Hitchcock wanted to release an artistic movie called Kaleidoscope in 1969, about a gay, deformed sex murderer. There was gonna be a shocking strangling scene at the climax, which we would think is a sex scene, but go inside to see a strangling scene. But Universal was shocked by the idea, and had him do Topaz instead.
@Thespeedrap
3 жыл бұрын
He did made it with Frenzy just a little different.
@ZoolGatekeeper
3 жыл бұрын
I also know that Hitchcock bought the rights to a great story, where a man wakes up in the morning and for some reason thinks that his wife has been replaced.. The whole story revolves around the man trying to reason with his friends and the police detective about the truth.. I think the idea and script was sold at some point, cause I saw it as a theater reproduction at some point... Would have been one of his finest work, much like 'Psycho'..
@RogerOThornhill
3 жыл бұрын
If Hitchcock had been allowed to make Kaleidoscope in the mid 60s, we might have had a second golden age. Universal killed Hitchcock when it killed the movie.
@youngblood4127
2 жыл бұрын
@@ZoolGatekeeper That's fascinating and still by modern film standards a new & unique story that could be told.
@bobbyjosson4663
Жыл бұрын
@@RogerOThornhill That is ridiculously simplistic. He had carte blanc to pretty much make what wanted, he had sold his ownership in 'Psycho' and the Hitchcock TV shows to Universal for a huge chunk of shares, making him one of the wealthiest directors in the business. He also transmuted transmuted it into 'Frenzy'. The original had POV killings. It would probably have killed his career as it did Michael Powell's a few years earlier. And he was going through a really dark time, what with the Hedren mess and him destroying his relationship with Bernard Herrmann. I think he lost confidence, just like Preston Sturges in the '40s and Wilder in the '70s.
@nikagogibedashvili6476
4 жыл бұрын
I have just one request to the author of the essay : Do not get demotivated by a long and sometimes stressing journey to the mainstream. We know you get there and we feel what you are saying.
@kencoakley8366
2 жыл бұрын
I saw "Family Plot" at a drive-in with "Smokey And The Bandit", which is a movie that Hitchcock adored.
@gunnarthedude8205
2 жыл бұрын
Frenzy is basically if Hitchcock made a movie but didn't have a censor button (not including the films of Brian De Palma). It sure would be interesting to see what he could do now
@PaulKyriazi
4 жыл бұрын
I've seen over 100 video analysis of Hitchcock & his movies. This one is the best: Concept, visuals, narration, pace & conclusions. A great job on it. Don't go into your 'dark ages'.
@nigelalderman9178
4 жыл бұрын
The climactic music in Vertigo and Marnie is similar but in Vertigo it is positive and affirming and in Marnie wistful and unsettling.
@prilljazzatlanta5070
3 жыл бұрын
I think a lot of To Catch a Thief is also a precursor to Vertigo
@KenshoBeats
2 жыл бұрын
A lot of Herrmann’s music has similarities. Parts from for instance the non Hitchcock movies Beneath The 12 Mile Reef, The Man In A Grey Flannel Suit but especially The Bride Wore Black and Tender Is The Night are very similar to certain passages in Vertigo. Herrmann too was refining his craft of arrangement, writing and orchestration. Brilliant composer. The music he wrote for Psycho is often referred to as his signature sound. This is not only regrettable but severely missing the essence of Herrmann. Which is not about suspense at all but about romance, even when intended to accentuate scenes of suspense.
@danielmadigan8276
2 жыл бұрын
Bernard herrman L
@danielmadigan8276
2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic. The Egyptiah
@davidwoods8181
2 жыл бұрын
You see I actually think it’s the other way round
@sifatshams1113
4 жыл бұрын
Rope was definitely Hitchcock's most underrated film, in my opinion.
@acdragonrider
4 жыл бұрын
I like notorious a lot
@MrJohnlennon007
3 жыл бұрын
Rope is my favourite movie ever. Brilliant film!
@OrchestrationOnline
4 жыл бұрын
Great commentary - but I feel your analysis doesn't go deep enough. You leave out the most important explanation of why Hitchcock continued to make films past his prime - process and working habits. Over his long career, he'd developed a lifestyle of scouting new projects and developing them in long script meetings and storyboarding. That in fact was his major satisfaction with filmmaking, to the point at which he joked that filming the picture was merely the final and least enjoyable step. Though his partnerships with great writers certainly inspired him, it was his relationship with his wife Alma that was the most essential. A "Hitchcock" picture was ultimately the responsibility of both Hitchcocks - and Alma's failing health is no less momentous a factor in the falling-off of artistry in the final decade. But what I feel most absent in this analysis is the perspective of Hitchcock as a "production director" - a filmmaker employee of a studio who was always turning out a new film, good or bad, such as during his first two decades as a director. The obligation to keep working on things after a lifetime of habitual productivity, combined with an ingrained lifestyle of film development, meant that Alfred AND Alma had to keep going well into the 70's. Though they were aware like no other team of the mechanics of celebrity, they weren't ever convinced that such celebrity had stakes that required every film to be a smash. And they'd had their share of dreadful flops (like Under Capricorn, which is so much worse than Topaz that I wonder that you don't mention it) and kept working. If you look at the pacing of releases, then this so-called "Dark Age" isn't all that dark. Psycho and The Birds were both smashes, then Marnie was okay. Topaz and Torn Curtain were flops, but then Frenzy was a great picture, and Family plot was okay. That isn't a dark age, more of a slow bowing out in the face of new cinema.
@copperdog
4 жыл бұрын
The real dark ages are probably his early talkies, everything he did after Blackmail and before The Man Who Knew Too Much in my opinion. All other "ages" have at least one great film.
@yohei72
4 жыл бұрын
Really good observations on the importance of the filmmaking process to Hitchcock's whole lifestyle. As far as the relative quality of the late films goes, that's much more a matter of subjective opinion. I found "Topaz" and "Family Plot" almost unwatchable, "Torn Curtain" surprisingly enjoyable, and "Frenzy" overrated but fascinating. But your mileage may vary, as always.
@filmnobelpreis
Жыл бұрын
(I kinda like Topaz.)
@OrchestrationOnline
Жыл бұрын
@@filmnobelpreis It does have its fans, and there are some great scenes in it.
@daviddd99
4 ай бұрын
@@yohei72 Frenzy is okay, but being based in London in the 1970s detracts somewhat - I would have preferred a U.S. setting. London in the 70s was pretty grim.
@kencoakley8366
2 жыл бұрын
I saw Rear Window, Vertigo, Rope, The Trouble With Harry and The Man Who Knew Too Much at my local cinema in 1984 when the Hitchcock estate took them out of the vaults for the first time since 1961. My favorite of the bunch was Rope. I like films that take place in a single day and/or as few places as possible and the fact that Rope was all done with one angle was genius.
@TheEternalOuroboros
Жыл бұрын
Rope is underrated af.
@haileyshannon7548
4 ай бұрын
@@TheEternalOuroboros I just saw Rope last night. Totally not what I was expecting. It's an adaptation of a play and sometime you can really tell (one set, small cast)
@abdulkhafidsulaymaan
4 жыл бұрын
"Good evening" Alfred Hitchcock. Wow man, this man, this name man's means something to me and watching this synopsis made me realize Alfred Hitchcock has always meant something to me. Over all of these years, I've kept him with me. I've always loved movies and tv, they were the one thing that I really and truly enjoyed with my brother and our father. My father used to watch this show on tv with Alfred Hitchcock- he would do the intro to each of the short story that we'd watch. Apparently (now that I think about it) my father enjoyed mystery and horror based tv shows cause we used to watch The Twilight Zone, Perry Mason type shows and later on before his death we watched Tales From The Crypt together, me him and my lil brother- this was back in the mid to late 80s. I know Alfred Hitchcock is important to me now because he was important to my dad back then... Its crazy because i never really knew about all of the great movies he made, in the ghetto we just don't watch those sort of movies Psycho, Birds and his other great movies but I remember his show. It's so crazy because Im so deep into movies and writing stories now, I've always respected Alfred Hitchcock, believe it or not, that plump little British man was the most culture a hood bound kid could get in the ghetto. I know that Alfred Hitchcock is a classical OG director but I don't love him because of what other people said about him, I think he was always important to me because he was important to my father- I've never watched any of the movies he is most known for and I dont really love him for any of those movies. I love him for what he gave me my dad and my lil brother. Alfred Hitchcock and my dad are the reasons why I will one day be a great writer.
@robertjewell9727
3 жыл бұрын
Excellent essay. This would make a great 3-hour café discussion. I've had major ideas about these final films for a long time so much so that I wish I could somehow reedit Family Plot and Torn Curtain into good films.
@filmnobelpreis
Жыл бұрын
Family Plot is already a good film.
@robertjewell9727
Жыл бұрын
@@filmnobelpreis it's a good film, but it has a scene in which in my opinion there are elements that should be removed, namely the opening scene.
@johnk3831
4 жыл бұрын
I know you have heard this a lot but I had to write and thank you for this engaging, detailed and affectionate study of these final Hitchcock films I am a theatre director and lifelong Hitchcock obsessive and student - my theatre work has always been deeply inspired by cinema, especially the work of Hitchcock, Bergman and Kubrick I've read and seen all the books and studies on Hitch but never have had the pleasure of seeing one explore and discuss his final period with such care, intelligence and sensitivity It was a joy to hear your insights and feel your deep admiration, respect, passion and understanding of an artist who I have a feeling left us long before you were born In these times of disposable, vapid criticism and deep on the surface insight your piece is a breath of pure, exhilarating oxygen I was very moved by it and wish you the very best Never have I been more grateful for my library of films than I am during this challenging period - I hope this finds you safe and well enjoying the company of cinema
@EyebrowCinema
4 жыл бұрын
You're far too kind, John. I'm touched this spoke to you so powerfully. I hope you too are safe and as you so nicely put, enjoying the company of cinema.
@johnk3831
4 жыл бұрын
@@EyebrowCinema it definitely did as few people have taken the time to look at these last works of his with care - they are usually just dismissive and facile in their judgement Your skill in expressing yourself in a non pedantic manner coupled with real, incisive insight was what drew me in, aside from beautiful editing and clever choices - esp loved the use of that deeply melancholy music from Hermann's sadly unused score for torn curtain Even as unfulfilled and ineffective as that film is I often wonder how more effective in every way it would have been with that disturbing and powerful original score I am fascinated with the final works of great artists - directors, painters, composers - and the depth and complexity that the shadow of mortality brings to their work It is haunting to explore Anyway sorry for another long message - I hope to have a chance to further talk film, theatre and art with you sometime - let me know if that interests you at all It a pleasure to connect
@kamran102
4 жыл бұрын
This is also true for most musicians. A bands 1-2 first albums are often not very good, then they find their style and they get their audience, then after a some years they get old and the youthful inspiration and energy runs dry (or there is just too much alcohol and drugs).
@Skabanis
4 жыл бұрын
Most, if not all directors have nothing close to vertigo in terms of lasting power...let alone the rest of Hitchcock’s master pieces so he had a few not so amazing. Great video.
@jtgunz
4 жыл бұрын
Hmmmm, lots to discuss, agree with and debate here. For starters, I'm with Robin Wood, William Rothman and other critics who find MARNIE to be one of Hitch's most sublime works-and TOPAZ holds up much better in the "director's cut" version. Was he in decline? Sure. He was getting older. And he did lose his dream team of collaborators. And his controlling interest as a stockholder in Universal Studios paradoxically put limits on his creativity. And his biggest complaint in the sixties was that he couldn't find any original material to bring to the screen. But also keep in mind that he had previous dry spells as well. As a result, I think it's a bit unfair to compare his late films with, say, the genius of REAR WINDOW. Instead, why not compare this late period with his struggle to find his footing in the late 1920s, or with various midcareer lesser efforts, like SABOTEUR, UNDER CAPRICORN and STAGE FRIGHT? It might also be worthwhile to compare his last four films with some of the truly innovative films he was thwarted from making during the late sixties, such as MARY ROSE, which might well have re-defined the ghost story, and KALEIDOSCOPE, which was to intended to put the Hitchcock touch on an Italian Neorealist style. FAMILY PLOT was an experiment in a looser, more modern approach to filmmaking. For instance, he encouraged his lead actors to improvise their scenes, resulting in a more "modern" spontaneous style-license he would have never allowed in previous years. Of course, that affected his filming methods, resulting in routine shot-reverse shot editing, which you (rather dismissively) noted. At times you seemed to equate financial success/failure with the film's inherent quality. I hope you realize that that's a problematic correlation to say the least, right? But here's my biggest beef with your video. I kept wanting to ask: who the hell are you to adjudicate whether or not this or that aspect of Hitch's or anybody else's films "fail" or "succeed?" You're a smart guy, but your video misses one essential point: This isn't the Olympics or a beauty pageant. It's art. Therefore, I think your efforts to be a movie critic would greatly improve if you were to take each work on its own terms and show more respect for the artistry on display.
@landonhagan450
4 жыл бұрын
On a related note to the decline of directors. I would argue that Spielberg's "decline" is the most overstated. His work became less approachable for the blockbuster crowd, but no less emotionally engaging. Perhaps even more so, actually. His recent attempts to make the same straightforward blockbuster type movies from earlier in his career haven't been successful, sure, but that's the result of trying to play against his own natural evolution as an artist. The rest of his recent work is usually still excellent.
@landonhagan450
4 жыл бұрын
@JuniorX EastNY What? In addition to Bridge of Spies, Minority Report, Catch Me if You Can, War of the Worlds, The Adventures of TinTin, Lincoln, and The Post all came out after 2001. And that's just the stuff people generally agree to be good. There are a few others that are debatable. And few that could really be argued as outright bad. Sure he stopped doing the creative blockbusters of the eighties and nineties, but that doesn't make his more subtle recent movies bad. I definitely like his older stuff better overall, but to have gotten worse is not the same as to have become bad.
@cate1657
4 жыл бұрын
I would vote for "Duel"--a fine Spielberg film (1971--stars Dennis Weaver) done in only three weeks! The idea for the film came from a short story appearing in Playboy Magazine and is true to the plot. Has anybody seen this incredible movie? Hope you can stream it--highly recommended.
@landonhagan450
4 жыл бұрын
@@cate1657 I'm a little confused since the topic was more about Spielberg's later years but thanks for the recommendation nonetheless. I'll have to check that out.
@tomnorton4277
Жыл бұрын
Stanley Kubrick's level of quality never declined either. His first movie is by far his worst but it's still better than Rian Johnson and JJ Abrams' entire filmographies put together. Furthermore, Kubrick learned from his mistakes whilst he was making Fear and Desire and used those lessons to ensure that he always delivered high quality movies for the rest of his career. Several of them ascended to the level of outright masterpieces that most filmmakers would never be able to pull off.
@jesustovar2549
Жыл бұрын
@@tomnorton4277 "but it's still better than Rian Johnson and JJ Abrams' entire filmographies put together" sounds like you just wanted to trash the Star Wars sequel trilogy for whatever reason (don't worry, I agree it' still trash), also I would add Quentin Tarantino, I can understand his decission of wanting to make a 10th and final film because he dosen't want to decline like, let's say Hitchcock (Quentin declared in an interview he's not a fan of Alfred but still considerates him a great filmmaker).
@rosebyanyname
3 жыл бұрын
IDK, I really like Family Plot. Bruce Dern and Barbara Harris have a really sweet and funny chemistry that made me root for them to succeed.
@Shadowman4710
3 жыл бұрын
ITA. It's a really enjoyable film.
@CaminoAir
4 жыл бұрын
Great overview and analysis. Thank you for all your work on this video. I'm always surprised that 'Vertigo' came before 'North By Northwest'. 'Vertigo' feels and looks the more modern of the two films. Did 'Torn Curtain' have a rejected Herrmann score? I can't remember. Composer/director partnerships are critically important. Franklin J. Schaffner and Jerry Goldsmith complemented each other wonderfully. I thought Hedren's performance in 'Marnie' was very good for a relatively inexperienced actress. Even average Hitchcock film's will still be watched for decades to come.
@infonut
2 жыл бұрын
That's because Grant looks younger in NBN than Stewart does in Vertigo. I often said that Vertigos flaws were its length complimented by Stewarts performance. The character should have been younger, more rugged and violent.
@batman.darthmaul
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, if I remember correctly, Hitchcock and Herrmann had their falling out during Torn Curtain. Hitchcock gave Herrmann very specific and very clear direction about the kind of music Hitchcock wanted and Herrmann completely ignored it. When Hitchcock heard the first examples of Herrmann's score, with Herrmann present, Hitchcock was so upset he turned right around without a word and walked out of the room. The two reportedly never spoke again.
@garytiptin6479
9 ай бұрын
"Torn Curtain" was originally going to HAVE a Herrmann score, but Hitch & Herrmann had a falling out over it, and they never worked together again.
@johnstahlman9767
4 жыл бұрын
the man who knew too much also helps that Peter Lorre is the villain. hard to go wrong with that
@melenatorr
4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this lovely, thoughtful and empathetic study on this complicated and great director.
@yggdrasil3
4 жыл бұрын
This is a really underrated channel.
@EyebrowCinema
4 жыл бұрын
Cheers.
@theremixproject907
4 жыл бұрын
That was worthy! Your insight sounds older than your voice and there wasn't a whole lot to disagree with. The choice of visuals & a very easy to listen to delivery of a well written script, mesh into a PBS worthy audition.
@Mattfromthepast
4 жыл бұрын
I just discovered your channel and I am loving your videos, very well done and researched. I will say that personally I will still take Hitchcock's bad films of his final decade over most modern explosion fests. This was an extremely interesting video, keep up the good work.
@raminagrobis6112
3 жыл бұрын
I agree. I much prefer a world with a few more, albeit inferior, movies by Hitchcock than one without the "decline period" final 4. At least (except for Family Plot, which is frankly awful and beyond help), they work on their own set of rules, are entertaining enough to keep me engaged, and are very much of their time, a time where I was beginning to discover cinema myself. In the case of Topaz, I'm fortunate enough to know the 'foreign' actors (they are French, and I'm in the francophony) very well and really love them. It has often been mentioned that 'Topaz' failed because of the "lack of stars". Well, it did have many stars for whoever knows French cinema even a little. I can function very well without any Hollywoodian actors, thank you!
@tylerhonsel8136
4 жыл бұрын
Beautiful video man! Wonderful categorization and contextualizing of Hitchcock’s work!
@curiousworld7912
4 жыл бұрын
Well done. This was a terrific critical scroll through the work of Hitchcock. It's interesting to see how a director learned his craft, became a master at it, but couldn't really adapt with the times - while also being dependent on a particular group of artists that helped bring his visions to screen. (I have to add that it's always tickled me that I own an early print of one of the two Tretchikoff paintings that hang in the murderer's apt. in 'Frenzy'.)
@SirSmoldham
4 жыл бұрын
Fabulous video. But it's funny, regarding "Frenzy" and your comment on Ron Goodwin's film score, that you didn't talk about Henry Mancini's discarded music for the film since you used the theme. Speaking of music I find it fascinating that John Williams scored Hitchcock's last film and one for Brian De Palma. But I digress. Thank you so much for this piece. It spoke volumes.
@dcdad556
2 жыл бұрын
Another fine video essay by you... Film careers, as any career, are like a rollercoaster: there are ups and downs. You just don't want to be falling over the edge at the end.
@Gissak
3 жыл бұрын
This channel really needs more subscribers. You do really good work.
@jenniferschillig3768
4 жыл бұрын
I'd disagree that The Birds doesn't measure up to the three or four films that came before it...it's INCREDIBLY creepy and suspenseful. And it's funny that you should mention Bond's influence on Hitchcock...wasn't he toying with the idea of filming Casino Royale in the late fifties, with Cary Grant as Bond? (I wouldn't have had the Bond movies any other way than what we got, but sigh...a Hitchcock-directed Casino Royale with Cary Grant...sigh...)
@EyebrowCinema
4 жыл бұрын
I don't like The Birds as much as Vertigo or Psycho, say, but you're right, it is incredibly creepy and suspenseful. Some masterful set-pieces and Tippi Hedren doesn't get enough credit for a great lead performance.
@GH3K3
4 жыл бұрын
@@EyebrowCinema The third act is weak and the ending somewhat dissatisfying. It was originally longer in the shooting script, but got cut.
@antoniod
3 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid I watched "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" every day(repeats)waiting for a Hitchcock cameo, not understanding that as he was already the host of the show a cameo would have been redundant.
@alanford3359
4 жыл бұрын
Just a fantastic, emphatically engaging piece of work my friend. I really appreciated the empathy and humanity you bestowed to the master film maker in your writing. Very moving. I was looking for a quick retrospective review for Torn Curtain but I got so much more. Thank you (your new subscriber 😉 And yes, I found Barbara Harris in Family Plot to be supreme delight too, her 'kooky' charm utterly disarming 😊).
@EyebrowCinema
4 жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it. This video was something of a passion project so it's nice to see others respond to it.
@ChubbyChecker182
3 жыл бұрын
Frenzy is my fav6 Hitchcock movie. Probably my favourite "London" movie too. It's so unusual and quirky and dark and Funny...and has some amazing cinematographic moments.
@Orgotheonemancult
4 жыл бұрын
This is such a fantastic documentary. Thank you for making it!
@nateds7326
4 жыл бұрын
The directors that keep up their quality for almost their entire careers are the all time greats. I can only think of a handful off the top of my head. It's a rare thing.
@pitbull635
3 жыл бұрын
who??
@nateds7326
3 жыл бұрын
@@pitbull635 david finches maybe, chris nolan(those 2 are more recent though so we'll see how theirs go), stanley kubrick, martin scorsese, sergio leone, paul thomas anderson etc
@JByrdddd
27 күн бұрын
@@nateds7326 All of them have had hits and misses no matter what. No director is flawless and that's really the missing point from this entire discussion
@blueduck9409
Жыл бұрын
Well said. I enjoyed the introduction, and i think you are spot on with your observations. Bravo.
@hamburgareable
4 жыл бұрын
Sir, youre doing Hitchcock justice right now with this essay!
@Lou.B
Жыл бұрын
Fascinating and well done!
@SparkyHou
4 жыл бұрын
Hitchcock is one of the top film makers of all time. Very few other film makers have produced as many great movies. I have seen almost all of his movies( not counting waltzes from vienna). I was pleased you mentioned Frenzy as good. However, i think it is great. It is one of his best movies. The edginess of the movie is something i would have expected from a much younger man. Consider billy wilder. In twilight years, he made the horribly mediocre Avanti. Frenzy has the best dialogue line ending of any movie. I would watch it over having to watch marnie again.
@pablovio
4 жыл бұрын
Frenzy is great, really really great. I watched it a lot of times. It’s a movie made on location on covent garden, where hitch spended his childhood, and his approach of making an agile mise en scene on location and letting the actors improvise and interact a lot with the sets for me works perfectly showing the conflict of the main character and the psicology of the assasin. I saw a making off of this movie in which I saw hitchcock enjoying the shooting and showing confidence in the team, I don’t buy the idea of the dream team of the fifities, hitchcock always worked with whoever was aviable and seemed right. Shure Hermann is a genius, but I doubt it was thought as a dream team at the moment, but more as top of the line professionals. I really don’t see a dark ages hitchcock in this one. Shure i find Topaz boring, but family plot terribly funny. I think we tend to see the movies from the past through some kind of romantic glasses, and then something like Vertigo is ultra cannonized for a Number of reasons. Vertigo is a masterpice, but frenzy is also a masterpice, both made of the same material: celuloid. I can’t agree with the tesis of the video, but nevertheless it’s well presented
@SparkyHou
4 жыл бұрын
I agree but i feel that the truffaut-hitchcock book has canonized the idea of the auteur theory. Hitchcock is always pointed to to defend this theory. The idea of a great film maker only makes great movies is a popular one. I have always said even great film makers make bad film (mr and mrs smith), a fan can make excuses to like them but it is isn't. good. I think a great film makers like Hitchcock or wilder,has made 3 to 4 great movies. The rest can be forgiven. A good film maker may only have one compelling story to tell and fill the rest of their career with mediocre films. Not a popular point of view for a society that wants to brand everything and everyone.
@johannesbluemink4581
4 жыл бұрын
Well, it is my personal opinion, but I thought Avanti was somewhat above average, with Jack Lemmon having some funny scenes. Indeed, of his last 4 movies, I also think Frenzy is the best, but bowing out with Family Plot wasn't so bad after all. Even the worst AH movies have something, well .....Hitchcockian, ha ha.
@pablovio
4 жыл бұрын
Don’t forget that hitchock never tought of himself as an auteur, the concept wasn’t even a trend in film theory most of his life!
@pablovio
4 жыл бұрын
Johannes Bluemink I agree, I try to be open to my own emotions watching a movie, and all I can say is that I find family plot awfully entrertaining. And for the few things I know about narrative structure, screenwriting, acting, cinematography, I think I can understand a little why I like it. I don’t care about the auteur theory, or if this not is what is considered Hitchcock’s prime, or if a fan can justify any movie. I love hitchock because of the cinema he gave us. I never watched Avanti, but I also love Wilder, you gave me something to watch !
@oldmoviesinbwwithsubtitles3501
7 ай бұрын
The musical score for frenzy is fantastic, at the Covent Garden shop it's uplifting, joyful. The original composer Henry Mancini's opening for the film was very depressing, The new composer was hired and the new opening for the opening credits is very uplifting.
@samuel_andreyev
4 жыл бұрын
This is very well done. Thank you.
@dbuck242
3 жыл бұрын
Amazing analysis. I really enjoyed this and learning more about Hitchcock films. Thanks for making this. I’m sure it took a lot of work.
@jlovebirch
3 жыл бұрын
Excellent, perceptive summary and analysis of Hitchcock that does not deserve a single down vote (76 at the time of this writing). Still have never been able to get through Torn Curtain.
@ryanmccurdy9423
Жыл бұрын
I decided to watch all the Hitchcock films currently on Max. 39 Steps, The Lodger, Downhill, Foreign Correspondent, The Man who Knew too Much…watching them made me want to come back to this video. Hitchcocks early work doesn’t get that much praise but the ones I watched were just outstanding. The guy was a master of craft.
@greeneyes66
7 ай бұрын
What a great summary of the works of one of cinema's defining directors. I was enamored with his films from an early age, watched them whenever I could on TV. To boot, to discover the then re-released Rear Window, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Vertigo on the big screen in 1984. The latter one, I only learned to love more with every viewing. Couple of years ago, I had the good fortune to see Dial M for Murder in 3D at the Berlin International Film Festival. A treat! Last year, I took the effort to (re-)discover his 30s and 40s oeuvre - which I was less interested in as a youngster. How great 39 Steps, Saboteur, Young and Innocent and many more still hold up.... Hitch is one of the true masters.
@xpindy
4 жыл бұрын
Care to explain what happened to Billy Wilder at approximately the same time?
@Leif_sauce
Жыл бұрын
Great video. Solid editing!
@Shadowman4710
3 жыл бұрын
I've never seen "Topaz" but I really enjoy the other 3, particularly "Family Plot."
@Pocketrocket-pj1us
9 ай бұрын
28:00 Whew! I was worried that Leonard Maltin disapproved. He was always my favorite, (pre internet, I.e. KZitem) reviewer. With his masterful review of, 'Laserblast' still haunting me, all these years later! ;)
@antonydrossos5719
3 жыл бұрын
This will sound weird to some, but the shots I'm seeing from Hitchcock's early movies look like they were adapted from Indy Comic books. Like THIS shot, 4:25
@Ravi-xf8dw
4 жыл бұрын
Great video. Thank you for such a detailed work. Just found your channel. Need to watch more Hitchcock. Vertigo is one of my most favorite.
@ryancoulter4797
3 жыл бұрын
Family Plot looks like a Wonderful World of Disney Sunday movie from the 70s.
@racewiththefalcons1
4 жыл бұрын
Hitchcock's style was just too out-dated for the 60's, and desiring to shoot on sound stages instead of real locations contributed to this greatly. He wanted to stick to the control he was used to, and the old-timey Hollywood lighting techniques that were dying, rather than wishing to to evolve his approach. But even his earlier movies feel like products of their time rather than timeless. That doesn't take away their greatness, but only illustrates that even though he almost literally "invented cinema as we know it", his vision of the medium was narrower than its inevitable expansion. One could even make the argument that Hitchcock essentially stopped evolving his creative visual style in the early 1950's. He didn't change anything because what he was doing worked - then. It didn't work anymore in the 60's, not when younger filmmakers were emerging with fresh and creative ideas that helped evolve the medium as a whole. Compare The Birds to something like Ivan's Childhood. Ivan's Childhood is _older_ than The Birds, but The Birds looks and feels *far* more antiquated. I don't think Hitchcock had any desire to expand his approach to cinema, visually in particular, and I scarcely believe he even knew how even if he wanted to. The cinema he knew was what he created, not what he was going to inspire.
@kostajovanovic3711
4 жыл бұрын
You are up to something good
@stephenpickells2003
4 жыл бұрын
He was really good at giving people what they wanted, so he had the confidence of the financiers and was given artistic freedom to try out a few things over the years. But then he got old and tired and people kept offering money so he kept making films. And he probably still enjoyed some things about it, without the need to keep striving for artistic merit. I enjoyed The Birds mainly for the visual effects even though most of them look primitive now. They looked cheesy back then, but the whole birds-flying-into-your-face approach was impressive. It didn't stimulate any suspense that I remember, but that's probably because it was such a lame-arsed plot. The scene in the bedroom where Tippi Hedron is attacked was funny to watch, but the fact that she was really injured makes you wonder if it was worth doing.
@BelatedCommiseration
4 жыл бұрын
I appreciate that you are not exactly doing Hitch a disservice here...but I think it's a shame you pick on something like the Birds, that is somewhat antiquated to us now purely because of the limitations of the visual effects that particular story demanded. Which obviously will jar to us in a CGI age...but was still an interesting experiment...I would argue the great Hitchcock films that are reliant on what he did best; identity crisis, psychological breakdown, the ordinary in the extraordinary, strange motivations and obsessions...I would argue these are pretty timeless. Which is why I think its unfair to pick on the Birds against Ivan's childhood, which is not bound by special effects in the same way as the premise of the Birds is. If you compare it to other Hitchcock films instead, like Strangers on a Train, North by Northwest, Shadow of a Doubt or Psycho. I would argue those (and many others of Hitch from his Mid point to 'Golden years) stand the test of time very well indeed; still feel fresh and not antiquated at all because they are not constrained by their technology in quite the same way as the Birds and all of Hitch's true skills in dealing with his medium as the ultimate auteur came to the fore. I would say it holds up against anything by Tarkovsky...that being said I have only seen Solaris in full (which, beautiful and insightful as it is, I would argue does have something of a pacing problem) and parts of Ivan's childhood and Stalker...and that's really about it, so I should search out more. I actually would like to see Stalker in full as it looks really interesting to me from the segments I have seen on KZitem.
@casrifay
4 жыл бұрын
But Psycho and The Birds are modern films especially if compared with his earlier ones. Nevertheless your point is generally quite accurate
@stephenpickells2003
4 жыл бұрын
@Adrian At And T you're a company
@francoisgermain3991
4 жыл бұрын
Torn Curtain had A LOT in common with Herg.'s album Tintin and the Calculus case.
@jimgarrison7340
2 жыл бұрын
Exc analysis and editing Eyebrow. You're good.
@kindredhooligans4445
3 жыл бұрын
Had Hitchcock been able to make *Kaleidoscope* in 1967, we wouldn't have had Topaz. With the film's intended use of handheld cameras, natural locations, unknown cast, and its pushing the boundaries of sex and violence would not only fit in nicely with the New Hollywood wave, but it would've reminded audience that Hitchcock was still a force to be reckoned with in his twilight years and would've solidified his stance as an artist in his final years. I blame Lew Wasserman for this tremendous blunder.
@KlausSgroi
2 жыл бұрын
Frenzy and Family Plot may not be "classic" Hitchcock films, but are certainly memorable, good films overall, mainly the first one. Torn Curtain and Topaz, on the other hand, leave a lot to be desired.
@jonathoncaldwell9064
4 жыл бұрын
My 96 year old grandmother hates him for some reason. I dont know if it is because of his work but I remember she used to turn his show off when it came on Nick at Nite. I personally think he's great. I noticed she didn't like a lot or people from the UK. I honestly think she didn't like him because her husband died in Normandy. They were only married 8 months but she loved him deeply from what everyone as well as her tells me. He was American and she seems like she blames British people just as much as all of Europe.
@fabwalk8133
4 жыл бұрын
don''t forget us when you hit a million subscriber! and i believe this is going to happen really soon
@lyonellaverde3135
3 жыл бұрын
Wonderfully written and researched. Well edited and a treat. This could make up part of a bio on the director. Kudos!
@ALLNEWSUX1
4 жыл бұрын
A wonderful video...well done. I'm always more interested in the obscure than the super popular so this was perfect for me.
@jimboy419
3 жыл бұрын
I like Family Plot for Harris and Dern with their funny and modern dialogue. I think Hitchcock saw how they represented the 70s and new attitudes and used them well. Frenzy also shows that he was with the times and not doing "beautiful" 50s style productions anymore.
@pablovio
4 жыл бұрын
Excelent video! It gave me a lot to think about, I don’t agree with it but your thesis is solid so I’d need my own 40 minute video to justify my disagreement. Instead I have a cuetion: why you tend to center your readings of hitch’s movies on male characters? I often find the female more vital to his narrative. There are cases where it isn’t, vertigo being and example where male ego is clearly central, (a film considered a failure by the filmmaker itself and by the public, but peted by critics over time, maybe something to do with male ego?), but in a lot of movies you bring in the video I care less for the male characters than the female: Notorius, Marnie, the birds, torn curtain, psycho (Norman bates it’s male or female?), under capricorn, stage fright, shadow of a doubt, etc. So why you choose the male character’s point of view when analyzing the movies? I have another question, why you ommited the trouble with harry when listing what you called the golden period? Is great to have videos like this in youtube
@marcocardia3960
2 жыл бұрын
I loved this video, the only Hickcook film I've seen is Psycho, but I'm ever more intrigued to see more of his films, my love of cinema began with Charlie Chaplin would love to see a video like this for him I've seen Monsier Verdoux and it has a similar hidden murder that I wasn't even aware because it's that surprising for a Chaplin movie
@zacharyantle7940
4 жыл бұрын
Let’s not forget Hitch was a several time contender to direct James Bond (directory contacted for the job by Ian Forming himself) but always turned them down for some reason. Ah well.
@casrifay
4 жыл бұрын
Zachary Antle he disliked this kind of film labeling as too obvious and superficial
@historicarchives4841
4 жыл бұрын
He liked full creative control. After The Paradine Case he carefully chose and developed all of his films.
@alexisliane316
6 ай бұрын
Of the four listed, Family Plot was not a flop by my assessment.
@michaelharrington7656
4 жыл бұрын
Thank you and congratulations on the best stuff on Hitchcock I've seen or read since the first edition of Robin Wood's book appeared ion 1965. I think his decline after Marnie was at least partly due to his demoralization after his disastrous obsession with Tippi Hedren . I believe Truffaut said that "Hitchcock was never the same man after Marnie." I would add that there are films in his golden age, such as Too Catch a Thief and the Wrong Man which are not as good as earlier films such as Spellbound with Ingrid Bergman in 1945 and Shadow of a Doubt. in 1943. I carry a torch for Spellbound which was a huge hit but remains, in my opinion, underrated. To me it seems that the great disappointment in his later years was his inability to make a film of Mary Rose, the strange and mysterious play by J M Barrie which he saw in London in 1920. I have seen a Scottish TV production which can be seen on KZitem--or could the last time I Iooked. The production is a bit stodgy and talky but I can see what Hitchcock might have made of it. There is also a BBC radio adaptation which is better. Jay Presson Allen wrote a draft screenplay for Hitchcock, which you can also read on line. Again , it is too talky but picks up about half way through. Mary Rose is a tragic and poignant ghost story which remains deeply mysterious and somewhat pagan in character. He would have taken a step beyond the borderline mysticism we saw in Vertigo. Have you seen the Selznick production Portrait of Jennie, with Jennifer Jones and Joseph Cotten ? There is more than an echo of Mary Rose to be found in it. If Universal had had the imagination and faith to back Hitch all his creative juices would have been flowing and he would have given the movie everything he had. We cannot know whether he would have made a successful film, but it would not have been boring like Torn Curtain. It would have had his heart in it, perhaps a broken heart.
@dakotaventiere3903
2 жыл бұрын
I liked Topaz way better than Torn Curtain, I even thought it was pretty good tbh. Not at the level of his earlier heights, of course, but I like it well enough
@gumbycat5226
4 жыл бұрын
Great review and very insightful. You deserve more viewers! I would like to offer my perspective - I disagree with the notion that Hitchcock was derailed by the new cinema... on the basis that those four sad movies (I include Marnie) simply don't stack up to his movies of the 30s, 40s and 50s. Hitchcock was in decline irrespective of things going on around him. As you pointed out, there was plenty of opportunity for Hitchcock magic - that "Fire" scene in Torn Curtain reads exactly like the final scene in 39 Steps except without the tension, etc. etc. Who ever could forget the dancing girls on stage in the background while Mr Memory gasps his last words off stage... cinema perfection... all Torn Curtain can offer is "Fire!" I can literally story-board the whole of The 39 Steps whereas I couldn't even place the "Fire!" scene - did it occur towards the end of the movie, I guess so. I start Hitchcock's decline with Psycho. In terms of its core theme (Mommy issues), it's a weak version of Strangers On A Train. I have never been convinced by the shower scene. It has such a reputation and when I finally saw it at age 16 in 1974, I was stupefied: it was clear to me on first viewing that the knife never enters the body - the only part that struck me as interesting was the blood washing down the drain and the tearing of the shower curtain. I think the entire power of that scene is in its music. For me, the best scene is when we first see Mommy. The denouement is devoid of interest- the good guys lack character and are as nameless as anybody in Topaz. For the life of me, I can't even remember how they catch him. The Birds too - the main character is completely unsympathetic. It's impossible to care for her. Things happen - they are not explained - and they happen to a cold, uninteresting person. Her coldness is like a cold shower compared to the equivalent character in Vertigo - mysterious, intriguing and vulnerable. The principle virtue of both movies is that they are inventive. This from an uber-Hitchcock fan.
@HeathcliffBlair
4 жыл бұрын
First rate video essay. Thanks.
@8176morgan
3 жыл бұрын
I would disagree with Daniel Simpson's categorization of Alfred Hitchock's Fourth Stage as lasting from 1948 until 1954. A better time frame would be his Transatlantic Films period that brought about his brief venture of being an independent producer and consisted of three pictures; that of "Rope", "Under Capricorn", and "Stage Fright". None of which were successful. His next movie was "Strangers On a Train" which he made for Warner Brother's and that he once referred to as his "second spring", and this began a remarkable run of thirteen great or very good pictures in a period of thirteen years which ended with "Marnie" and heralded many of his greatest and best known pictures. I believe that Mr. Hitchcock would appreciate that codification as the number 13 appeared quite frequently in his films, and maybe that was because he was born on August 13th, 1899.
@TheVarietyVendor
4 жыл бұрын
Awesome deep dive. I love Hitchcock. He and Tarantino are my fav directors ever. I'll watch anything that has to do with 'em. :D
@batman.darthmaul
Жыл бұрын
Oh, I don't know. I'd say The 39 Steps and The Lady Vanishes are both at least as well known as The Lodger.
@KipVaughan
4 жыл бұрын
Topaz is way better then his early silent films that don't feel like Hitchcock films at all. I didn't necessarily consider Frenzy to be better then many of his other late period films. I don't necessarily consider slow pacing to be a strike against a film. Vertigo's scenes with Scottie following Madeleine were very slow stretch out for several minutes but I haven't heard anyone call those scenes failures.
@acdragonrider
4 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed topaz. I really liked Downhill though
@KipVaughan
4 жыл бұрын
@@acdragonrider I actually don't remember Downhill all that well. It came in a recent Criterion re-issue I own so I am pretty sure I watched it?
@Thespeedrap
4 жыл бұрын
Very good video. I always like Hitchcock filmography.Personally he should had took breaks sometimes.And he could've mentored some aspiring filmmakers. Wish I hope Spike Lee, Scorsese, and Tarantino would do if they get to old.
@charlotteprolific4888
2 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed this video . But the Paradine Case is a great movie!
@Mandibil
4 жыл бұрын
Remember the Tippi Hedren controversy. I think his success of Psycho, made him think he was invincible. The catastrophic outcome of his attempt to buy hinself a female slave with Hedren, destroyed him and his filmmaking. I also believe the censorship restrictions of esrlier days actually helped his creativity. The loosening up in the 60’s and on renoved that necessary creative barrier. Otherwise I completely agree with you on your assesment of his dark age. Except that I also consider Frenzy a failure :-)
@zacharyayotte5553
4 жыл бұрын
Wonderful work!!
@drew96
3 жыл бұрын
Sorry, Torn Curtain, Topaz are creatively FANTASTIC films. Commercial success only one measure.
@bluecollarlit
5 жыл бұрын
This was good.
@EyebrowCinema
5 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Carson. It was a lot of work, but I hope I can make more larger scale videos like this in the future.
@paulpiacentini
3 жыл бұрын
I fondly remember all the 'little' Kubrick films before the mature masterpieces he created in the UK. I hope my point is made. More bloody typical American centricity, I'm afraid.
@reaganwiles_art
4 жыл бұрын
an actor friend claimed that his old buddy was in Family Plot and that Hitch rarely left his limo where he sat drinking cognac
@paulakpacente
Жыл бұрын
Old age is very debilitating. I give Hitchcock for carrying on, and I can't fault him for his last movies.
@GuadalupePicasso
3 жыл бұрын
Yooooo that scene in Torn Curtain when they kill the German spy by stuffing him headfirst into the stove and turning on the gas was intense!
@TheEternalOuroboros
Жыл бұрын
ROPE is my favourite Hitchcock.
@TheEternalOuroboros
Жыл бұрын
Watched Frenzy. My second favourite of his after Rope.
@davidwoods8181
2 жыл бұрын
The visual style of Torn Curtain looks so drab compared to what had come directly beforehand
@DCMarvelMultiverse
4 жыл бұрын
Hitchcock was obsessed with the loss of Grace Kelly. He tried to force himself on Tippi Hedren. He was suffering depression, self esteem issues, and other demons he could no longer suppress. Finally, his sex and gender views were behind the times with the exception of Frenzy. He fell into Giallo/Slasher on that one.
@wyattcorbin1629
4 жыл бұрын
Losing Kelly definitely shackled him to some degree. I like what he did after she got married, and there are some great films in there, but I feel like he dropped off after a while and he wasn’t able to really get the type of female star he wanted.
@casrifay
4 жыл бұрын
He also harassed a Brazilian actress for a Topaz role in their private interview
@acdragonrider
4 жыл бұрын
Wyatt Corbin I feel like losing grace Kelly was a huge loss for him. 😔 bloody Monaco. -.-
@jasoncromwell4206
4 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised that you didn't mention the one film that looms over this period. The one he wanted to make, but wasn't able to because of the constraints Universal put on him. The film was supposed to be an Erotic Thriller that was going to change everything once again. The film though was deemed too sexual and too violent for the Conservative Execs at Universal in the 60s. So, I think after the failure to get the movie made Hitch just tried to produce what he thought they wanted.
@seijunsejuki
7 ай бұрын
I've long maintained Torn Curtain gets a bad rap; I think, other than the admittedly cornball "fire!" scene referenced in this video, that the film is far better than it's critical reputation suggests.
@adnanben-abdellah5605
2 жыл бұрын
Hitchcock films from the 40s 50s and early 60s was his masterpieces. No sex and No nudity. Just a great story.
@haileyshannon7548
4 ай бұрын
Ok, Boomer!
@UntitledShowwithBobandPat
2 жыл бұрын
for most director, they're slump came after two or three decades. Hitchcock's came in hid 6th decade. And it was a continuous climb for the first 5. His best known, most highly regarded films came decades after he was already considered a master film maker. He was praised as the best British director in the 1930s. His first two American films competed against each other for Oscar's best picture. He did a run of Vertigo, North by Northwest, Psycho, and The Birds, and they were his 43rd, 44th, 45th and 46th feature films. Plus I like The Family Plot, it was fun.
@djtforever1414
4 жыл бұрын
Hitchcock is my favourite director. Topaz is underrated. Frenzy is the best of the last 4. Torn Curtain is the weakest of the later years.
@xpindy
4 жыл бұрын
BTW, a score for Torn Curtain by Herrmann does exist and is available.
@Progger11
2 жыл бұрын
Sidney Lumet also successfully evolved with the times and continued to make relevant films in New Hollywood
@jarelllevingston7882
Жыл бұрын
What movie is the scene at 8:28 from? With the hidden gun with the camera
@dd1530
Жыл бұрын
Foreign Correspondent
@jarelllevingston7882
Жыл бұрын
@@dd1530 thanks. I’m going to watch this week. It’s on HBO MAX.
@miked3063
4 жыл бұрын
hitch was also working on a film entitled kaleidoscope, which involved murder and a lesbian love triangle.
@alextttttt
4 жыл бұрын
Don't forget Saul Bass
@dragonskunkstudio7582
4 жыл бұрын
27:14 -You're George McFly. -Yeah so? Who are you?
@ddlp8252
3 жыл бұрын
Excellent essay!
@EricVoegelin
2 жыл бұрын
Physical decline, the cancellation of the TV show and the end of Hitchcock's collaboration with Benard Hermann and Robert Burks are correctly identified here as contributing to his artistic decline after Marnie, but this essay leaves out what I think is the most important contributing factor: his moral collapse after his harassment of Tippi Hedrin and the humiliation it caused his wife and daughter. His inner life had been exposed to himself and his family as immoral, disturbed, criminal. It's the equivalent of Frank Capra naming names and turning in his old collaborators to the witch hunters during the McCarthy era. Neither Capra nor Hitchcock ever recovered after their lack of character became painfully obvious to themselves and their loves ones.
@filmnobelpreis
Жыл бұрын
Some criticism: - Early into your video, you state that the films of the dark ages fail to capture the "zeitgeist". Was that what Hitch was after previously and succeeded or what's the point of that comment? - Later, you criticise the colour palette of Torn Curtain as uninspiring and dull. That was exactly the point of the creators to capture the mood of East Germany. It won't look as vivid as Hatari in a socialist state. - Topaz is not a bad movie, it only is when compared to Hitch's other work, but certainly not compared to the work of other filmmakers. - One of your points is only mentioned in a throwaway fashion, but it might be the most important one. In the 60s, the studio style just looked outdated, especially in colour. Anyway - still a good video and I appreciate the work put into it.
@charlesheck6812
6 ай бұрын
I enjoyed this analysis of Hitchcock, one of my favorite Directors… But honestly, I personally enjoyed Topaz. I liked the actors and I was perfectly OK with the story. It’s big flaw like you said is the ending… which looked like a hurried, last minute compromise. I actually enjoyed the story of Torn Curtain also… I agree there was no chemistry between the stars, but I didn’t find it boring at all--at first. The last third of the film, after the bus ride, did feel uninteresting and even unnecessary. Other than that, I pretty much agree with everything you said.
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