The Manilla Envelope
Sunday, January 09, 2005
 
An Introduction to Hitchcock



Recently developed an acute obsession with the man and his films; he himself often dealt with the helplessly compulsed. He made 53 films, give or take a few, and in every one was a piece of himself, his quirks, his humour, his insecurities, his dreams and often himself. He was well known for his cameos in nearly all of his films. You might say that he made the same four or five films over and over again and it is true. But its the details the that matter, the nuances and of course the characters involved. Now the myths ...

He treated actors/actresses badly.
I read stories that confirm this but I feel alot of them have been exaggerated and over-emphathsied. He did have a weakness for practical jokes which sometimes verged on cruelty but as a manipulator of the screen is it really a suprise if he rubbed people the wrong way. Let's not forget he often worked with the same people over and over again developing strong bonds and mutual respect, James Stewart, Grace Kelly, Cary Grant, Joan Fontaine, Farley Granger.

He was a misogynist/sexual pervert. He stayed married to Alma Reville for the rest of his life and only had sex once to concieve their daughter. True his films were often unkind to the fairer sex but most heroines must encounter some hardship in order to be such. He didn't represent male characters much differently, they too were often getting murdered, murdering, plotting, lying, philandering, etc. Besides you have remember that he made nearly all his films way before female empowerment.

He used unfeasible and bizarre plot devices. True, but at least he admitted it. Life is also sometimes bizarre and unfeasible, he would say.

More to come ...
 
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::CONTENT::

 

Playlists

 

Hitchcock

 

DVDs

 

Offence

 

Travel Pt.I Toronto/Niagra/Detroit

 

Travel Pt.II Chicago

 

Travel Pt.III Boston


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