Opening Shots Of The Lady Vanishes(1938) Versus Psycho(1960)
Warner Brothers has put one new 2020 movie(Wonder Woman 1984) and will put all of its 2021 releases same day theaters and "HBO Max," a somewhat new streaming service.
Director Christopher Nolan protested: "Now some of our best movies will debut on one of the worst streaming services." (Paraphrased.)
I get Mr. Nolan's anger(exactly how will superstar directors like Nolan and superstar actors got the big percentage paydays they can get from movie theater distribution.)
But I disagree with him about HBO Max.
The channel is a bit light on the "original productions"(series, etc) but it is an absolute treasure trove of "movies from our past" -- from the silents through the 2010s, with wonderful trips to those decades I personally love -- the 50's through the 90s. HBO Max has a "Turner Classic Movies" section with Citizen Kane and North by Northwest in possibly permanent display(as part of a collection called "Film School 101."
And the channel is flooded with foreign classics from the 40's, 50's, 60s. I've done The Wages of Fear(a Clouzot movie from a book that Hitchcock wanted to film but didn't buy in time) and I'm looking to try Ikiru. They've even got Battleship Potemkin on there.
Anyway, they also have The 39 Steps and The Lady Vanishes and other Hitchcock films from the 30's and I tried The Lady Vanishes the other night and it was "educational":
It had been decades since I last saw The Lady Vanishes, and I forgot about the opening shot:
Black and white. The camera is high over the snowy mountains and valley of -- eh, I can't remember -- the Swiss Alps?. Anyway, the camera slowly pans left to right, left to right, and down -- from the mountains to the valley below, over and past a waiting train, over and past some tiny , moving people, then left over to a car driving up to a mountain lodge, left and over to the lodge itself, towards a window in the lodge...and then through that window and into the lodge itself, a reception room with people in it.
Sound familiar?
Yep, its the opening shot of Psycho -- 22 years early.
I suppose that a "harrumphing" critic (like Pauline Kael) could say "you see, Hitchcock just copies his old shots and gives us nothing new." Hitchcock puckishly addressed the issue by noting "self plagarism is style." I like that one because we Hitchcock fans LIKE to see some of the same motifs turning up from picture to picture...especially if they WORK. "From the farthest to the nearest" Truffaut said to Hitchcock about the opening of Psycho, "that's how a lot of your films open."
I'm hard pressed to catalog them. The Lady Vanishes(here.) Rope(but just from one street scene and directly over to an apartment window and murder most foul.) Frenzy(from high above the River Thames and down to a riverside political speech.) Topaz rather cheats the idea, given us a static shot of a crowd of Soviets watching a military parade with titles: "Somehwere in this crowd is a Russian official who is disturbed by this show of force. He will take action." Or something like that.
Am I missing any other skyline "farthest to nearest" shots in Hitchcock? Vertigo opens with a sweeping view of a chase across the San Francisco skyline, but not a "farthest to nearest" camera move.
Anyway, "The Lady Vanishes" and "Psycho" match up pretty directly -- high overhead shot slowly lowering, left to right, left to right, down, down down and into a window.
But with these differences:
The Lady Vanishes, made in 1938 for a British studio lacking American studio budgetary size, and "trapped in its era" uses "toy sized" models for much of this scene. The train looks like a toy. The sole car that we see is CLEARLY a little plastic toy evidently being pulled by a string to move left to right. And the "mountain lodge" is a toy model building(with its "window" being a rather nifty bit of technical mattework -- a process shot not unlike the shot of the Bates Mansion outisde of Cabin One after Marion's murder.
I wondered: did 1938 movie audiences actually BELIEVE that they were looking at a real train, a real car, a real lodge -- or did they see right through these little toys and think -- "well, that's the best can be done, I'll just get into the story." (This ties into my comments elsewhere about how I met some young people who didn't know that Arbogast's fall was done in front of a process screen; they "bought it, as is" as a real fall.)
And I remembered this: I first saw The Lady Vanishes on local Los Angeles TV in 1968, well launched into my "Hitchcock jones" (having seen Rear Window, Vertigo, North by Northwest, and The Birds, and having HEARD about Psycho) and I remember thinking this: "Boy, this movie looks PRIMITIVE. Its too old for me." And that was only 30 years after its release. Like the distance back to Silence of the Lambs from today.