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The other day, two esteemed literary figures sent me a short questionnaire on
Alfred Hitchcock. They wondered, do I think about him? I do.
The other day, two esteemed literary figures sent me a short questionnaire on
Alfred Hitchcock. They wondered, do I think about him? I do.
The questions were going to a lot of people, and I don’t know what the esteemed lit figs plan to do with the survey. But what struck me was the currency of Alfred Hitchcock (1899–1980). It’s not that he has an anniversary, but those dates are telling. He has been dead more than thirty years. A group of exceptional film-makers died at about the same moment: Howard Hawks, Chaplin, Nicholas Ray, George Cukor, William Wyler, Vincente Minnelli, Douglas Sirk, King Vidor. With regret, I have to concede that those careers are now known in the halls of cinephilia but hardly anywhere else. Yet if you say “Hitch” out loud on any bus, people start looking for a bomb, or a fat man with a poker face who is studiously ignoring the search. That voice, his look, the promise, and the threat—they’re all with us still.
A package of Hitchcock’s silent
films, beautifully restored by the British Film Institute’s National Archive,
is traveling round the country and delighting viewers who had come to think of
him as American, Technicolored, and a devotee of desperate cries and screaming
music. Recently two feature films about him—The Girl
and Hitchcock—had
a commercial release. They weren’t any good, but someone reckoned that this
director’s curious and repressed sex life was a subject for entertainment
instead of biographical research. And in 2012, the poll of critics organized by
Sight & Sound (it comes once a decade) determined that at long last Citizen Kane
should step aside. Vertigo
was the greatest film ever made.
That’s a curious shift. When it
opened in 1958, Vertigo was a flop, in an age when Hitch was not
accustomed to such affronts. Not long afterward, he withdrew the film, which
surely helped to increase its allure. I was entranced by Vertigo in
1958, and I am fascinated by its courage still—I mean its resolve to defy the
box office and expose the workings of a secretive man. But is it even the best
Hitchcock film? I’d rather see Rear Window,
North by
Northwest, Psycho,
or Notorious.
That hardly matters. As soon as you mention Psycho, the cabinet of Dr.
Hitchcock is ajar, allowing us to see and hear his insolent mixture of menace
and contempt, murder and mischief. My problem with Vertigo’s gloom is
that there are no laughs (except for the absurd ease of parking in San
Francisco). When Hitch is most himself, we laugh as we cringe, and sooner or
later we get the inner message—what are the movies if we don’t know whether to
smile or to shudder?
When I imagined the bomb on the bus,
with the fat man taking no notice, I was alluding to a big scene in Sabotage
(1936), but the example is important to most of Hitchcock. He wanted to
devastate us, but he preferred to stay cool and professional about it. He was
confirmed in his respect for fear, like a great artist, or a great torturer.
His films were experiments in what a screen, darkness, and apprehension could
do, and he liked to maintain the manner of the laboratory technician, observing
but himself unmoved. So part of the recklessness in Vertigo was the way
a private (if not secretive) man was prepared to disclose his own disquiet over
this chronic detachment. The guilty passion glimpsed in that film was of a man
falling into his own sexual fascination with a story until it drowned life.
Thus the greatest film ever made (for now) is a stricken admission about film
itself and the fantasy it
feeds on.
for the rest go here: http://www.newrepublic.com/article/114225/hitchcock-review-david-thomson
feeds on.
for the rest go here: http://www.newrepublic.com/article/114225/hitchcock-review-david-thomson
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