Jimmy Stewart suffers from high anxiety in what some consider to be Alfred Hitchcock's greatest film.
Everett Collection
Jimmy Stewart in Vertigo, 1958.
At the risk of sounding slow-witted, I must complain that Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo was a little too difficult for me. I had to concentrate so narrowly on the labyrinth of the plot that I never broke out in the cold sweat which is the emotional reward of a good thriller. Even so, I'm not sure that I could successfully diagram the evil stratagem. Mr. Hitchcock is employing in this film an impressionist manner which is the last word in whodunit sophistication and which relieves the storyteller of the need to demonstrate that the time schedule will work, that the corpse will keep its secrets, or that the various gulls will indeed assume what they are intended to assume. In the end, it is not a murder that inspires entire confidence.
- Vertigo
- directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Stars: James Stewart, Kim Novak.
Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Distributor: Paramount Pictures
Academy Awards: None
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Leopold and Loeb: The Uses of Adversity
Robert Hatch: The memoir of Nathan Leopold, one of the twentieth century's most notorious murderers.
-
Star Wars
Robert Hatch: The only film ever made that could be said to have cost the United States government billions--in a missile defense system that only Hollywood could make work.
-
The Godfather
Robert Hatch: If one Paramount exec had his way, Don Corleone would have been played by Danny Thomas. Fortunately, Francis Coppola had no interest in turning Mario Puzo's novel into Make Room For Goddaddy.
On the credit side, the picture moves rapidly through some pretty San Francisco and Northern California coastal scenery, and James Stewart carries out his detective and romantic assignments with easy grace and warmth. Kim Novak is excellently eye-catching in costumes a size too small for her; she seems stultified, but the plot calls for repressed behavior and I could not tell whether this was a case of good acting or good casting. Barbara Bel Geddes is given an important and faintly sinister role with horn-rimmed glasses; this comes to nothing, however, and that sort of false emphasis is a real defect in the game of crime chess.
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