Hi, doghouse!
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I think that was in January of 1973. I did not attend -- so great that YOU did -- but a family friend at Universal sent me the program, which I treasured at the time and still have.
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I think I'd gotten my first copy of Hitchcock/Truffaut only months before, so I just ate that festival up. I believe I even took some vacation time from work in order to do so (and I've kept my program, too, although I haven't looked at it in years).
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It was a great program.
I'll try to articulate something here that maybe won't work, but I'll try:
My "Hitchcock fandom" rather fully emerged after the string of 1966/1967/1968 network and local screeings of all the biggies: Rear Window, Vertigo, North by Northwest, The Birds and (after a network cancellation and moved to local late night) Psycho. Then I got my copy of Hitchcock/Truffaut.
But: just as the fandom kicked in...Hitchocck pretty much disappeared from the scene. It was over three years from Torn Curtain to Topaz, a quicker two and one half to Frenzy, then a long four to Family Plot.
So Hitchocck was really about me becoming a great fan of a director who was pretty much done and gone. And something like that 1973 program was a nostalgic "reach back" to when he had a weekly TV show and those classics werer in release..with the kicker(which had rather created the REASON for the 1973 event) that Hitchocck finally had a well-reviewed hit again with Frenzy.
This is yet another reason that the success of Frenzy was important. With Frenzy on his resume as a recent hit, Hitchcock could be feted in LA(in 1973) and in New York(in 1974, with Princess Grace in attendance) NOT ONLY as a great "Golden Age" director, but as one who was actually relevant again in the 70's.
Briefly again on that photo of Brenda being strangled in Frenzy. In lingering on it, I perhaps revealed a certain taste for the brutal but it is there to look at on the "Frenzy" page and it IS brutal. And thus meaningful.
Interesting to me: the most famous production shot of the shower scene in Psycho is of Janet Leigh screaming -= BEFORE she is attacked -- at someone/something that we are just DYING to see(Mrs. Bates, as it turns out). But she isn't being stabbed. In the "Frenzy" shot, the victim IS being killed(strangled in a 1972 brutal way) but again there is "mystery": the male hands of the unseen killer tightening the necktie. We were just DYING to see him, too. (Bob Rusk, as it turns out, and not Richard Blaney as suspected early in the film.)
Thus did Hitchcock in his "photographic promotional materials" for Frenzy both mimic Psycho and (as Frenzy itself did) go BEYOND Psycho, in brutality.
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The rangy Stewart and diminutive Hitchcock made quite a picture when they stood onstage together before being seated.
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I'll bet that they did. In a similar fashion, when Hitchcock presented the honorary Oscar to Lew Wasserman in 1974(see? Hitchcock was hot again, per Frenzy), the two men stood next to each other and it was like The Tall Thin Man and the Short Fat Man in tandem. Such dual power!
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Hitchcock did stuff like that a lot. Referring to himself as "one" sometimes ("People think one is a monster because of the work one does.")
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I've come to understand that's more a British thing than a specifically Hitchcock one, and an archaic one at that. Karloff used to do it sometimes, and I've noticed it in older British films and television dramas.
Another Britishism that caught my ear in that documentary was Hitchcock's phrasing regarding the MacGuffin: "It's what the characters are after but the audience don't care." That got a giggle from the house, as though he'd deliberately engaged in poor grammar, like saying "ain't."
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Another good call. I felt Hitchcock often -- in his filmed interviews without editorial clean-up -- spoke in rather oddly fractured English. But now -- ONLY now -- do I truly understand why.
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But what I've noticed since then is that it has to do with nouns representing collectives, as in "Universal are releasing Hitchcock's next picture" or "the staff meet monthly." We treat them as singular; they treat them as plural. I think that, too, has been falling out of fashion for some time.
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Again, interesting.
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I love noting these little differences in the usage of our common language. Another charmer: where we'd say "the vacuum cleaner's broken" or "is on the blink" (or the "fritz"), some Brits say "the Hoover's gone wrong."
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One reason I enjoy watching British films is because though English is being spoken...its being spoken different.
That said, I understand that Universal actually CHANGED some of the dialogue in Frenzy to reflect American idiom. "Truck" inserted for "lorry"; "elevator" for "lift" and something about which floor Rusk's flat is on.
When you think about it, this was pretty "cultural damaging" to re-loop British actors to say British terms in American idiom!
And beyond that: Frenzy is a real oddity in studio filmmaking. Universal released the film as if it were an "All-American Universal Studios movie" but it is clearly and distinctly British in cast, writer and studio(Pinewood.) Given those changed lines for American release, what we have in Frenzy is an odd "American-British hybrid" of a film.
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But perahps it is better that DePalma had to use other composers. John Williams' overture for "The Fury" is tremendously exciting.
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I was unable to conjure that from memory, but quickly found a video file online and it came right back to me. I remember now what a promising aural mood it created, but although I recall little of the film, what stayed with me was the somewhat repelled feeling I had by the time it concluded. Seemed rather overkill, pardon the expression, especially after his immediately preceding examination of telekinesis, Carrie (which hadn't really tickled me much either).
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I'm not a big fan of the "telekinesis" plot in either film, because to me its just wish-fulfillment fantasy: the weak destroy their stronger enemies simply by wishing it so and things fly through the air and kill them, or the victims fly through the air and die.
"Carrie" did this on a small, indie-film scale; "The Fury" did it with a big budget (for major studio 20th Century Fox) and with John Williams (to me) great big booming Star Wars/Superman type score.
"The Fury" is famous for spawning a Pauline Kael lovefest of a review that was overkill itself. Other critics felt Kael went way off the deep end here for a fairly schlocky film. She wrote that "The Fury" "had more set-pieces than any Hitchcock film"(maybe so, but they were mostly bad) and that the film's final scene(which I liked) would have had Hitchock, Welles, and about 20 other classic filmmakers laughing in glee. OTHER critics attacked Kael mercilessly for this review.
As for DePalma, as if working with Fox was some sort of mistake, he went back to near indie-film production for "Dressed to Kill" and "Blow Out."
Oh, the final scene of "The Fury": John Cassavetes was a noted director of realistic films, but better(to me) as an actor -- he had a handsome, sullen face and a look like he was always amused by the idiots in the world around him. Well, he's the ultra-villain in "The Fury" and at film's end, Amy Irving uses HER telekinetic powers to make Cassavetes entire body quake and shake and percolate until...his head explodes upwards from his neck at the camera and the rest of his body explodes like a balloon full of blood.
Kael thought this was magnificent. I thought it was pretty damn funny...and Williams score is operatic here in using the Cassavetes explosion to fade the film to a thunderous conclusion of music and image.
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