It's a MacGuffin.


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Posted by Metal at ts1-48.cso.niu.edu on November 30, 2000 at 14:09:21:

In Reply to: So posted by BMFLobo on November 30, 2000 at 11:13:21:

"Alfred Hitchcock to Francois Truffaut, regarding Notorious (1946): "When I started working with Ben Hecht on the screenplay for Notorious, we were looking for a MacGuffin, and as always, we proceeded by trial and error, going off in several directions that turned out to be too complex.... So we dropped the whole idea in favor of a MacGuffin that was simpler, but concrete and visual: a sample of uranium concealed in a wine bottle." From Hitchcock/Truffaut, the classic book of interviews between the two great directors. "...

"It's the priceless, elusive object of the noir hero's quest -- and often the noir villain's as well. Perhaps it's the incriminating "smoking gun" clue that's gonna blow the whole case wide open. Or maybe it's a treasure so valuable that some people would kill for it. It may take the form of guilty secrets, providing the catalyst for blackmail or extortion. Then again, maybe it's just a MacGuffin, the term Alfred Hitchcock coined to describe the ficticious fool's gold that really doesn't mean much of anything, but is employed as an excuse to push the plot along -- like the unsolvable mystery of "Rosebud" in Citizen Kane."
...
""It's the stuff that dreams are made of," says Sam Spade (Humphrey Bogart) of the coveted Black Bird. It's also the MacGuffin that drives the plot of John Huston's The Maltese Falcon (1941). In the end, its value proves elusive, not unlike the gold that vanishes into the wind in Huston's The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948). "
...
"Pandora's Box: Unable to contain her curiosity any longer, Lily Carver (Gaby Rodgers) opens the atomic treasure chest that so many have paid for with their lives -- and unleashes nuclear havoc upon the world -- in Robert Aldrich's Kiss Me Deadly (1955).

Quentin Tarantino did something similar with the mysterious glowing briefcase sought by John Travolta and Samuel L. Jackson in Pulp Fiction (1994). "

http://cinepad.com/filmnoir/bait.htm





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