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Demoncrat 19th November 2019 05:45 PM

To Catch A Thief (1955)

Cary Grant? Grace Kelly? Flirting for an entire film?
Sold. So what that it isn't filled with tortuous imagery. It's still a joy to behold. The entire plot is a McGuffin. Who cares? Just bask in the 'starlight' and get swept away. Am digging Marnie out to see if it is this ones evil :laugh: twin after all ....
Ahem.

Susan Foreman 12th October 2020 06:50 AM

Hitchcock by numbers (and pictures)


Alfred Hitchcock Collectors Guide

Susan Foreman 6th August 2022 02:09 PM

'Frenzy' at 50: The most violent film Hitchcock ever made / BBC Culture

"...Frenzy premiered as the closing film at the 1972 Cannes Film Festival and received a broadly rapturous critical response. Many of the contemporary reviews betrayed a sense of relief that the great Hitchcock had not produced another dud. Gene Siskel wrote in the Chicago Tribune, "Hitchcock, after a string of four indifferent films, is back providing grand entertainment," while the headline of Jay Cocks' review in Time Magazine declared the director was "still the master". The film would go on to outperform Psycho at the box office and become Hitchcock's most financially successful work for Universal.

Fifty years on, Frenzy remains a chillingly effective thriller and a curious bookend to the murderous saga which commenced with The Lodger. It is drenched in Hitchcockian verve, and, paradoxically, unlike anything he had made before. "Frenzy is steeped in the (English) past, yet contemporary in some of its ambitions, a testament to a director less encumbered by codes (of all sorts), but with complicated results that leave us wondering how well we ever really knew Hitchcock himself," Christine Sprengler, author of Hitchcock and Contemporary Art, tells BBC Culture.

Hitchcock had always been celebrated for his visions of male violence within aggressively patriarchal worlds, but with Frenzy he chose not to sugar the pill. Perhaps the film's savagery suggests how its director might always have operated in a less censorious industry – but then his final film, 1976's caper Family Plot, contains little of the nastiness which characterises Frenzy. It's more likely that Hitchcock was reluctant to age into the role of an antiquated heritage act, and even in the abrasive era of the New Hollywood, giallo, and exploitation cinema, the septuagenarian genius was still probing new ways of horrifying his audience."

Demoncrat 23rd May 2023 06:30 PM

Family Plot (1976)

His swansong then. I didn't remember a thing about this one, so all the betterer.
A fake psychic finds more than she bargained for when trying to reel in that one last big fish.
Bruce Dern ambles along with a helping hand.
Really enjoyed this. The cast all do their job ably and it was twisty and turny enough. A sort of return to familiar territory after the bleakness of Frenzy, it won't be sitting on the shelf too long before I revisit.
Recommended. :nod:


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