Good comments, thanks. It turns out that Hitchcock did that occasionally, it was part of his style.
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Yes. I think -- rather like Disney with his animation -- Hitchcock liked the idea of creating a "surreal dream world" for his movies in which the "fakery" was part of the dream-like quality.
Sad to say, some better films than Marnie are so marred.
Your examples above RSGRE, are good ones.
This always pains me in North by Northwest:
Right AFTER a gorgeous three dimensional shot of Cary Grant being held at gunpoint by a maid-villain in the Rushmore house(with lamps and reflections criss-crossing the special "box")...we get a HORRIBLE matte painting, right behind Eva Marie Saint, of the outside of the house. In a close up on her face and shoulders, we can see a "little cartoon car" painted behind her that looks like it is out of "Who Framed Roger Rabbit."
The bell tower on the Mission San Juan Bautista in Vertigo famously doesn't exist, but Hitchcock gives us one "high shot overhead" as James Stewart staggers out of the church that screams out "fake"!
Perhaps because Vertigo and NXNW was so damn good otherwise, the matte paintings were simply forgiven. Not so, Marnie.
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His next film "Torn Curtain" was full of stagy sets too.
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That's right. Marnie gets the bad ink(that ship painting is bad) but there is more bad matte painting in Torn Curtain; its as if Hitchcock was edging into "animated features." And maybe he was. Gromek trails Paul Newman through one matte painting and glass shot after another in the museum.
And yet...isn't that how MOST movies are done today with CGI? Have actors walk in front of a green screen and PROJECT the streets and buildings around them.
In some ways, Hitchcock was way ahead of his time...
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Maybe it had something to do with the supposed falling out between him and Tippi Hedren and he didn't care anymore, and was his way of getting even with her.
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That's possible. A book written on the making of the movie raises the point that Hitchcock started work on Marnie too soon after the exhausting technical outdoor work of The Birds. He should have rested longer. He was so sick on the set he told an assistant that the man might have to finish the movie for him. The Tippi Hedren business happened during this stage.
He may well have given up on Marnie...
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