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Time & Perspective Quote by Francois Truffaut

"The film of tomorrow appears to me as even more personal than an individual and autobiographical novel, like a confession, or a diary"

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Truffaut is betting that cinema will outgrow its old alibis: spectacle, genre, studio polish. He’s imagining a “film of tomorrow” that doesn’t just tell stories but exposes the storyteller. The provocation is in the comparison. Novels had long been granted the prestige of interiority, the license to be messy, private, self-justifying. Truffaut flips that hierarchy and claims the camera can be even more intimate than prose, because it records not only what you say but how you look saying it: the hesitations, the taste, the rhythm of attention. “Confession” and “diary” aren’t metaphors for sincerity so much as a new standard of authorship.

The line sits squarely in the French New Wave’s polemic against “tradition of quality,” the literary, well-made cinema that prized adaptation and respectable craft. Truffaut and his cohort wanted the director as author, not a functionary. Calling tomorrow’s film “personal” is also strategic: it defends low budgets, location shooting, jump cuts, and all the supposed imperfections as evidence of a singular mind at work. If a diary is allowed to be fragmentary, a film can be too.

There’s subtextual bravado here as well. A diary implies privacy, but films demand an audience. Truffaut is admitting the paradox at the heart of modern filmmaking: the most intimate work is also a performance, a carefully edited vulnerability. The future he’s describing is less about technology than permission - for cinema to be as indiscreet, subjective, and self-incriminating as the person behind it.

Quote Details

TopicMovie
Source
Later attribution: A Companion to Contemporary French Cinema (Alistair Fox, Michel Marie, Raphaëlle..., 2015) modern compilationISBN: 9781444338997 · ID: ZLwtBgAAQBAJ
Text match: 96.52%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... Truffaut himself was prescient in this matter. Writing in 1957, he declared: The film of tomorrow appears to me as even more personal than an individual and autobiographical novel, like a confession or a diary. The young filmmakers will ...
Other candidates (1)
Ingmar Bergman (Francois Truffaut) compilation33.7%
le liar who has never hesitated to give truth the form he felt the occasion demanded on his plans for his autobiograp...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Truffaut, Francois. (2026, January 14). The film of tomorrow appears to me as even more personal than an individual and autobiographical novel, like a confession, or a diary. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-film-of-tomorrow-appears-to-me-as-even-more-59174/

Chicago Style
Truffaut, Francois. "The film of tomorrow appears to me as even more personal than an individual and autobiographical novel, like a confession, or a diary." FixQuotes. January 14, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-film-of-tomorrow-appears-to-me-as-even-more-59174/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The film of tomorrow appears to me as even more personal than an individual and autobiographical novel, like a confession, or a diary." FixQuotes, 14 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-film-of-tomorrow-appears-to-me-as-even-more-59174/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Tomorrow's Film: Personal as a Diary - Truffaut
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About the Author

Francois Truffaut

Francois Truffaut (February 6, 1932 - October 21, 1984) was a Director from France.

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