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Alfred Hitchcock: 50 Years of Movie
Magic
Alfred Hitchcock is among the few directors to combine a strong
reputation for high-art film-making with great audience popularity.
Throughout his career he gave his audiences more pleasure than could be
asked for. The consistency of quality plot-lines and technical ingenuity
earned him the recognition of being one of the greatest filmmakers of
all time. His films earned him the reputation of being the "master of
suspense", and after viewing two of his more popular films, Psycho and
The Birds, it is evident why. There is a distinction between surprise,
which lasts only a few seconds, and suspense which captivates one’s
attention the entire length of a film. This is something that Hitchcock
realized early on, and applied into his movies. He is one of the few
directors whose name on a marquee is as important, if not more so, than
any actor who appears in the film itself. Both his style of directing,
and that of the movies that he has directed are very unique, making him
stand out in the film industry. He pioneered the art of cinematography
and special effects, which along with his cameos, are what he is most
often associated with. Hitchcock led a long and prosperous life in the
movie industry, starting as a teenager and making movies up until his
death in 1980, while working on the 54th of his career (Sterrit 3).
Alfred Joseph Hitchcock was born on August 13, 1889 in London, England.
As a child his parents were very strict with him and they imposed severe
and unusual punishments upon him, as what they considered to be
discipline. One of these incidents scarred him for life. As punishment
for arriving home late one night, young Alfred’s father had a policeman
friend lock the boy up in a cell for five minutes, "in order to teach
him where naughty little boys who come home after 9 o’clock would
eventually end up." (Phillips 27). Throughout his career he used the
innocent man being arrested and imprisoned in his films, and claimed
that forever after he had a fear of the police (Spoto 16). Fear was also
a big part of his childhood, which later was evident in many of his
movies. "Fear? It has influenced my life and my career." (18) explains
Hitchcock, he also had a fear of being alone and of darkness which once
again appeared in many of his movies. "...fear you see is an emotion
that people like to feel when they know they are safe." (39).
Hitchcock led a life of fantasy, and spent much of his time alone,
entertaining himself because he did not have many friends growing up. He
lived life as if he was on the outside looking in. Much like a person
watching television or a director directing a picture. Reading was also
a part of Hitchcock’s life from a young age. The novels Bleak House and
Robinson Crusoe were two that stuck with him over the years. He also
really enjoyed Edgar Allan Poe, stating that "Very likely it’s because I
was so taken by the Poe stories that I later made suspense films." (39).
In 1915 he started work for the Henley Telegraphy Company. He soon began
to study art at the University of London, which led to being promoted to
Henley’s advertising department to design cable ads. But Hitchcock’s
true love was the movies. He hunted all over the famous Wardour Street
trying to obtain a position in film-making. In 1920 a co-worker at
Henley’s helped him put together a portfolio and he was hired instantly
by The Famous Players-Lasky as a title designer for silent films. For
two years Hitchcock wrote and designed for popular British movie
directors. The hard working Hitchcock was recognized by his employers as
well as leading actors of the day. In 1922 the director of Always Tell
Your Wife, a film in progress, got very sick and had to leave the movie.
The lead actor Seymore Hicks had to take over the duties of direction,
but was stumped on ideas. The young Hitchcock assisted him with the rest
of production, and a legacy had been born (Rohmer 4).
Hitchcock’s solo directorial debut, The Pleasure Garden was released in
January of 1927, but it was not until three weeks later that the
illustrious career of Alfred J. Hitchcock really took off. In February
of 1927 The Lodger was released and it attracted mass audiences because
of the rave reviews it received early on. It marked the first time in
British film history that a director got more praise than did any of his
stars (Kapsis 20). Besides being Hitchcock’s first acclaimed motion
picture, The Lodger is also note worthy because it was the movie in
which one of the greatest movie traditions of all time would begin; the
famous Hitchcock cameo appearance, a unique trademark of his films for
the next fifty years. In April of 1926, Michael Balcon told Hitchcock he
wanted to make a movie of the 1913 mystery novel The Lodger, and felt
that Hitchcock’s sense of character and narrative would be perfect (Spoto
84). So early in his career, Hitchcock already had a reputation for the
true art of film-making.
Hitchcock always prided himself as being the total film-maker, planning
and having total control over every aspect of his films, from casting to
publicity. Hitchcock loved to be publicized, and some critics feel that
the original intent of his unusual camera shots were no more than a
publicity stunt at first. Regardless, Hitchcock brought cinematography
to new levels, pioneering the point-of-view shot, which among other
things was recognized for its ability to bring about viewer-character
identification (Sterrit 11). Hitchcock’s cameos, which he admitted to
have borrowed from Charles Chaplin in A Woman of Paris (Kapsis 21), was
just another example of Hitchcock’s personalization and perhaps little
"gimmicks" of his films. He did not just become characters like did
colleagues Orson Welles or Woody Allen, but his presence and style was
always recognized.
During the first decade of his career Hitchcock toyed with a variety of
formats including theatrical adaptation, romance, musical, and of
course, thrillers. It was not until 1934 when Hitchcock filmed The Man
Who Knew Too Much that Hitchcock started making thrillers on a regular
basis. That film marked the first is a secession of six thrillers which
would become known as the classic "thriller sextet". Following the 1938
release of The Lady Vanishes, Hitchcock was voted to be the best
director of that year by New York film critics (23).
Throughout the 1940’s his reputation continued to flounder with the hit
movies Spellbound (1944 [in which artist Salvador Dali painted some
scenery]), and Notorious (1946). The 1950’s was the beginning of
Hitchcock’s most productive and popular era. Movies like Dial "M" for
Murder (1954), Rear Window (1954), The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956), and
North By Northwest (1959) were on the big screen and the Hitchcock name
was everywhere. In 1955 the television program "Alfred Hitchcock
Presents" was also released. The style and reputation that came with the
Hitchcock name was visible in every movie, in every scene. North By
Northwest to this point had gone where no other film had gone before.
The airplane chase in the cornfield became one of the most famous
sequences in movie history, and really identified Hitchcock as a
cinematographer and a director. Well, it is only fitting that the most
famous murder-thriller movie of all time be the next released.
Psycho (1960) became Hitchcock’s biggest commercial hit ever. Produced
at just over $800,000, it grossed over $20 million (Bowers 1391). Psycho
is the story of murder and deception, but at the same time (although
slightly ambiguous) it is the story of split personality and not letting
go. Suspense (and in some cases fear) is built up throughout the entire
movie, making the viewer forget that there are only two actual scenes of
violence. Psycho is a film that takes place more in the mind of the
viewer than on the screen. The movie is based on a novel with the same
name by Robert Bloch, which was a fictionalization of a real event in
Wisconsin (Bowers 1393).
Marion Crane is the first character that is really introduced. She is
upset because her and her boyfriend Sam can not get married due to
financial difficulties. Marion’s boss entrusts her to deposit $40,000 of
a client’s money. The next time we see Marion she is packing a bag and
has the money with her, obviously planning to leave with it. Even though
she is a thief, the audience is still sympathetic towards her because of
her situation. Marion trades in her car for a new one and leaves Phoenix
heading towards California, where her and Sam plan to get married. When
Marion pulls over for the night, the first view of the now famous Bates
motel and mansion. A figure of an old woman is visible in the window. As
Marion wanders around the motel she meets Norman, the proprietor, and
also sees his hobby of stuffing birds. After she is taken to her room,
she is sitting on her bed (with the bathroom and shower clearly visible
in the background) and she hears an argument between Norman and his
mother. Marion then decides to take a bath before bed, and the most
famous murder scene in movie history takes place. The infamous shower
sequence, totally takes the viewer by surprise. Marion who appears to be
the main character is killed off in the first third of the movie. This
scene required over 60 still shots, 70 setups, and over a week of
attempts; all for a less than a minute on screen. True Hitchcock genius,
you never actually see the knife strike Marion, but the loud, high
pitched screeching music, and the close-ups of her face and the knife
sends chills through the body. An investigator comes out to the motel,
and becomes the next victim. Soon the audience learns that there is no
Mother Bates, when one of the other investigators discovers her body in
the basement, where she is attracted by Norman, the split personality,
dressed in his mother’s clothing. The movie has foreshadowing and
imagery through out, such as the credits splitting apart, and all the
use of mirrors, implying that perhaps other characters are split also (Spoto
357), and the presence of the shower and all the stuffed birds in the
background. As William Blowitz said "The star of this picture is Alfred
Hitchcock." (Kapasis 83).
"A blot on an honorable career" is how New York Times (NYT) critic
Bosley Crowther announced the release of Psycho in 1960, and by the end
of the year he had it on his list of 10 best for the year (Sterrit 100).
In his original review Crowther says that Psycho is "...obviously a low
budget job." and "It does seem slowly paced for Mr. Hitchcock and given
over to a lot of small detail." (NYT film review). He also said that the
stunts were exaggerated. "The consequence in his denouement falls quite
flat for us. But the acting is quite fair." is how he describes the
other aspects of this film; the film which best describes the mastery of
Alfred Hitchcock. Philip T. Hartung who reviewed Psycho for Commonweal
magazine in September of 1960, had a different opinion of it; "Hitchcock
pushes everything as far as he can go: the violence, the sex, the
thrills and the gore." All of the literature used in this report all
agree on one fact: Psycho is a movie beyond its years and is one of the
best in movie history. Although none of his movies did or would ever
compare to the success of Psycho, his next release The Birds (1963), is
another classic example of Hitchcock’s true genius.
Inspired by a unusual occurrence of "crying" birds, who bit some
residents along the San Francisco coast, The Birds is another scary, and
truly remarkable movie (Discover 37). Again the use of special effects
and unique camera angles are found in this Hitchcock classic. This movie
also comes from a novel by Daphne du Maurier, who’s storytelling
abilities make a reader believe, much like Hitchcock himself (DeWitt
249).
The Birds begins in San Francisco where Mitch Brenner meets Melanie
Daniels. She has a crush on him and decides to visit him weekend house.
Melanie arrives in town, where all the birds have already begun to
gather. The birds behave strangely, and cause the people to be
threatened. The birds attack all over Bodega Bay, seemingly unprovoked.
In one scene a flock of birds plunged down upon a gas station where a
worker is frightened and drops the gas pump. The gas continues to flow
from it, and is set on fire, when a passer-by drops a match on the
ground causing a immense damage. In a later scene the children are
trapped in the school, and as the teacher attempts to lead them to their
homes, believing the birds have flow away, they turn a corner and are
suddenly surrounded. The birds come together and strike, while the
children run and scream for their lives. Some of them trip and are
either pecked to death or trampled. Throughout the movie the birds wreak
havoc all along the coast of San Francisco. All the remaining people
escape the town, and the birds move in and seem to claim as their own,
as though they were a conquering army. The movie just ends without any
real idea of what happens next, something that Hitchcock had never done
before.
According to Bosley Crowther who reviewed the movie in April, 1963 for
NYT "The cast is appropriate and sufficient to this melodramatic intent.
Tippi Hedren is pretty, bland and wholesome as the disruptive girl. Rod
Taylor is stolid and sturdy as the mother-smothered son." He goes on to
say that the narrative elements of this film are clear and naturalistic,
and he thinks the scenery is very well suited to the movie. "Mr.
Hitchcock and his associates have constructed a horror film that should
raise the hackles on the most carageous and put goose-pimps on the
toughest hide." ( Crowther qtd NYT). It is rather obvious that Mr.
Crowther enjoyed this picture at first viewing more than he did Psycho.
Hitchcock always believed that developing an artistic reputation was far
more important than fame, and that as much as you put in, that is how
much you get out. The remarkable life and career of Alfred Hitchcock
demonstrate truth in his words. He put everything he had into all his
movies, making sure that every detail, no matter how minute, was
perfect. Alfred Joseph Hitchcock died in 1980 while working on what
would have been his 54th motion picture. His unique style and
breakthrough ideas will stand for all time, and he will always be
remembered as one of the greatest directors of all time.
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