Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

Outline · [ Standard ] · Linear+

 The Alfred Hitchcock fan thread

views
     
Mov_freak
post May 8 2014, 10:21 PM

aka. Nickelodein Weirdo
Group Icon
Moderator
1,723 posts

Joined: Feb 2009


In honor of Alfred Hitchcock

Frantic (1988)

After 1983 and 1984 (3rd Star Wars and 2nd Indiana Jones) I believe Harrison Ford, tried alot of things to prove that he is a worthy thespian, and this I believe is a very good movie!

Director Roman Polanski having gotten into legal troubles in the States, made States movie in Europe.

It is MY firm believe that this is actually Roman Polanski's love letter to Alfred Hitchcock!!

So I dare say this is the most Hitchcock movie not made by Hitchcock!!

The script, the direction and subject matter, amazingly Hitchcockian!!

American doctor and his wife is in France to attend a conference.

They are making it into a working holiday.

There was a screw up at the airport, and the doctor's wife ended up with the wrong luggage...

The doctor calls the airport to report the screw up, and then takes a shower.

The wife receives a call and went down the lobby... The plot thickens!!

Hitchcock lovers, go watch this. You know you want to... laugh.gif

Oh! I do believe Liam Neeson's Unknown (2011) did copy the first one third of the movie!! tongue.gif

As always, My Two Sen.

This post has been edited by Mov_freak: May 9 2014, 01:30 PM
Mov_freak
post May 18 2014, 10:46 AM

aka. Nickelodein Weirdo
Group Icon
Moderator
1,723 posts

Joined: Feb 2009


QUOTE(skylinelover @ May 17 2014, 04:55 PM)
haha interesting review there laugh.gif rclxms.gif
*
You are too kind
Mov_freak
post Nov 30 2014, 11:10 PM

aka. Nickelodein Weirdo
Group Icon
Moderator
1,723 posts

Joined: Feb 2009


Foreign Correspondent (1940)

Put this on a couple of weeks back and was really excited.

It is not usual for me to find an Alfred Hitchcock movie I have not seen before.

I have to tell you, my expectation was high... and after watching the movie...

This is a strange movie...

The plot is so... overly convoluted, it absolutely makes NO SENSE!!

In my opinion, I believe Hitchcock had made so many similar movie, he got bored, and this movie suffered for it...

The "highlight" of the movie
» Click to show Spoiler - click again to hide... «
was so... unbelievable and the last frame of the movie was basically a US poster for selling War Bonds (this movie was just before Pearl Harbour incident) so am actually puzzled by this.

This movie actually deminish Hitchcock a bit in my eyes...

I was disappointed, or could it be, I expected too much...

This movie was release the same year as Rebecca (1940) (Hitchcock first American movie) and I love Rebecca much much more...

My Two Sen
Mov_freak
post Dec 2 2014, 10:42 AM

aka. Nickelodein Weirdo
Group Icon
Moderator
1,723 posts

Joined: Feb 2009


QUOTE(6so @ Dec 2 2014, 09:37 AM)
There will never be an autofocus cinema lens to begin with. To be technical the cinema lenses are a different category from dslr camera altogether. Until today when you uses Red camera or Arri Alexa,all lenses strictly on manual focussing so it's viable to use those lens on various camera body and to build the best optical lens already took up a lot of weight and volume,so it's impractical to slap another motor that are proficient and silent in every single focal length.Furthermore until today the technology isn't there yet to replace a human focus puller as the calculation simply couldn't keep up with the precision of a human hand-eye tracking a moving subject.The closest autofocus you can get is on a motion control rig but all point to point focus are pre-calibrated during rehearsal.Just to be clear.

Chroma key (green/blue and in rare cases red) only happens efficiently during the mid-90's as it uses COMPUTER software to do clean-up.Before that all either practical optical illusion or optical background projection or frame by frame painting/erasing or even sandwiching two different negatives to make a single negative.Hence you saw a different exposure of the attacking bird to overlap the background plate that gives away the crude outline.Pre Star Wars era,majority of effects shot are limited only to static framing (not counting jittery stop motion) as fluid 3 axis movement simply unfeasible before the invention of motion control rig when comes to compositing elements.
*
I hope for our sake you are in the local movie industry!! nod.gif
Mov_freak
post Dec 8 2014, 05:04 PM

aka. Nickelodein Weirdo
Group Icon
Moderator
1,723 posts

Joined: Feb 2009


North by Northwest (1959)

For the life of me, I cannot understand, how I had watched this movie a couples of time and not posted a review of this movie here...

I am really REALLY getting old.

My, Hitchcock sure liked Cary Grant. He had appeared in Hitchcock's, Suspicion (1941), Notorious (1946), To Catch a Thief (1955) & North by Northwest (1959).

SO much so, that one would question if Cary Grant knew that it is actually director Stanley Donen who directed Charade (1963) (a Hitchcock-ish movie) and not Hitchcock!! laugh.gif

Being one of Hitchcock's best known works, I don't know if there is any additional information I can add to this except for

1) Paramount Pictures contracted Hitchcock out to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) to do this, and after the success of this movie, Paramount supposedly pressured Hitchcock for another "North by Northwest-ish" project for Paramount and Hitchcock said no. Hitchcock then approach Paramount with Psycho and because of the subject matter, Paramount refused to fund the movie, and Hitchcock himself had to come up with the money for Psycho instead but he was under contract to make another 2/3 movies for Paramount... A solution was devised, Hitchcock would fund Psycho and Paramount would distribute and they would split the profits (if any). Allegedly, the movie was made under USD 1,000,000 and it went on to make USD 32,000,000. So, everyone was happy!!

2) After this movie, Hitchcock did offer Grant another role in his movie, namely, Torn Curtain (1965), and Grant declined, on the ground that he was already working on his last movie, Walk, Don't Run (1966) and would retire after that. Paul Newman got the role in Torn Curtains instead and allegedly, Paul and Hitchcock DID NOT GET ALONG.... Hitchcock swore he would never work with another "big star" after that, and he never did...

Oh, one last thing... If they had handphones back then, this movie's plot would not had worked... tongue.gif

My Two Sen

This post has been edited by Mov_freak: Dec 8 2014, 05:20 PM
Mov_freak
post Apr 5 2016, 10:52 AM

aka. Nickelodein Weirdo
Group Icon
Moderator
1,723 posts

Joined: Feb 2009


QUOTE(skylinelover @ Apr 2 2016, 08:31 AM)
time 2 revive back the classic thread laugh.gif rclxms.gif
haha based on your trivia,,,can i add that he had also successfully ended a "small star" career named TIPPI HEDREN that infamously starred in MARNIE who is mom 2 melanie griffith ohmy.gif with his SPECIAL TIED CONTRACT towards her so that he can sex her off the camera

when she suddenly grew stronger dominantly,,,he had vowed 2 end her career AT ALL COSTS which had successfully destroyed her entire career after MARNIE devil.gif speaking of harsh brutality in showbiz work eh puke.gif

even COUNTESS IN HONG KONG by charlie chaplin the following year cannot revive back miss hedren career anymore mega_shok.gif 

what a shame 2 the potential big star who should be following the footsteps of the previous hitchcock babes like ingrid bergman,,,marlene dietrich,,,doris day,,,grace kelly,,,kim novak,,,eva marie saint,,,vera miles today bye.gif

by the way,,,got TV movie depicted the saga of hitchcock very obsessed with hedren during MARNIE filming
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Girl_%282012_TV_film%29
you can check and let me know what you think of the biography icon_idea.gif  icon_idea.gif
*
Thanks for that, I did not know that bit of trivia!!

Also, interesting how you "bumped" this when I just got pristine copies of The 39 Steps (1935) and The Wrong Man (1956)!!

Will put their reviews here

Cheers

 

Change to:
| Lo-Fi Version
0.0220sec    0.84    6 queries    GZIP Disabled
Time is now: 18th December 2025 - 05:12 PM