Guadagnino Explains How Woody Allen Inspired Opening Credits of #MeToo-Themed ‘After the Hunt

In the opening credits of After the Hunt, a #MeToo-themed thriller, director Luca Guadagnino evokes the aesthetic of Woody Allen’s films, formatting the actor’s names in alphabetical order on one card.
When asked at the press conference why he paid tribute to Allen, who has been accused of sexual assault by his adopted daughter Dylan Farrow, Guadagnino didn’t mince words.
“The crass answer would be, ‘Why not? There is a canon that I grew up with, and when I started thinking about this movie with my collaborators, we couldn’t stop thinking of Crimes and Misdemeanors or Another Woman or Hannah and Her Sisters.
There was an infrastructure to the story that felt linked to the great oeuvre of Woody Allen from 1985 to 1991,” he said. “I played with that graphic and font a few times before, and I felt it was an interesting nod to thinking of an artist who has been facing some problems about his being and what is our responsibility in looking at an artist we love like Woody Allen.”
Set in the world of higher education, “After the Hunt” stars Julia Roberts as a beloved college professor who finds herself at a personal and professional crossroads when her mentee (Ayo Edebiri) accuses her friend and colleague (Andrew Garfield) of crossing a line. As she navigates the situation, a dark secret from her own past threatens to come to light.
In describing “After the Hunt,” Guadagnino says the story is “looking at people in their truths. It’s not that one truth is most important, it’s how we see the clash of truths and what is the boundary of these truths together. It’s not about making a manifesto to revive old-fashioned values.”
Screenwriter Nora Garrett addressed the difficulty of tackling complex and hot-button issues like cancel culture in her script.
“To imagine that we have completely moved on into a separate wave of feminism undermines what is actually happening and the reality of being with each other in society. We’re trying to bring something that felt true and real.”
“Not to be disagreeable, because it’s not in my nature,” Roberts said, “but the thing that you said that I love is it ‘revives old arguments.’ I don’t think it’s just reviving an argument of women being pitted against each other, or not supporting each other. There are a lot of old arguments that get rejuvenated that creates conversation.”
Roberts lamented that society is “losing the art of conversation in humanity right now, noting: “If making this movie does anything, getting everybody to talk to each other is the most exciting thing we could accomplish.”