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Bill Forsyth - Interviews

Bill Forsyth

Interviews

Edited by Lloyd Sachs
Series: Conversations with Filmmakers Series

Hardcover : 9781496863171, 192 pages, August 2026
Paperback : 9781496863188, 192 pages, August 2026
Expected to ship: 2026-08-17
Expected to ship: 2026-08-17

Table of contents

Introduction
Chronology
Filmography
“I Think It’s Quite Helpful Being Illiterate as a Filmmaker”
Lloyd Sachs / 1981
A Suitable Job for a Scot
John Brown / 1983
The Forsyth Saga
Elliott Stein / 1983–1984
Bill Forsyth: Speaking with Scotland’s Finest Filmmaker
Gerald Peary / 1985
Bill Forsyth: Into the Woods
Graham Fuller / 1987
Bill Forsyth: The Imperfect Anarchist
Allan Hunter / 1990
“Because I Don’t Like Conventional Films, I’m Always Trying to Subvert Them”
Jonathan Hacker and David Price / 1991
Being Human
Allan Hunter / 1994
“We Were Making Films for Scottish People”
Leonard Lopate / 2010
“Comedy Is Just a Resource That You Use for Getting Through Life”
Jim Healy / 2010
The Good Numbers—Ten Questions for Bill Forsyth
Jasper Rees / 2014
Cornflakes Versus Conflict: An Interview with Bill Forsyth
Jonathan Murray / 2015
Bill Forsyth: “Scotland Is a Little Nation with an Identity Problem”
Steven Mackenzie / 2016
The Making of Local Hero
Jasper Rees / 2019
On Making Breaking In with Burt Reynolds
Bill Forsyth / 2019
From Sponsored Movies to Coming-of-Age Classics: Bill Forsyth Talks About Pioneering Scottish Cinema
Abbey Bender / 2019
“The Idea of Just Talking to a Bunch of Kids Terrified the Life Oout of Me”
Jim Healy / 2020
Index

Insightful conversations with one of cinema’s quietly innovative storytellers, director of Local Hero, Gregory’s Girl, Housekeeping, That Sinking Feeling, and more

Description

One of the most beloved filmmakers of his time, Bill Forsyth (b. 1946) has—with one exception—not directed a feature in more than thirty years. This long silence is all the more remarkable given his meteoric rise: between 1979 and 1983, the Glasgow native crafted four comic gems that helped put Scottish cinema on the map. How did the director of such enduring classics as Gregory’s Girl and Local Hero seemingly vanish from the film world?

It’s tempting to blame his retreat on the painful fallout from Being Human, the troubled Hollywood production starring Robin Williams. But even before that big‑budget flop, the deeply reserved Forsyth wrestled with the discomfort he felt directing—and with audiences who often overlooked the serious themes beneath his offbeat comedies. “I’ve always had a much darker side than most people have perceived,” he confided to British critic John Brown.

Through interviews with leading critics and film authorities, Bill Forsyth: Interviews offers a revealing look at the filmmaker’s personal approach to his art, shaped by early encounters with the French New Wave and a youthful stint making industrial films about forestry, fishing, and factories. Forsyth reflects on his debt to auteurs like François Truffaut, Preston Sturges, Jean Renoir, and Jacques Tati, and offers candid insights into his process. These conversations highlight his methods and the underappreciated dimensions of his work, including what Scottish critic Jonathan Murray calls their “comic ingenuity, idiosyncratic narrative structures, and tonal complexity.”