#HowardHawks

2026-02-16

“Individuals may form communities, but only institutions can create a nation”*…

Traffic police in Rome, 1981.

Good institutions are social technologies that scale trust from personal relations to entire nations. Game theorist and social scientist Julien Lie-Panis unpacks the extraordinary phenomenon of human cooperation to explain how– and why– institutions work…

Every human society, from the smallest village to the largest nation, faces the same fundamental challenge: how to get people to act in the interests of the collective rather than their own. Fishermen must limit their catch so fish stocks don’t collapse. People must respect others’ property and safety. Citizens must pay taxes to fund roads, schools and hospitals. Left to pure self-interest, no community could endure; the bonds of collective life would quickly unravel.

The solutions we’ve devised are remarkably similar across cultures and centuries. We create rules. Then we appoint guardians to enforce them. Those who break the rules are punished. But there’s a problem with this approach, one that the Roman poet Juvenal identified nearly 2,000 years ago: Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? Who will guard the guards themselves?

Fisheries appoint monitors to prevent overfishing – but what if the monitors accept bribes to look the other way? Police officers exist to protect everyone’s property and safety – but who ensures that they don’t abuse their power? Governments collect taxes for public services – but how do we stop officials from diverting the funds to their own accounts?

Every institution faces the same fundamental paradox. Institutions foster cooperation by rewarding good behaviour and punishing rule-breakers. Yet they themselves depend on cooperative members to function. We haven’t solved the cooperation problem – we’ve simply moved it back one step. So why do institutions work at all? To understand this puzzle, we need to first ask what makes human cooperation so extraordinary in the natural world…

[Lie-Panis explores human cooperation, and examines the ways in which, while it follows the same evolutionary rules as cooperation among other species, humans have expanded the ambit of their coordination. He explains the ways in which institutions depend on “a present-future trade-off,” on its constituents’ patience as it works through problems. And he illustrates the ways in which constituents’ concerns with material security and social capital can generate that patience. He concludes…]

… Institutions can thus be understood as social technologies. We engineer them constantly, often without realising it. When neighbours organise to maintain a shared garden or playground, they appoint a small committee to manage funds and decisions. The arrangement works because it transforms the hard problem of coordinating dozens of contributors into the easier problem of trusting a few visible people who can be praised for diligence or blamed for misuse.

Like any tool, institutions cannot create what isn’t already there; they can only amplify existing cooperative capacity. Institutions rest on the conditions that make cooperation rational: material security and social capital. Where those conditions hold, reputation can work at scale. One layer of accountability supports the next, until cooperation extends far beyond the limits of familiarity. From the same force that binds vampire bats and coral reef fish, we have built cities, markets, and nations. Institutions are how trust is scaled to millions of strangers.

Eminently worth reading in full: “Guarding the Guardians,” from @jliep.bsky.social in @aeon.co.

Apposite (albeit a bit orthogonal): “Culture Is the Mass-Synchronization of Framings,” from @marco-giancotti.bsky.social.

* Benjamin Disraeli

###

As we get along, we might recall that it was on this date in 1938 that a film poking fun at a plethora of institutions, Howard Hawks’ comedy Bringing Up Baby, premiered at the Golden Gate Theater in San Francisco. Featuring Cary Grant, Katherine Hepburn, and a leopard, the film earned good reviews but suffered at the box office. Indeed, Hepburn’s career fell into a slump– she was one of a group of actors labeled as “box office poison” by the Independent Theatre Owners of America– that she broke with The Philadelphia Story (again with Grant) in 1940.

As for Bringing Up Baby, the film did well when re-released in the 1940s, and grew further in popularity when it began to be shown on television in the 1950s. Today it is recognized as the authentic screwball classic that it is; it sits at 94% on Rotten Tomatoes, and ranks among “Top 100” on lists from the American Film Institute and the National Society of Film Critics.

source

#BringingUpBaby #CaryGrant #cooperation #culture #film #history #HowardHawks #institutions #KatherineHepburn #movies #politics #reputation #socialCapital #socialInfrastructure #socialTechnology #society
A black and white photograph showing a traffic scene with a police officer directing vehicles in an urban setting, surrounded by a few pedestrians and parked cars.Film poster for 'Bringing Up Baby' featuring Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn, with an illustration of a leopard in the foreground.
FILM TALKfilmtalk
2026-02-04

“The Big Sleep” (1946), directed by Howard Hawks, starred Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall in their second film together (after “To Have and Have Not,” 1945).

Belgian bilingual film poster (Flemish and French).

IMDB score: 7.9
Letterboxd score: 4.0

TAGS:

NUEVO IMAGENES DE ACTUALIDADNUEVO_IMAGENES_DE_ACTUALIDAD
2025-12-14

EL FALSO REMAKE DE "RIO BRAVO".
Cuando se habla de cineastas que regresaron deliberadamente a sus propias películas para rehacerlas, el canon suele estar bien establecido: Hitchcock revisitando El hombre que sabía demasiado, DeMille engrandeciendo Los diez mandamientos, McCarey replanteando Tú y yo, Ozu reformulando…
nuevoimagenesdeactualidad.blog

2025-12-03

(13/13)
- USA doit contourner censure code Hayes (cf 1930 1959 + Poutine Donald 2024 2025) -> L'Impossible Monsieur Bébé d' avec .
- Saxe : Naissance de .
- Empire UK : Londres -> East End : 14 % des maisons du quartier de Shoreditch sont équipées de salles de bains .

zoom sur un tableau de Kandinsky
CinegenresCinegenres
2025-11-30

𝐒ortie en 𝟏𝟗46

*Les Enchaînés de Alfred Hitchcock
*Une nuit à Casablanca de Archie Mayo
*Le Grand Sommeil de Howard Hawks
*Gilda de Charles Vidor
*La Belle et la Bête de Jean Cocteau






𝐄n 𝐒avoir 𝐏lus:
instagram.com/unjourunfilm75/

1946
2025-11-29

FIREBALL - Howard Hawks - 1941- ★★★⭑
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An original screenplay for a film that is part slapstick comedy, part gangster movie, playing on duplicity, mischief, and caricatured situational comedy. American optimism.

2025-11-29

BOULE DE FEU - Howard Hawks - 1941- ★★★⭑
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Une écriture de scénario originale pour un film situé entre la comédie burlesque et le film de gangsters qui joue sur la duplicité, la coquinerie, le comique de situation caricatural. Optimisme américain.

Curt Johnson - Indie Geniusindiegenius
2025-09-08

Movie TV Tech Geeks This Iconic Cult Director Made John Carpenter's Definitive “Favorite Movie of all Time” dlvr.it/TMyLPV

Dr Sheri Chinen Biesen📽️🎷🎬sheribiesen.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy
2025-04-21

Poll: Howard Hawks Films | which do you prefer #HowardHawks #films #cinema #Hawks #classic #Hollywood #movies #FilmSky #auteur #directors 📽️🍁🎬🍂 • The Big Sleep • Bringing Up Baby • His Girl Friday • Monkey Business • Red River • Scarface • To Have and Have Not • Twentieth Century

a man in a hat is reading a bo...

CinegenresCinegenres
2025-04-01

𝐅ilm de la 𝐒oirée

𝐒𝐜𝐚𝐫𝐟𝐚𝐜𝐞 de Brian De Palma en 1983

*Casting prestigieux, scénario original (Oliver Stone),tension omniprésente, violence poussée, bande son de qualité, mise en scène habile, fine et efficace



@Cinegenres cinegenres.com @cinegenres.Shorts

𝐅ilm 𝐂omplet:
cinegenres.com/film-de-la-soir

Andy Aldridgegrange85@mas.to
2025-03-14
QuirkyFilmsQuirkyFilms@c.im
2025-02-11

#BehindTheScenes
#MonkeyBusiness (1952)
A chemist finds his personal and professional life turned upside down when one of his chimpanzees finds the fountain of youth.

Director #HowardHawks and cinematographer #MiltonKrasner discuss scene with #CaryGrant #MarilynMonroe

Harrison ScullinReelyOldMovies
2025-01-19

Rio Bravo (1959) review with special guest Blaine Andres @criticless_blaine @criticless_inc will be released TOMORROW night at 7pm pst on YouTube and Rumble

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