DVD special features: The Birds: All About The Birds - Making Of, Tippi Hedren's Screen Test, Universal News Reel Stories x 2, Storyboard Sequence: Deleted Scene (Script Pages), Alternative Ending (Sketches & Storyboards), Production Photographs. Family Plot: Plotting Family Plot - Making Of, Storyboards. Frenzy: The Story .. Read more
| Starring | James Stewart, Kim Novak, Barbara Bel Geddes, Henry Jones |
|---|---|
| Director | Alfred Hitchcock |
| Genres | Thriller |
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In one of the truly great later Hitchcocks, James Stewart plays the retired cop with a terror of heights who's hired by Tom Helmore to follow his suicidal wife, Kim Novak. Stewart falls in love with the enigmatic blonde but can't prevent her falling to her death. Some months later he spots a woman (also played by Novak) who bears an uncanny resemblance to the dead woman, and is drawn into a complex web of deceit. Novak gives her greatest performance, while the darker side of Stewart shatters his all-American Mr Nice Guy persona. A hallucinatory movie, of dreamlike revelations in its glistening San Francisco locations, it remains one of the most painful depictions of romantic fatalism in all of cinema.
Double identity thriller which has many sequences in Hitchcock's best style. A film as unsettling as the phobia it deals with, keeping its audience dizzy and off balance throughout.
Brilliant but despicably cynical view of human obsession and the tendency of those in love to try to manipulate each... read more on Time Out
Beautifully and powerfully directed, visually pleasing, with the same passion the French story line carries.
Mesmeric, obsessive, and well acted.
A love story with a sad series of twists.
Not about, as some would have it, male dominance, and control.
No, far more subtle, and psychological in nature.
A story of cruel triple betrayal, manipulation, breakdown, obsessive love, repentance and giving, hurt, anger and love, all mixed very effectively and with tragic results.
You feel for both the main characters played by J. Steward and Kim Novak in different ways, forgetting the one who really deserves your sympathy completely.
James Steward plays his role under Hitchcocks direction perfectly, Novaks Hyde to Dr. Jeckel transformation is stunningly effective.
Possibly one of the greatest films of all time, Hitchcock's masterpiece sends your head into a spin time and time again. James Stewart is on blistering form, a long time collaborator of Hitchcock's - still amazing to think that Hitchcock never won an Oscar for best director - perhaps that reflects the true worth of the Academy Awards. C'est La Vie!
Vertigo is Hitchcock in peerless form. It is him at his sharpest and his darkest, and it is a movie which remains unrivalled to this day. It was made during Hitchcocks golden years, which also included North by Northwest and Psycho. It even surpasses these two wonderful films.
The key to this film is its meticulous timing. Its pacing is superb. It allows the film to breathe, without allowing it to drag on. The viewer sees through the eyes of James Stewarts character during the first part of the movie, as we too become enchanted by this mysterious woman. Stewart successfully conveys the multitude of his emotions that his character goes through, and does in a powerfully subtle manner. Kim Novak sustains the allure that surrounds her character; her and Stewart share a chemistry that is rarely seen on-screen.
Despite all this, the films main strength is its plot, which has clearly inspired so many subsequent movies in this genre. Both the beginning and end of the movie remain imprinted in the viewers brain long after watching the movie.
If there were a list of five modern cinematic masterpieces that must be seen, this would surely be one of them.
It's easy to see why 'Vertigo' didn't prove a big hit when it was first released. As a thriller it's very unconventional, revealing all its surprises in one go, 20 minutes before the end of the film. It also features some very unsympathetic characters: an obsessive ex-cop who falls in love with a married woman, and a similar-looking girl whom he forcibly re-casts in the mould of his true love.
But thanks to Hitchcock's incredible knack for composition, colour and camerawork - as well as some brilliantly complex character development - 'Vertigo' becomes a passionate, beautiful piece of cinema. From the haunting painting of Carlotta to the final set-piece in the mission bell tower, the emotional turmoil of two lovers caught in a savage web of obsession never weakens.
Proof that subtle psychological studies can be more effective and memorable than the narrative of events...
Although Hitchcock thought Novak to be vulgar, she needed a common touch for half of her role and used it to the maximum to provide the central dramatic turning point of the thriller. But, really, this film is only superficially a thriller - the far deeper and much more disturbing narrative is Hitchcock's fascination with and horror of women. The story enables him to control the appearance and behaviour of a woman in minute and misogynistic detail, before punishing her twice over for the power she can exert over men. Stewart is both an instrument of the director and a victim of the woman, with an obsession for her that borders on the criminal and a phobia which is really a symbol of his fear of submitting. Although Hitchcock's treatment of women in his other films (The Birds, Psycho, Marnie) was more obviously violent, Vertigo remains one of the most voyeuristic and sexually chilling films ever.
Beautifully and powerfully directed, visually pleasing, with the same passion the French story line carries.
Mesmeric, obsessive, and well acted.
A love story with a sad series of twists.
Not about, as some would have it, male dominance, and control.
No, far more subtle, and psychological in nature.
A story of cruel triple betrayal, manipulation, breakdown, obsessive love, repentance and giving, hurt, anger and love, all mixed very effectively and with tragic results.
You feel for both the main characters played by J. Steward and Kim Novak in different ways, forgetting the one who really deserves your sympathy completely.
James Steward plays his role under Hitchcocks direction perfectly, Novaks Hyde to Dr. Jeckel transformation is stunningly effective.
Possibly one of the greatest films of all time, Hitchcock's masterpiece sends your head into a spin time and time again. James Stewart is on blistering form, a long time collaborator of Hitchcock's - still amazing to think that Hitchcock never won an Oscar for best director - perhaps that reflects the true worth of the Academy Awards. C'est La Vie!
Vertigo is Hitchcock in peerless form. It is him at his sharpest and his darkest, and it is a movie which remains unrivalled to this day. It was made during Hitchcocks golden years, which also included North by Northwest and Psycho. It even surpasses these two wonderful films.
The key to this film is its meticulous timing. Its pacing is superb. It allows the film to breathe, without allowing it to drag on. The viewer sees through the eyes of James Stewarts character during the first part of the movie, as we too become enchanted by this mysterious woman. Stewart successfully conveys the multitude of his emotions that his character goes through, and does in a powerfully subtle manner. Kim Novak sustains the allure that surrounds her character; her and Stewart share a chemistry that is rarely seen on-screen.
Despite all this, the films main strength is its plot, which has clearly inspired so many subsequent movies in this genre. Both the beginning and end of the movie remain imprinted in the viewers brain long after watching the movie.
If there were a list of five modern cinematic masterpieces that must be seen, this would surely be one of them.
Vertigo is probably one of the best collaborations between James Stewart and the legendary director Alfred Hitchcock.
Set in San Franciso, John Ferguson (Stewart) suffers will agoraphobia after an accident whilst serving in the police force. Now retired, Ferguson is asked by a friend to follow his wife who has started to develop some suspicious character traits. Typically, Ferguson is drawn to the woman and starts to believe her story. As the fim develops all is not what it seems, leading Ferguson into a pschyological spiral and obsesiveness.
Stewart is brilliant as ever and Hitchcock's direction is masterful. Considering this film was made over 40 years ago, it still feels fresh and innovative. The only reason it doesn't get five stars is that Rear Window is the best Hitchcock film ever made and nothing is really on a par with.
Wow.
I mean it.
I've been endeavouring to see this film for so long now, as I have been assured by University lecturers that this is a must-see for any filmmaker. And they were not wrong. I was drawn into this film very early on, and couldn't take my eyes off this beautifully restored version of Hitchcock's masterpiece for the entire duration.
Every shot looks good, the level of cinematographic talent on display here is astonishing. It beats Psycho any day of the week. Ignore those that say this is a 'slow' film, it just takes it's time, but it never lets you get bored, the well-rounded characters are too interesting for that! And of course there's those oh-so-famous-and-perma-imitated shots which are a filmmaking benchmark for originality.
This is a film about obsession, and it is easy to see why people get obsessed about this film...
I am now.
Not just as good as NBNW or Rear Window - this is still razor sharp direction and a classic tale of mystery by the best in the business.
This was so woeful it was unbelievable. Don't get me wrong, im a Hitchcock fan, however this was pretentious and dull. One to miss. James Stewart is sickening in this, I hate him in it. A ghastly, woeful and unpleasant film. Avoid at all costs.
so much so it ruined all that prceded it.
Perhaps I missed something but the tale lacks suspense and is far too long. You really don't care about the twist by the end.
Can't see what all the fuss is about, I feel duped by all the rave reviews. Definately NOT a classic.
In one of the truly great later Hitchcocks, James Stewart plays the retired cop with a terror of heights who's hired by Tom Helmore to follow his suicidal wife, Kim Novak. Stewart falls in love with the enigmatic blonde but can't prevent her falling to her death. Some months later he spots a woman (also played by Novak) who bears an uncanny resemblance to the dead woman, and is drawn into a complex web of deceit. Novak gives her greatest performance, while the darker side of Stewart shatters his all-American Mr Nice Guy persona. A hallucinatory movie, of dreamlike revelations in its glistening San Francisco locations, it remains one of the most painful depictions of romantic fatalism in all of cinema.
Double identity thriller which has many sequences in Hitchcock's best style. A film as unsettling as the phobia it deals with, keeping its audience dizzy and off balance throughout.
Brilliant but despicably cynical view of human obsession and the tendency of those in love to try to manipulate each... read more on Time Out