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Hitchcock's Most Cruel and Brilliant Trick: The Five Lost Hitchcocks


For much of his career -- particularly from 1955 on , when he had both a hit weekly TV series AND was putting out some of the biggest hits and greatest classics of his career -- Alfred Hitchcock was several things. A great commercial filmmaker of action, suspense and horror(Psycho) . A great ARTISTIC filmmaker in his style. A great showman ("ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S ...')

..and a great businessman, who made money off his movies, his TV show, and ancillary products like short story books, a "Mystery Magazine" and even record albums.

The businessman, the showman, and the filmmaker came together in a cruel and brilliant way, however, when Hitchcock made an announcement in the early 70s:

He was "taking away" five of his films, including two of his greatest classics. They would no longer be shown on network television(ABC, NBC, CBS), or on local TV stations on the Late Show. They would not be shown at "revival theaters" that were particularly popular in Los Angeles and New York. They would not be shown on college campuses, where revival classics were also popular.

This was before the advent of cable TV in a big way(though HBO launched in the 70's) and it was before VHS tape rentals came about. Still -- Hitchcock fans were used to seeing their favorite Hitchcock movies on TV and in revival houses, and Hitchcock simply took them away.

These became the "lost Hitchcock 5" (in chronological order and by studio)

Rope(1948) Transatlantic/Warners
Rear Window(1954) Paramount
The Trouble With Harry(1955) Paramount
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956) Paramount
Vertigo(1958) Paramount

So...

Four Paramount films (out of the six that Hitchcock made for that studio)
One "Transatlantic film"(with Warners as distributor)

And the reason that Hitchcock could take them away :

He OWNED The Trouble With Harry , The Man Who Knew Too Much, and Vertigo.
He OWNED Rope
He did NOT own Rear Window -- but it was caught up in a legal battle that removed it from circulation -- and Hitchcock elected to MILK that.

Hitchcock announced not only that he was personally removing the five films from circulation but that we would all have to wait for something in particular before Hitchcock would bring them back:

Hitchcock would have to DIE.

Imagine the cruelty of that. To see five lost Hitchcock movies -- including two considered among his absolute best(Rear Window and Vertigo) we had to wait for(ROOT for?) the old man to die.

It was a beautiful act of self-homage, yes? It allowed Hitchcock the Showman to live on past his own DEATH. He said "I intend to provide for my family by having these films released as an Alfred Hitchcock film festival after my death."

I doubt he REALLY needed to provide for his family. They would be rich enough from the TV series and Psycho's earnings.

No, I think Hitchcock was really making a power play: to be a respected and reknowned NEW director AFTER his death.

Having lived through this drought, I think I should mention that part of the problem was that we never really knew when we were going to get the Five Lost Hitchcocks back.

When Hitchcock died in April of 1980, the door was effectively opened...but we still didn't know when the films would come back.

It turned out to be three long years after Hitchcock's death -- Rear Window and Vertigo came back to art houses at the end of 1983(fall for Rear Window; Xmas for Vertigo.) The "lesser" ones -- The Trouble With Harry, Rope, and The Man Who Knew Too Much -- came back to art houses in the first half of 1984.

And as 1984 drifted into 1985, the Five Lost Hitchcocks suddenly got all sorts of circulation -- on VHS tape(to buy or to rent); on cable TV channels; and in revival houses( a few were still left.)

It all worked like a charm, just like Hitchcock predicted. He was HOT again...dead three years. One article said "The best movie of 1983 was made in 1954"(Rear Window.) Another article said "the best director of 1983 has been dead for three years." And these movies DID make money as nostalgia-crazed audiences turned out to see them in theaters and to rent or buy the VHS tapes.

Some "sidebar trivia" about the return of the Five Lost Hitchcocks:

ONE: Shirley MacLaine's first movie was " The Trouble With Harry" in 1955. She was a nobody, as was male lead John Forsythe, who went on to a TV series career(at Hitchcock's urging) afterward.

But came March of 1984 and the re-release of The Trouble With Harry, MacLaine had just won an Oscar for Terms of Endearment and Forsythe was riding high on Dynasty. So The Trouble with Harry could be promoted as having "two big stars of TV and screen."

CONT

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TWO: Whereas Rear Window, The Trouble With Harry, The Man Who Knew Too Much, and Vertigo ALL got network TV play in the 60s and early 70s, I don't think that Rope ever did. It was the TRUE lost Hitchcock when it came back in 1984. I wonder why it got no TV airplay before then? The unbroken takes?(Commercials would ruin them.) The gay subtext?

For me personally, having seen every other Hitchcock film ever made(except for a few of the early ones) on TV, VHS or at theaters(first run or revival)...Rope was the FINAL Hitchcock film with which I caught up. It simply hadn't been available to view before 1984, at least in my neck of the woods.

THREE: Hitchcock made two -- and only two -- films under his "mini-studio" banner -- Transatlantic Pictures(releasing via Warners.) One was Rope. The other was his film AFTER Rope, Under Capricorn. But Under Capricorn wasn't one of the Lost Five. I wonder why.

FOUR: Cruel glimpses from exile: When a very aged Hitchcock was feted at his American Film Institute tribute in 1979, among "usual suspect" clips from Psycho, The Birds and North by Northwest, brief clips were shown from ALL of the lost five -- Rear Window had not been on TV since 1971, and Vertigo since 1973. It was wonderful and painful to see brief moments from those films in 1979. And then they went back in the vault.

FIVE: I went to a college "marathon day of films" in 1978. One of the titles was The African Queen. But one listed title was "special mystery movie." I sat there expectantly and saw...Rear Window arrive on screen. The audience went nuts. My companion said that Rear Window was her favorite film of the marathon. This was a "bootleg" showing of the forbidden Rear Window and I believe that such showings were common in the 70's. Vertigo, too.

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SIX: When the Lost Hitchcock Five were released in 1983 and 1984 , they were now all "Universal pictures." Hitchcock had sold them to his pal Lew Wasserman at Universal/MCA. And so the Paramount logo was unceremoniously chopped off and replaced with the Universal logo(and Hitchcock HATED the Universal logo, he didn't allow it on his final five films.)

The result was that Rear Window opens with the window curtain already halfway up and The Man Who Knew Too Much opens with the Paramount/ VistaVision fanfare under the Universal logo.

Came the 90's, wiser film expert heads prevailed: Universal slapped its logo on first and THEN allowed the Paramount logos to be seen. (This was done for Psycho, too..and for the Warner Brothers logo over Rope.)

SEVEN: Two of the lost Hitchcock Five movies played on all three American TV networks in the 60's and 70s:

Vertigo and The Man Who Knew Too Much played on NBC (60's), ABC(1971) and CBS(1973) before being pulled for a long decade.

However, Rear Window played on TWO networks -- NBC(1966) and ABC(1971.)

Meanwhile, The Trouble With Harry only played on ABC.)

And Rope never played on any of them.

Also: The Man Who Knew Too Much got played on a local Los Angeles TV station(nine times in one week on The Million Dollar Movie) and Hitchcock and James Stewart sued over those showings, getting more money and moving the movie to network TV.

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And that's about it. Its all over now, it was decades ago, but it was pretty darn important to Hitchcock buffs at the time. Our beloved idol took some of his movies away from us...it was a nasty bit of Hitchcockian sado-masochism.

But it worked!

PS. During this period, only one "true" Paramount movie got regular TV airplay - To Catch a Thief with Cary Grant and Grace Kelly. Hitchcock didn't own that one. Psycho was a Paramount film, but Hitchcock sold it to Universal around 1970 and it went out with the Universal logo for years.

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Cool post! I was too young to know about any of this.

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I'm an older fellow and I wanted to leave this bit of movie history behind.

It was unprecedented and it cannot really ever be done again. Like I said: cruel AND brilliant.

Thank you for reading.

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I'll have to track down Rope, The Trouble With Harry & The Man Who Knew Too Much, I haven't seen those yet.

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They are all good...but in different ways.

The Trouble With Harry is more of a comedy than a thriller.

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That'd be interesting to see a comedy by Hitchcock... hopefully it worked!

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Eh...it is very low key comedy. No slapstick or big jokes. "Deadpan humor."

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Sounds perfect for his style. Slapstick would likely be very odd and out of place, but you never know.

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It is VERY perfect for his style. Hitchcock felt that The Trouble With Harry "spoke to him" in its deadpan humor, it was one of his personal favorites. It is also a very beautiful film, shot in Technicolor and VistaVision in the bright fall colors of Vermont.

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Great to hear, maybe I'll start with that one.

Thanks for all of the interesting history!

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You are welcome!

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I forgot to mention:

By sheer coincidence, four of the Hitchcock Lost Five were ALL FOUR of James Stewart's movies for Hitchcock:

Vertigo
Rear Window
The Man Who Knew Too Much
Rope

Meanwhile, while Stewart's Hitchcock films were out of circulation for a decade, ALL of Cary Grant's four Hitchcock films(Suspicion, Notorious, and especially To Catch a Thief and North by Northwest) got heavy airplay in the 70's.

It created the impression that Cary Grant starred in all the big Hitchcock movies and James Stewart in none!

Came the 80's and the re-release of the Lost Hitchcock Five -- suddenly James Stewart was hot again , too.
Vertigo and Rear Window looked like big deals. Stewart himself narrated -- in aged, lugubrious voice -- a trailer for all FIVE films(including the one he wasn't in, The Trouble With Harry.) And in that trailer -- perhaps pushing back against the Vertigo cult - -Stewart said that Rear Window was his personal favorite of his Hitchcock films.

With Hitchcock AND Grace Kelly(Princess Grace) dead by 1983, Stewart made some public appearances on behalf of the Hitchcock Lost Five -- some of them with Vertigo co-star Kim Novak.

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"cannot really ever be done again"

Tell that to George Lucas. :D The last time the unaltered Star Wars trilogy was (officially) released was in 2006, albeit as special features on the individual DVDs. And even then, they were just LaserDisc rips.

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That was a fascinating read lmao

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"cannot really ever be done again"

Tell that to George Lucas. :D The last time the unaltered Star Wars trilogy was (officially) released was in 2006, albeit as special features on the individual DVDs. And even then, they were just LaserDisc rips.

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I take your point, but isn't the issue with Lucas that we will NEVER see those unaltered versions(the originals) again? He also messed with the opening shot of the sky in American Graffiti -making it much more garish, worse.

Hitchcock at least eventually "gave us back the originals."

But he made it rough: we had to wait for him to die before we could see them again. And then we had to wait three years after his death before they were released.

Perhaps Lucas will allow the release of the original AG and Star Wars Trilogy after HIS death...

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What a great post. And just this past Christmas, my daughter gave me the brand new board game, Rear Window. It's a kinda neat tribute, of sorts.

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That sounds like a fun game!

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