A.Word.A.Day |
About | Media | Search | Contact |
Home
|
Jan 1, 2004
This week's themeWords related to movies This week's words bogart cinematheque jeune premier McGuffin cineaste On your calendar Get A.Word.A.Day on your calendar A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargMcGuffin or MacGuffin(muh-GUF-in)noun: A device that helps propel the plot in a story but is of little importance in itself. [Coined by film director Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980).] A McGuffin could be a person, an object, or an event that characters of a story are interested in but that, intrinsically, is of little concern. For example, in Hitchcock's movie North by Northwest, thugs are on the look out for a character named George Kaplan. Roger Thornhill, an ad executive, gets mistaken for Kaplan and so he is chased instead. Meanwhile Thornhill himself tries to find Kaplan who doesn't even exist. Hitchcock explained the term in a 1939 lecture at Columbia University: "In regard to the tune, we have a name in the studio, and we call it the 'MacGuffin'. It is the mechanical element that usually crops up in any story. In crook stories it is always the necklace and in spy stories it is always the papers. We just try to be a little more original." (quoted from the OED) Hitchcock borrowed it from a shaggy-dog story where a train passenger is carrying a large odd-shaped package. The passenger calls it a MacGuffin and explains to the curious fellow passengers that it's a device used to catch lions in Scottish Highlands. When they protest that there are no lions in the Highlands, he simply replies, "Well, then this can't be a MacGuffin."
"What disrupts all this is a McGuffin so gnarled and elaborate as to throw
the novel out of whack, even as it propels the plot. An insane Japanese
student armed with a poisonous powder invades the house convinced that he
is in love with Hazel."
"I'm saying that they can't be this bad. I'm saying there's something
underfoot here, something calculated; a charade, a clever ruse, a
MacGuffin, if you will."
X-BonusI wish you all the joy that you can wish. -William Shakespeare, playwright and poet (1564-1616) |
|
© 1994-2024 Wordsmith