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New York Times (Greene)

 

To me it is almost impossible to write a film play without first writing a story. Even a film depends on more than plot, on a certain measure of characterization, on mood and atmosphere, and these it seems to me almost impossible to capture for the first time in the dull shorthand of a script. One can reproduce an effect caught in another medium but one cannot make the first act of creation in script form. One must have the sense of more material than one need to draw on. "The Third Man," therefore, though never intended for publication, had to start as a story before it began those apparently interminable transformations from one treatment to another....

"The Third Man" was never intended to be more than the raw material for a picture.... The film, in fact, is better than the story because it is in this case the finished state of the story.
-- Graham Greene. 'The Third Man' as a Story and a Film, New York Times (March 19, 1950). [Written as a preface to the short story "The Third Man"]
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