: The script uses professional "text" literally; for instance, a 20-minute scene features an interviewer reading Lydia's Wikipedia page aloud to establish her massive, if precarious, professional standing. Field’s Writing and Scripting Style
: He has noted that compositions (musical text) often inspire the "internal rhythm" of his scripts and characters. Gestures of Ambiguity: On Todd Field's Tár - Hazlitt Todd Field
As a screenwriter, Field's "text" (scripts) is known for its psychological complexity and density. : The script uses professional "text" literally; for
: His writing often features long paragraphs and detailed scene descriptions that some might find "harder for the reader," though they are cited as "compelling as hell" by critics at The Black List . : His writing often features long paragraphs and
: The film opens with a text-message exchange between unidentified parties. This exchange, superimposed over a shot of Lydia Tár sleeping on a plane, establishes that she is being watched and monitored by someone with "intimate, malevolent" intent.
In Tár , text is used to shift perspective and create a sense of unease:
: Field describes his screenplays as "living documents" that only truly become active when a performer like Cate Blanchett arrives to interpret the intent.