Best Hitchcock film
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Topic: Best Hitchcock film
Posted By: Easy Livin
Subject: Best Hitchcock film
Date Posted: April 09 2005 at 13:18
So many good ones to chose from, but which of the great director's films is your favourite?
I've listed most of his later films, so apologies if your's is an early one I've had to omit.
I've gone for North by Northwest (Cary Grant), but it was tough to decide between that, Marnie, and 39 steps (and indeed, many others!)
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Replies:
Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: April 09 2005 at 13:26
I would've picked Notorious if it was there, but instead I had to go with Rear Window.
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Posted By: Jimbo
Date Posted: April 09 2005 at 13:28
That's really impossible to say.. He made so many wonderful films .
Out of the ones I've seen, my favourites are Rear Window, The Trouble
With Harry, Vertigo and Psycho. I'll choose Vertigo this time ![](smileys/smiley32.gif) .
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Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: April 09 2005 at 13:30
I just noticed 'Strangers on a Train' was on the list, and I already voted... aww...
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Posted By: Reed Lover
Date Posted: April 09 2005 at 15:56
Whilst you couldnt consider "To Catch A Thief" a Hitchcock classic,it is my favourite film of his.Nothing to do with writing,directing etc,just one thing-
Grace Kelly.
She absolutely dazzles the screen with her incredible beauty and looks so good in this one that occasionally I have to gulp,just to breathe. She's not particularly sexy,just so drop-dead gorgeous,with looks to die for.
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Posted By: Man With Hat
Date Posted: April 09 2005 at 16:43
I voted for pshyco. It's really a soild and timeless story. I would have voted for the Birds, however, but i didnt care for the ending. North by northwest is good as well...if fact I would say about 85% of his work is absoulutely fantastic.
------------- Dig me...But don't...Bury me I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.
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Posted By: Eemu Ranta
Date Posted: April 09 2005 at 17:24
Haven't seen half of those, but Rear Window remains as one of my
personal favourites.
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Posted By: aqualung28
Date Posted: April 09 2005 at 17:50
it was hard to pick between Rear Window and North by Northwest but I decided Rear Window was better, but not by much
------------- "O' lady look up in time o' lady look out of love
'n you should have us all
O' you should have us fall"
"Bill's Corpse" By Captain Beefheart
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Posted By: mirco
Date Posted: April 09 2005 at 19:18
I choose Rope, to mantain the intrigue in a room for an our is an outstanding work (the same can be said for the rear window, but Rope is an earlier film).
------------- Please forgive me for my crappy english!
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Posted By: Reed Lover
Date Posted: April 09 2005 at 19:36
Posted By: Easy Livin
Date Posted: April 10 2005 at 16:03
Posted By: Reed Lover
Date Posted: April 10 2005 at 16:35
Posted By: Hiwatter
Date Posted: April 11 2005 at 04:18
Psycho. great story, great acting Anthony Perkins - his best movie.
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Posted By: Dragon Phoenix
Date Posted: April 11 2005 at 05:48
Posted By: Alucard
Date Posted: April 11 2005 at 06:57
It's hard to chose only one I voted for Vertigo, but I love 39 steps, Notorius and North by north west just the same.
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Posted By: Easy Livin
Date Posted: April 11 2005 at 14:44
No no!!! Ahem (adopting deep rough voice), nothing at all!
She's very attactive.
![Embarrassed](https://www.progarchives.com/forum/smileys/smiley9.gif) ![LOL](https://www.progarchives.com/forum/smileys/smiley36.gif)
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Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: April 11 2005 at 15:43
Go see Vertigo. That's some scary sh#t!
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Posted By: John Gargo
Date Posted: April 11 2005 at 18:26
VERTIGO, although if asked on a different day I could have told you a number of other choices... I almost clicked PSYCHO.
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Posted By: PROGMAN
Date Posted: April 12 2005 at 05:15
The Birds That Was Cool!
------------- CYMRU AM BYTH
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Posted By: Fragile
Date Posted: April 12 2005 at 19:51
Reed Lover wrote:
Whilst you couldnt consider "To Catch A Thief" a Hitchcock classic,it is my favourite film of his.Nothing to do with writing,directing etc,just one thing-
Grace Kelly.
She absolutely dazzles the screen with her incredible beauty and looks so good in this one that occasionally I have to gulp,just to breathe. She's not particularly sexy,just so drop-dead gorgeous,with looks to die for. | You know Reed, sometimes you talk alot of sense
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Posted By: sigod
Date Posted: April 13 2005 at 07:19
mirco wrote:
I choose Rope, to mantain the intrigue in a room for an
our is an outstanding work (the same can be said for the rear window,
but Rope is an earlier film). |
Agreed. This is my fave film too.
A couple of things about Rope; firstly it was the first film that deliberately
used long scene shots with one camera continuously following the action as a
way of building the tension. If you look hard there are only two camera cuts in
the ENTIRE film. The rest of the time it is played through much like a stage
production with the camera acting as an invisible roaming eye.
I think (although I’m not sure) the duration of the first
cut was only beaten in length recently with the release of the Hitchcock-esque ‘Snake
Eyes’.
Secondly, there was some trouble with getting the film released at the time as
it was based on a book in which the two murderers and their teacher (played in
a superbly dark manner by Jimmy Stewart) were gay. Not popular subject matter
for the day.
------------- I must remind the right honourable gentleman that a monologue is not a decision.
- Clement Atlee, on Winston Churchill
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Posted By: Easy Livin
Date Posted: April 14 2005 at 15:03
Here's a few interesting bits of trivia about Hitchcock from the Internet Movie Database: http://www.imdb.com/ - http://www.imdb.com/
- His first job in films was designing titles for films made by Lasky’s studios
- First directing role was 1923 "Always tell your wife", when the original director fell ill
- Some of his trademarks were– cameos, bathroom scenes, close ups of hairstyles (women), mistaken or assumed itentities, his preference for blones
- He was a close friend of Albert R. Broccoli, well known as the producer of the James Bond - 007 franchise. Hitchcock's North by Northwest (1959) was the influence for the helicopter scene in From Russia with Love (1963)
- Hitchcock never won a best director Oscar
- When he won his Lifetime Achievement award in 1979, he joked with friends that he must be about to die soon. He died a year later.
- In Psycho (1960), Hitchcock splashed Janet Leigh with freezing cold water to make her scream so effectively when she saw "Mrs. Bates.", although the site also says "Contrary to popular rumors, during the shooting of the shower scene, Alfred Hitchcock did not arrange for the water to suddenly go ice-cold when the attack started".
- He was infamous with cast and crews for his "practical jokes." While some inspired laughs, such as suddenly showing up in a dress, most were said to have been more cruel than funny. Usually he found out about somebody's phobias, such as mice or spiders, and in turn sent them a box full of them.
- Psycho was Filmed in black and white because Alfred Hitchcock believed the movie would be too gory for color.
- Psycho - The shower scene has over 90 splices in it, and did not involve Anthony Perkins at all. Perkins was in New York preparing for a play.
- Psycho - The sound that the knife makes penetrating the flesh is actually the sound of a knife stabbing a casaba melon.
- The final chase scene In North by North West was not shot on Mt. Rushmore; Alfred Hitchcock couldn't gain permission to shoot an attempted murder on a national monument. The scene was shot in the studio on a replica of Mt. Rushmore. Everything is shot carefully, so as to avoid associating the faces of the monument with the violence.
- North by North West - Rather than go to the expense of shooting in a South Dakota woodland, Alfred Hitchcock planted 100 ponderosa pines on an MGM soundstage.
- North by North West - Jessie Royce Landis played Thornhill's (Cary Grant's) mother, yet he was ten months older than her.
- The Birds - Tippi Hedren was actually cut in the face by a bird in one of the shots.
- The Birds -The film does not finish with the usual "THE END" title because Hitchcock wanted to give the impression of unending terror.
- The Birds -An intended final shot with the Golden Gate Bridge covered in birds was not filmed because of cost.
- The poster for the movie said: "THE BIRDS IS COMING!" irritating English teachers worldwide.
- The Birds - The movie features 370 effects shots. The final shot is a composite of 32 separately filmed elements.
- The Birds - When audiences left the film's UK premiere at the Odeon, Leicester Square, London, they were greeted by the sound of screeching and flapping birds from loudspeakers hidden in the trees to scare them further.
- Grace Kelly Hoped to return to acting in Alfred Hitchcock's Marnie (1964), but the people of Monaco didn't want their princess playing a thief and romancing Sean Connery.
Some Hitchcock Quotes
- Television has brought murder back into the home - where it belongs"
- "There is no terror in the bang, only in the anticipation of it."
- "Even my failures make money and become classics a year after I make them."
- "When an actor comes to me and wants to discuss his character, I say, 'It's in the script.' If he says, 'But what's my motivation?, ' I say, 'Your salary.'"
- "There is nothing quite so good as a burial at sea. It is simple, tidy, and not very incriminating."
- "Man does not live by murder alone. He needs affection, approval, encouragement and, occasionally, a hearty meal."
- "Cartoonists have the best casting system. If they don't like an actor, they just tear him up."
- "I am a typed director. If I made "Cinderella," the audience would immediately be looking for a body in the coach."
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