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The term ( French for ''author'') is used to describe Film Director s (or, more rarely, producers) who are considered to be artists with their own unique vision. The word was first coined in François Truffaut 's 1954 essay "A Certain Tendency of the French Cinema" (''See main article at Auteur Theory '').
Although the use of "auteur" to describe a particular director may be contested by some critics, the following directors are frequently seen as espousing the principles of Truffaut's auteur theory: the style of an auteur is recognisable in his/her films regardless of their Genre or subject matter. However, this style does not need to be purely visual—any unique point-of-view or obsession could be considered the mark of an auteur. It is more a stamp of the director's personality that marks a body of work as that of an "auteur".
- In , Jean Renoir , François Truffaut , Jean-Luc Godard , Robert Bresson , Eric Rohmer , Alain Resnais , Claude Chabrol , Jacques Rivette , Jacques Tati , Jacques Demy , Agnes Varda , Chantal Akerman , Chris Marker , René Clair
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