,682 --> 00:06:31,335 But it was a big influence 105 00:06:31,415 --> 00:06:34,919 on so many other films, and even illustrations of the day. 106 00:06:35,587 --> 00:06:37,511 Hitchcock: "An old house... 107 00:06:39,103 --> 00:06:44,713 "which is ..., if I may say so, a little more sinister looking, 108 00:06:45,423 --> 00:06:47,905 "less innocent than the motel itself." 109 00:07:07,484 --> 00:07:10,431 We saw in the longer film how Hopper's "Nighthawks" 110 00:07:10,503 --> 00:07:12,601 was inspired by a book by Hemingway 111 00:07:12,630 --> 00:07:16,582 and how the subsequent film version was then inspired by "Nighthawks". 112 00:07:18,868 --> 00:07:22,574 A great example of this symbiotic and mutually beneficial relationship 113 00:07:22,948 --> 00:07:25,747 can be found in an obscure and rarely film 114 00:07:25,767 --> 00:07:28,828 released two years before he completed "Nighthawks". 115 00:07:30,554 --> 00:07:33,842 I think, looking at details such as the corner setting, 116 00:07:34,084 --> 00:07:35,960 the position of the sidewalk, 117 00:07:35,983 --> 00:07:38,883 and even a soda jerk wearing a similar cap, 118 00:07:38,917 --> 00:07:42,567 this may have been one of the main inspirations for Hopper's diner. 119 00:07:46,735 --> 00:07:50,735 An entire generation of film directors would be influenced by Hopper, 120 00:07:50,735 --> 00:07:53,745 and that aesthetic would be instantly recognizable 121 00:07:53,757 --> 00:07:56,337 as a certain type of "American landscape"` 122 00:07:56,399 --> 00:07:59,530 not just aesthetically, but in terms of mood. 123 00:08:02,208 --> 00:08:04,402 ["All the paintings of Edward Hopper 124 00:08:04,402 --> 00:08:07,756 [could be taken from one long movie about America, 125 00:08:07,786 --> 00:08:11,496 [each one, the beginning of a new scene." — Wim Wenders] 126 00:08:11,962 --> 00:08:15,462 David Lynch, another American fan, would also reference 127 00:08:15,470 --> 00:08:17,416 many of Hopper's paintings in his films. 128 00:08:17,416 --> 00:08:20,186 ["I like many painters, but I love Francis Bacon the most, 129 00:08:20,196 --> 00:08:21,876 [and Edward Hopper" — David Lynch] 130 00:08:21,902 --> 00:08:25,313 Lynch, like Hopper, peeled back the facade of the perfect American life 131 00:08:25,313 --> 00:08:26,933 to expose sinister "goings-on". 132 00:08:26,941 --> 00:08:28,759 And in the third season of Twin Peaks 133 00:08:28,769 --> 00:08:31,187 he used the painter's references quite liberally. 134 00:08:36,754 --> 00:08:39,734 Hopper's vision of American life, has had a huge impact 135 00:08:39,734 --> 00:08:42,499 on how the rest of the world pictures the United States. 136 00:08:42,736 --> 00:08:46,616 It is a world that today we still call "Hopper-esque". 137 00:08:47,498 --> 00:08:50,684 He is what we think of as a quintessential American artist, 138 00:08:51,132 --> 00:08:55,696 yet he was also a major influence on so many non-American filmmakers, 139 00:08:55,737 --> 00:08:59,281 who saw an intensity in Hopper, a sense of emptiness, 140 00:08:59,297 --> 00:09:02,792 and a lack of communication that we can all understand. 141 00:09:03,708 --> 00:09:06,438 Many of the filmmakers have their own fascination 142 00:09:06,438 --> 00:09:09,271 with the American dream — and the dark side behind it. 143 00:09:09,520 --> 00:09:12,280 They recognize the themes of disconnection. 144 00:09:12,355 --> 00:09:15,271 They see that the psychology behind a Hopper painting 145 00:09:15,271 --> 00:09:19,036 can be translated into any culture and any language, 146 00:09:19,249 --> 00:09:21,599 and they made Hopper one of their own. 147 00:09:28,263 --> 00:09:33,098 Michelangelo Antonioni said: "The theme of most of my films is loneliness" 148 00:09:33,256 --> 00:09:36,531 and his films typically featured bored lovers, 149 00:09:36,561 --> 00:09:40,651 whose lives are blighted by quiet despair and existential unhappiness. 150 00:09:41,734 --> 00:09:45,619 He professed to being stylistically inspired by Hopper 151 00:09:45,629 --> 00:09:48,512 (as well as Giorgio de Chirico). 152 00:09:49,647 --> 00:09:52,287 Roy Andersson's films are instantly recognizable 153 00:09:52,287 --> 00:09:55,444 for their stylized presentation and painterly approach, 154 00:09:56,071 --> 00:09:57,952 and the director, whose films show 155 00:09:57,956 --> 00:10:00,550 the alienation and solitude of modern life, 156 00:10:00,580 --> 00:10:02,714 cites Hopper as a major influence. 157 00:10:03,115 --> 00:10:04,677 Like Hopper's paintings, 158 00:10:04,687 --> 00:10:07,495 Andersson carefully stages every single frame. 159 00:10:08,014 --> 00:10:11,028 His sets are elaborately built over several months, 160 00:10:11,058 --> 00:10:14,497 and his films sometimes take four years to make! 161 00:10:15,086 --> 00:10:17,536 Andersson's themes — like Hopper's — 162 00:10:17,555 --> 00:10:20,555 often leave it up to the viewer to guess what is happening 163 00:10:20,555 --> 00:10:22,589 outside the picture frame. 164 00:10:22,709 --> 00:10:24,884 We complete the picture. 165 00:10:26,485 --> 00:10:29,492 The diner in "Nighthawks", his most iconic image, 166 00:10:29,492 --> 00:10:31,643 and possibly his most cinematic, 167 00:10:31,643 --> 00:10:34,620 has been recreated time and again in the cinema. 168 00:10:35,227 --> 00:10:38,065 The diner has become a short cut to "emotional dysfunction". 169 00:10:41,837 --> 00:10:43,922 Woman: "I know I can't rely on you, Arthur. 170 00:10:45,185 --> 00:10:46,575 "Not for anything." 171 00:10:48,095 --> 00:10:50,525 Man: "There's a lot of bad boys out there. 172 00:10:51,180 --> 00:10:52,730 Woman: "I know." 173 00:10:54,231 --> 00:10:56,521 Woman: "But I got eyes in the back of my head." 174 00:10:58,800 --> 00:10:59,970 (Gunshot) 175 00:11:00,333 --> 00:11:01,703 Director: "Cut!" 176 00:11:02,573 --> 00:11:05,529 Filmmakers continue to be inspired by Edward Hopper 177 00:11:05,976 --> 00:11:09,577 whose works still resonate in the 21st century. 178 00:11:09,951 --> 00:11:14,768 And his influence is felt even in a new generation of K-pop stars. 179 00:11:19,241 --> 00:11:22,931 Edward Hopper, the biggest fan of cinema, would have been astonished 180 00:11:23,023 --> 00:11:26,696 to know his influence would still be felt by so many young filmmakers 181 00:11:26,874 --> 00:11:31,424 and even Korean pop stars, decades after he created his images. 182 00:11:32,860 --> 00:11:34,181 But who knows? 183 00:11:34,258 --> 00:11:37,438 Maybe in another life, he would have been directing films himself. 184 00:11:37,699 --> 00:11:38,970 Director: "Cut!" 185 00:11:40,266 --> 00:11:41,896 Edward Hopper: "Could that be?" 186 00:11:50,829 --> 00:11:52,769 Woman: "Is there a cue when I enter?"