D
Deleted User X18H
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Utterly brilliant film.
Cheers, one of my all time favourite filmsUtterly brilliant film.
Going to Sky Plus that. Cheers for the heads up.
Cheers, one of my all time favourite films
When I was at school in the late(ish) 70's, one of my 'options' was a subject called Film Appreciation. Not being particularly studious, I thought it would be an absolute doss for 2 years just watching films. It was utterly brilliant! We studied The Ealing Comedies, Hitchcock, music scores and such like. I have never been able to watch a film since without wondering why the Director has chosen a particular angle for a shot, etc. Passport To Pimlico was an absolute classic and some of the Hitchcock stuff was bloody good too!
Rear Window. I saw it at the Vancouver film festivalin 84 at the Ridge Theatre. Utterly stunning. Entire film shot in one room. And that Grace Kelly . . . . Crikey
Followed a few days later by Rope (the one filmed as a continuous piece in one take (although it was actually two). I love the scene where Stewart rips those preppy boys a new one over their outrage. Shame Hitchcok sullied his legacy with Frenzy (yuck!).
Yep, Rear Window was excellent. Apart from the camera angle in the shower/stabbing scene in Psycho, my most memorable scene by Hitchcock was at the end of North By Northeast when Cary Grant leans down to grab the hand of Eva-Marie Saint who has fallen over a ridge, and seamlessley moves into him lifting her up into his bunk bed on a train. Hitch was a bloody genius! If I knew how, I'd stick a poll up for his best film. But I don't.
I have yet to see N by NW. I have the dvd. You have whetted my appetite.
That said, I was listening to Danny Baker a few weeks ago who pointed out one flaw, which is that no way would anyone run away from a plane in the same direction as the plane is flying. It is bound to catch you, innit?
Cheers - enjoy your evening
If I knew how, I'd stick a poll up for his best film. But I don't.
Titchfield Thunderbolt is on BBC4 now. It's just started.
When I was at school in the late(ish) 70's, one of my 'options' was a subject called Film Appreciation. Not being particularly studious, I thought it would be an absolute doss for 2 years just watching films. It was utterly brilliant! We studied The Ealing Comedies, Hitchcock, music scores and such like. I have never been able to watch a film since without wondering why the Director has chosen a particular angle for a shot, etc. Passport To Pimlico was an absolute classic and some of the Hitchcock stuff was bloody good too!