Alfred Hitchcock - Tumblr Posts
Movie number 19: The Wrong Man (Alfred Hitchcock, 1956). Henry Fonda stars as ‘Manny’ Balestrero, a Stork Club musician wrongly arrested for robbery. Unusually for Hitchcock, The Wrong Man is a true story and befitting the subject he shoots in a stark documentary style on the real life locations on which the story takes place. The director cameo, gallows humour and exotic locales which characterise much his 1950’s oeuvre is absent in what is Hitchcock’s most serious work. Fonda is excellent in the role of Manny, conveying fear and bemusement with complete conviction. Vera Miles is equally convincing as his wife whose descent into mental illness is, thankfully, handled with sensitivity and taste. Support comes in the form of underrated British Star Anthony Quayle. Lacking the glossy flamboyance of much of the director’s mid/late 50s movies, The Wrong Man is none the worse for it. This was a first time view for me and I would certainly regard it as among Hitchcock’s finest work. #thewrongman #alfredhitchcock #henryfonda #veramiles #anthonyquayle #filmnoir #hollywood #classichollywood #vintagehollywood #goldenagehollywood #jinglebonesmoviereviews #jinglebonesmovietime #jinglebonesnewyearsresolution #everymovieiwatch2019
Movie number 64: There Ain’t No Justice (Pen Tennyson, 1939).
A lightweight drama from Ealing’s early years, There Ain’t No Justice stars Jimmy Hanley as mechanic turned boxer Tommy Mutch. After a promising start to his career Mutch quits fighting on learning his bouts are fixed. He later returns to the ring in order to pay a family debt but refuses to take a dive as demanded by a corrupt manager.
Hanley made a career from playing amiable types but is woefully miscast here. As a fighter he is unconvincing in both his physicality and his performance. This unfortunate casting is detrimental to an already dramatically weak picture. It is further hampered by the broad ‘cockerney geezer’ stereotypes of the supporting characters.
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock’s former Assistant Director Pen Tennyson, it is for the most part, not up to the standard of even Hitchcock’s weakest efforts. However, one scene depicting an attempted suicide displays a brilliant use of editing to create tension and is so good it feels like it belongs in a different film. This sequence alone makes the movie worth watching.
Tennyson directed two further, more distinguished movies: The Proud Valley (1940) and Convoy (1940), both at Ealing. He was tragically killed in a plane crash in 1941, ending a career which showed much early promise.
Released the same year as the pugilist classic Golden Boy (Rouben Mamoulian), There Ain’t No Justice is nowhere near as good a movie. Indeed, it’s not very good at all. It lacks the authenticity to appeal to boxing fans and the dramatic impetuous to appeal to movie fans. Worth a look for Ealing completists or for any admirers of Mr Hanley but markedly less rewarding for casual viewers.
Movie number 65: The Silent Passenger (Reginald Denham, 1935).
Dorothy L Sayers’ amateur sleuth Lord Peter Wimsey makes his big screen debut in this original story, written by Sayers with screenwriter Basil Mason.
When a man in wrongly accused of murdering his philandering wife’s lover Lord Peter Wimsey steps in to prove his innocence. The action largely takes place on board train from London to Dover and benefits from location shot on actual stations.
Made three years before another great train bound mystery, The Lady Vanishes (Alfred Hitchcock, 1938), The Silent Passenger pales in comparison to the later movie. Yet this slightly creaky thriller actually surpasses its obvious ‘B’ movie origins and really isn’t bad at all. Admittedly, it’s not much of a mystery as the audience know the identity of the murderer from the outset. But its climactic chase through a locomotive repair shop and into the pathway of an oncoming train is genuinely exciting. Peter Haddon hams it up nicely as Wimsey and it has its share of humorous moments as well as minor thrills. It is no classic by any means, but does have an old fashioned charm nonetheless.
WE’RE NOT MARRIED (Dir: Edmund Goulding, 1952).
Covering similar ground to the earlier Mr and Mrs Smith (Alfred Hitchcock, 1941), We're Not Married is a portmanteau comedy in which, due to a jurisdictional error, five couples discover they are no longer married.
On Christmas Eve, a newly appointed justice of the peace (Victor Moore) marries the first of five couples, ignorant to the fact that his appointment does not take effect until January. This comes to light a few years later when each pair is informed of the mishap. The movie follows each couple as they respond to the news in different ways.
Although its strands are loosely connected, We're Not Married cannot overcome feeling like a series of sketches, some of which are, inevitably, better than others. For me the weakest of the bunch was the one which is granted the most screentime. Top billed Ginger Rogers and Fred Allen star as the Gladwyns, a pair of radio hosts whose contracts deem they are a married couple. I found the constant bickering between the two rather tiresome, although it does feature some neat satirical swipes at commercial radio.
Far more appealing is the sequence with Marilyn Monroe as a Mississippi beauty queen and her stay at home husband David Wayne. Monroe's appeal, in what was one of her first significant roles, in readily apparent; easily holding her own among a cast of much bigger names. The other highlight is the episode with soldier Eddie Bracken and his pregnant wife Mitzi Gaynor. With Bracken about to be shipped to Hawaii, the sequence is a sweetly old fashioned reminder of the mores of an earlier age.
Less successful are the remaining segments, with Eve Arden as the long suffering wife of philanderer Paul Douglas and, Louis Calhern and Zsa Zsa Gabor as a warring couple on the verge of divorce. Both have their amusing moments but suffer from dated, some would argue sexist, humour.
Not a perfect movie, and some ways off from being a classic, We’re Not Married is still worth a watch thanks to some genuine high spots and its roster of vintage Hollywood stars.
A longer review of WE’RE NOT MARRIED is available on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME! Link below.
THE CASTLE OF CAGLIOSTRO (Dir: Hayao Miyazaki, 1979).
Originally titled ルパン三世 カリオストロの城, The Castle of Cagliostro is an animated action adventure, the feature film debut for director Hayao Miyazaki.
Master thief Arsene Lupin III and his cohort Jigen stumble upon an international counterfeit operation after a daring raid on a swanky Monte Carlo casino results in a haul of fake cash. Tracing the operation to the small country of Cagliostro, they come up against the crooked Count Cagliostro when attempting to rescue a damsel in distress, his intended bride Clarisse. Meanwhile Lupin's nemisis Inspector Zenigata is hot on his trail.
Read the full review on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME! Link below.
𝕹𝖔𝖗𝖒𝖆𝖓 𝕭𝖆𝖙𝖊𝖘
I’m not a huge fan of Hitchcock, but this one is amazing.
My name is Thornhill, Roger Thornhill. It’s never been anything else.
North by Northwest (1959) dir. Alfred Hitchcock
"I don’t want to film a ‘slice of life’ because people can get that at home, in the street, or even in front of the movie theater. They don’t have to pay money to see a slice of life. And I avoid out-and-out fantasy because people should be able to identify with the characters. Making a film means, first of all, to tell a story. That story can be an improbable one, but it should never be banal. It must be dramatic and human. What is drama, after all, but life with the dull bits cut out. The next factor is the technique of film-making, and in this connection I am against virtuosity for its own sake. Technique should enrich the action. One doesn’t set the camera at a certain angle just because the cameraman happens to be enthusiastic about that spot. The only thing that matters is whether the installation of the camera at a given angle is going to give the scene its maximum impact. The beauty of the image and movement, the rhythm and the effects—everything must be subordinate to the purpose."
Alfred Hitchcock August 13, 1899 — April 29, 1980
North by Northwest (1959)
I love discussions about the cinematic forefathers of The Assassination of Gianni Versace.
Murderers Who Fuck: Morality and Representation in Swoon and The Assassination of Gianni Versace
Alfred Hitchcock was one of the bad ones. He was a notorious bully who had little if any respect for his collaborators, especially the actresses. Hitchcock was, to say the least, heterosexual. His obsession with women often seen on screen was even more present in his personal and on-set life. The worst (known) example is the emotional and sexual abuse of Tippi Hedren that ultimately ended her career. This is all to say, Alfred Hitchcock is certainly one of the least likely figures in the history of queer cinema. Yet, for better or worse, he’s also one of the most important.
Hitchcock’s obsession with women was part of a larger interest in various psychosexual behavior. Starting with The Lodger, a silent film many consider his first masterpiece, Hitchcock cast out gay actors (or as out as one could be in the 20s) to play leads and villains within scripts that were themselves rather coded. Films like Rebecca, Rope, Strangers on a Train, and Psycho all feature major queer characters. And while I struggle to get over Psycho inadvertently beginning the toxic trend of trans women killers in film, I absolutely adore the devilish queerness of the others. That’s the big question though. The trend of queer people, especially trans women, being portrayed as killers is one of the most damaging cases of misrepresentation in media. So how can I so adore a misogynistic, heterosexual director who only featured queer people as murderers?
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We can maybe find the answer in Tom Kalin’s 1992 New Queer Cinema classic, Swoon (co-written by Hilton Als). Like Hitchcock’s Rope, Swoon takes its inspiration from the famous Leopold and Loeb case. In 1924 two male lovers decided to kill a fourteen-year-old boy… just because they could. The lack of motive and salacious details of homosexuality turned this into one of the most famous cases of the 20th century, inspiring several books, Rope, and a third movie, 1959’s Compulsion. When Kalin’s film came out it inspired a large amount of backlash, and continues to do so when it gets screened. Why, when so few films have been made about gay people, did a third film need to be made about these gay killers? Isn’t it dangerous to continue to spread these stereotypes, especially in 1992 in the midst of the AIDS crisis?
Tom Kalin responded: “I believe in equal opportunity homicide. I also want to claim the right to kill with rage and murder for irrational reasons and obsessive passion in the same way heterosexuals have had the latitude to do so in the history of storytelling since storytelling has begun.”
One needs only to watch the sanitized plea that is the following year’s AIDS film Philadelphia to know what culture Kalin was pushing against. There’s a removal of sexuality from homosexuality and insistence of Sydney Poitier in Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner level perfection demanded for any progress. And Kalin was saying “fuck you” to that. He’s right. The entire genre of film noir is filled with cases of sympathetic straight people committing all sorts of horrific acts. Kalin, and Greg Araki with his film The Living End (also 1992), asked, why can’t there be a gay Double Indemnity? Why can’t there be a gay Bonnie and Clyde?
Of course, there were plenty of coded gay villains in early Hollywood. But Hitchcock was unique in how he portrayed them. Peter Lorre’s sniveling Cairo in The Maltese Falcon is obviously intended to be gay, but he exists almost solely as a foil to Bogart’s masculine Samuel Spade. He’s not just bad morally, he’s bad narratively. He holds no power, has no arc, is more of an amusement and a plot point than a person. Hitchcock’s villains had power and their queerness was present on screen. There is a clear love and clear sexuality in Rope and Rebecca. We see fully developed desires even when, like Mrs. Danvers, they’re a supporting character. They’re not jokes. They’re complicated, damaged, sometimes evil, often tragic, human beings. Cairo is gay because he’s effeminate and weak. The leads of Rope are gay because they’re fucking each other.
Swoon takes this approach into a post-code world. The film has more sex and more love than it does murder. We see Leopold’s romantic obsession with Loeb and understand his motive the same way we understand the allure of Barbara Stanwyck or Faye Dunaway. Kalin also emphasizes the way people were as appalled by their homosexuality as they were their murder. This is highlighted in a particularly telling scene where all of the women in the courtroom are asked to leave when homosexuality is being discussed after being allowed to stay for the gruesome details of the real crime. Suddenly the film suggests something rather startling. If Leopold and Loeb were raised to believe their homosexuality, an integral part of themselves, was an unforgivable sin, then how were they supposed to know any better with other moral questions? Maybe murder, like fucking, would feel good and right once it happened. Kalin doesn’t go as far as declaring this, but he does ask the question. And while it’s fascinating and liberating it’s also incredibly dangerous. Not because Swoon was going to inspire a bunch of queer people to go become killers, but because it might give homophobic audience members exactly the excuse they were looking for.
Swoon made $340,000 at the box office. Philadelphia made $77 million. While the cultural impact of Hitchcock’s filmography is unclear, I think it’s fair to say Swoon played mostly to gay and gay-friendly audiences who safely grappled with the questions posed. But how could a similar work play to a contemporary mainstream audience? Is it possible to raise these issues on a larger scale without scaring off the straights? How could that be done? It took until this year to find out.
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My main goal in writing 750 words on an early 90s art film was to convince you all to watch American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace. Bare with me. I’m a much better film nerd than I am social media influencer. But I’m here to say Ryan Murphy’s follow up to the blockbuster People vs. OJ, is a masterpiece of queer storytelling and television in general.
I knew almost nothing about Versace or his killer Andrew Cunanan prior to watching the show. But its initially messy, eventually brilliant, structure takes care of this. The show begins with Versace’s death and essentially works backwards, so the entire audience knows just about everything that’s going to happen before we see what came before. This immediately desensationalizes the story, removing the element of surprise and replacing it with character development and a suspenseful dread. Hitchcock’s famously scoffed at surprise in favor of suspense (google his bomb under the table example if you didn’t go to film school).
While the format is certainly bold, the show’s greatest narrative trick is how little it’s actually about the titular fashion designer. The first episode promises an OJ-style star-studded look at Versace (Ricky Martin as his lover! Penelope Cruz as his sister!), but then he just about disappears. The show becomes almost exclusively about Cunanan and the other victims. And oh what a character Cunanan turns out to be. They may both be based on real people, but it’s impossible not to see Rope and Swoon’s takes on Richard Loeb in Darren Criss’s wonderful portrayal of Cunanan. They share a sociopathic arrogance that’s as captivating as it is terrifying. With the nine-hour time frame we’re able to see Andrew both as the classic charming serial killer and a pathetic, rejected man who desperately wants love, acceptance, and validation. The show is also incredibly responsible in its portrayal of his violence, not dwelling on the gore, but still creating some of the most disturbing scenes I’ve ever seen on television. We may grow to understand Cunanan, we may sympathize with him, but the show will not let us forget what he did.
Andrew was gay. And his homosexuality plays a key role in his modus operandi. It factors into his unquenchable desire for acceptance and it determined who his victims were. A self-hating romantic rival, a disinterested ex-lover, a closeted married man, a celebrity whose success allowed him to be himself. The character of Andrew Cunanan is pretty much a perfect queer villain. Not only does he have the dangerously seductive Hitchcock intrigue, but his life and crimes are intrinsically connected to his sexuality. It’s fascinating to watch, but we’re no longer talking about a black and white, avant-garde indie film. This is the follow-up to an FX series that won nine Emmy awards. Even if it didn’t build the same buzz (which it unfortunately has not) many eyes would be on this show, many belonging to straight people. A character like Andrew Cunanan suddenly becomes rather dangerous representation, especially when shown in this full and human of a way.
And this is where the show really succeeds. Because Andrew is not the only gay character the show cares about. Nor is it only Andrew and Versace, whose celebrity would automatically create a remove from the audience. No. Because three out of four of Cunanan’s other victims were themselves gay, and the show makes sure to devote entire episodes to Jeffrey Trail, David Madson, and Lee Miglin. It also spends time with Cunanan’s one-time sugar daddy Norman Blachford, Cunanan’s drug-addicted acquaintance Ronnie Holston, and Versace’s longtime lover Antonio D’Amico. Through these characters the show is able to deeply explore such varied queer issues as being a gay marine during Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, expectations of masculinity, closeted marriages, self-hatred, coming out to family, coming out at work, poverty, sex work, and lack of security when you are unable to legally marry your partner. Yes, Cunanan is allowed to be the full, terrifying villain he was, but the show’s humanizing of various queer archetypes and individuals doesn’t stop there. It solves the problem of potentially negative representation by balancing it with plenty of positive representation, and, more importantly, plenty of neutral representation.
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During Versace’s finale, Ronnie Holston is being interrogated about Andrew’s whereabouts when he says the following: “You know the truth is. You were disgusted by him long before he became disgusting. You’re so used to us lurking in the shadows. And, you know, most of us, we oblige. People like me, we drift away, we get sick, nobody cares. But Andrew was vain. He wanted you to know about his pain. He wanted you to hear. He wanted you to know about being born a lie. Andrew is not hiding. He’s trying to be seen.”
Homophobia in no way justifies Andrew’s crimes. But it partially explains them. And in all of these examples from Hitchcock to Swoon to this show, it’s incredibly liberating to see characters who completely disregard respectability politics in the most extreme of ways. Not because any of these people should be admired, but because we deserve to see the full scope of our humanity on screen like straight white people get to all the time. Evil and cruelty are a part of that humanity whether we like it or not. I’m not saying let’s print Andrew Cunanan’s face on a t-shirt like a misguided teenage boy with A Clockwork Orange. But Andrew Cunanan was a real person, Leopold and Loeb were real people. They are a part of queer history.
We deserve to see our entire history on-screen.
Grace Kelly’s black and white dress in Rear Window (1954) in black and white (requested by anonymous)
Alfred Hitchcock imitando a Ringo Starr, 1964.
Grace Kelly, Dial M for Murder - Alfred Hitchcock (1954)
Valeria Burzo
Blackram Hall: whodunit, murder mystery, hardboiled, pulp, crime, thriller, italian giallo, noir and neo-noir, detectives and serial killers, spy stories, vintage, manor houses, art, life and death. Avatar pic by Mitchell Turek
Another fake poster I drew, this time for Rope (1948)!! Another one of my favs :))
Inktober, day thirty-one
Tippi Hedren and a crow friend
Ink / pen / graphite / 2015