Actors & Directors
- Julie Andrews
- Alfred Hitchcock
- George Roy Hill
- Robert Earl Jones
- Robert Redford
- Robert Shaw
- Paul Newman
Release date: 2006-12-26 Run time: 246 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £7.97
Review The Sting/Torn Curtain / Universal Pictures UK:The Sting Winner of seven Academy Awards including Best Picture, Director, and Screenplay, this critical and box-office hit from 1973 provided a perfect reunion for director George Roy Hill and stars Paul Newman and Robert Redford, who previously delighted audiences with Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Set in 1936, the movie's about a pair of Chicago con artists (Newman and Redford) who find themselves in a high-stakes game against the master of all cheating mobsters (Robert Shaw) when they set out to avenge the murder of a mutual friend and partner. Using a bogus bookie joint as a front for their con of all cons, the two feel the heat from the Chicago Mob on one side and encroaching police on the other. But in a plot that contains more twists than a treacherous mountain road, the ultimate scam is pulled off with consummate style and panache. It's an added bonus that Newman and Redford were box-office kings at the top of their game, and while Shaw broods intensely as the Runyonesque villain, The Sting is further blessed by a host of great supporting players including Dana Elcar, Eileen Brennan, Ray Walston, Charles Durning, and Harold Gould. Thanks to the flavorful music score by Marvin Hamlisch, this was also the movie that sparked a nationwide revival of Scott Joplin's ragtime jazz, which is featured prominently on the soundtrack. One of the most entertaining movies of the early 1970s, The Sting is a welcome throwback to Hollywood's golden age of the '30s that hasn't lost any of its popular charm. -Jeff Shannon Torn Curtain Paul Newman and Julie Andrews star in what must unfortunately be called one of Alfred Hitchcock's lesser efforts. Still, sub-par Hitchcock is better than a lot of what's out there, and this one is well worth a look. Newman plays Cold War physicist Michael Armstrong, while Andrews plays his lovely assistant-and-fiancée, Sarah Sherman. [+]
Armstrong has been working on a missile defense system that will "make nuclear defense obsolete," and naturally both sides are very interested. All Sarah cares about is the fact that Michael has been acting awfully fishy lately. The suspense of Torn Curtain is by nature not as thrilling as that in the average Hitchcock film-much of it involves sitting still and wondering if the bad guys are getting closer. Still, Hitchcock manages to amuse himself: there is some beautifully clever camera work and an excruciating sequence that illustrates the frequent Hitchcock point that death is not a tidy business. -Ali Davis.
Actors & Directors
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Farley Granger
- Laura Elliot
- Leo G. Carroll
- Robert Walker
- Ruth Roman
Release date: 2001-04-09 Run time: 96 min. RRP: £13.99 Price: £4.69
Review Strangers On A Train (1951) / Warner Home Video:From its cleverly choreographed opening sequence to its heart-stopping climax on a rampant carousel, this 1951 Hitchcock classic readily earns its reputation as one of the director's finest examples of timeless cinematic suspense. It's not just a ripping-good thriller but a film student's delight and a perversely enjoyable battle of wits between tennis pro Guy (Farley Granger) and his mysterious, sycophantic admirer, Bruno (Robert Walker), who proposes a "criss-cross" scheme of traded murders. Bruno agrees to kill Guy's unfaithful wife, in return for which Guy will (or so it seems) kill Bruno's spiteful father. With an emphasis on narrative and visual strategy, Hitchcock controls the escalating tension with a master's flair for cinematic design, and the plot (coscripted by Raymond Chandler) is so tightly constructed that you'll be white-knuckled even after multiple viewings. Strangers on a Train remains one of Hitchcock's crowning achievements and a suspenseful classic that never loses its capacity to thrill and delight. -Jeff Shannon.
Actors & Directors
- Desmond Tester
- John Loder
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Joyce Barbour
- Sylvia Sidney
Release date: 2008-08-18 Run time: 73 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £3.98
Review Sabotage [1936] / Network:
Actors & Directors
- John Stuart
- Virginia Valli
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Miles Mander
- Carmelita Geraghty
Release date: 2008-08-18 Run time: 60 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £3.98
Review The Pleasure Garden [1925] / Network:
Actors & Directors
- Brenda De Banzie
- James Stewart
- Daniel Gelin
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Doris Day
- Bernard Miles
Release date: 2005-10-17 Run time: 115 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £2.18
Review The Man Who Knew Too Much [1955] / Universal Pictures UK:Alfred Hitchcock's 1956 remake of his own 1934 spy thriller is an exciting event in its own right, with several justifiably famous sequences. James Stewart and Doris Day play American tourists who discover more than they wanted to know about an assassination plot. When their son is kidnapped to keep them quiet, they are caught between concern for him and the terrible secret they hold. When asked about the difference between this version of the story and the one he made 22 years earlier, Hitchcock always said the first was the work of a talented amateur while the second was the act of a seasoned professional. Indeed, several extraordinary moments in this update represent consummate film-making, particularly a relentlessly exciting Albert Hall scene, with a blaring symphony, an assassin's gun, and Doris Day's scream. Along with Hitchcock's other films from the mid-1950s to 1960 (including Vertigo, Rear Window, and Psycho), The Man Who Knew Too Much is the work of a master in his prime. -Tom Keogh, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Alfred Hitchcock
- William Bendix
- Tullulah Bankhead
- Walter Slezak
Release date: 2006-03-27 Run time: 96 min. RRP: £17.99 Price: £8.98
Review Lifeboat [1944] / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Teresa Wright
- Hume Cronyn
- Henry Travers
- Wallace Ford
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Joseph Cotten
Release date: 2005-10-17 Run time: 103 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £2.98
Review Shadow Of A Doubt [1942] / Universal Pictures Video:Alfred Hitchcock considered this 1943 thriller to be his personal favourite among his own films, and although it's not as popular as some of Hitchcock's later work, it's certainly worthy of the master's admiration. Scripted by playwright Thornton Wilder and inspired by the actual case of a 1920s serial killer known as "The Merry Widow Murderer," Shadow of a Doubt sets a tone of menace and fear by introducing a psychotic killer into the small-town comforts of Santa Rosa, California. That's where young Charlie (Teresa Wright) lives with her parents and two younger siblings, and where murder is little more than a topic of morbid conversation for their mystery-buff neighbour (Hume Cronyn). Charlie was named after her favourite uncle, who has just arrived for an extended visit, and at first Uncle Charlie (Joseph Cotten) gets along famously with his admiring niece. But the film's chilling prologue has already revealed Uncle Charlie's true identity as the notorious Merry Widow Murderer, and the suspense grows almost unbearable when young Charlie's trust gives way to gradual dread and suspicion. Through narrow escapes and a climactic scene aboard a speeding train, this witty thriller strips away the fa ade of small-town tranquillity to reveal evil where it's least expected. And, of course, it's all done in pure Hitchcockian style. -Jeff Shannon.
Release date: 2008-02-25 Run time: 810 min. RRP: £59.99 Price: £34.96
Review Hitchcock - The British Years [1925] / Network:
Actors & Directors
- Leslie Arliss
- Laurence Olivier
- Jean Simmons
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Michael Powell
- Robert Donat
- Henry Cornelius
- Trevor Howard
- David Lean
- Celia Johnson
Release date: 2005-07-18 Run time: 948 min. RRP: £29.99 Price: £12.20
Review The Rank 70th Anniversary Collection - 8 DVD Box Set (Brief Encounter / The 39 Steps / The Wicked Lady / Genevieve / The Red Shoes / A Matter Of Life And Death / Hamlet / Henry V) / ITV DVD:
Actors & Directors
- Karl Malden
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Montgomery Clift
- Anne Baxter
Release date: 2008-02-04 RRP: £12.99 Price: £1.50
Review I Confess / Warner Bros. Z1 31863:Classic Hitchcock movie starring Montgomery Clift & Anne Baxter. Otto Kellar and his wife Alma work as caretaker and housekeeper at a Catholic church in Quebec. Whilst robbing a house where he sometimes works as a gardener, Otto is caught and kills the owner. Racked with guilt he heads back to the church where Father Michael Logan is working late. Otto confesses his crime, but when the police begin to suspect Father Logan he cannot reveal what he has been told in the confession.
Actors & Directors
- Jon Finch
- Barry Foster
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Billie Whitelaw
- Alec McCowen
- Anna Massey
Release date: 2005-10-17 Run time: 110 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £2.97
Review Frenzy [1972] / Universal Pictures UK:By the time Alfred Hitchcock's second-to-last picture came out in 1972, the censorship restrictions under which he had laboured during his long career had eased up. Now he could give full sway to his lurid fantasies, and that may explain why Frenzy is the director's most violent movie by far-outstripping even Psycho for sheer brutality. Adapted by playwright Anthony Shaffer, the story concerns a series of rape-murders committed by suave fruit-merchant Bob Rusk (Barry Foster), who gets his kicks from throttling women with a necktie. This being a Hitchcock thriller, suspicion naturally falls on the wrong man-ill-tempered publican Richard Blaney (Jon Finch). Enter Inspector Oxford from New Scotland Yard (Alex McCowan), who thrashes out the finer points of the case with his wife (Vivian Merchant), whose tireless enthusiasm for indigestible delicacies like quail with grapes supplies a classic running gag. Frenzy was the first film Hitchcock had shot entirely in his native Britain since Jamaica Inn (1939), and many contemporary critics used that fact to account for what seemed to them a glorious return to form after a string of Hollywood duds (Marnie, Torn Curtain, Topaz). Hitchcock specialists are often less wild about it, judging the detective plot mechanical and the oh-so-English tone insufferable. But at least three sequences rank among the most skin-crawling the maestro ever put on celluloid. There is an astonishing moment when the camera backs away from a room in which a murder is occurring, down the stairs, through the front door and then across the street to join the crowd milling indifferently on the pavement. There is also the killer's nerve-wracking attempt to retrieve his tiepin from a corpse stuffed into a sack of potatoes. [+]
Finally, there is one act of strangulation so prolonged and gruesome it verges on the pornographic. Was the veteran film-maker a rampant misogynist as feminist observers have frequently charged? Sit through this appalling scene if you dare and decide for yourself. -Peter Matthews.
Release date: 2007-02-27 Run time: 1695 min. Price: £9.28
Review The Ultimate Hitchcock Collection / ST Clair Vision:
Release date: 2007-02-26 Run time: 755 min. RRP: £34.99 Price: £23.19
Review The Early Hitchcock Collection [1929] / Optimum Home Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Sam Flint
- Anthony Perkins
- Vaughn Taylor
- Frank Albertson
- George Eldredge
Release date: 2003-04-21 Run time: 109 min. RRP: £19.99 Price: £4.04
Review Psycho (1960) / Universal Pictures Video:For all the slasher pictures that have ripped off Psycho (and particularly its classic set piece, the "shower scene"), nothing has ever matched the impact of the real thing. More than just a first-rate shocker full of thrills and suspense, Psycho is also an engrossing character study in which director Alfred Hitchcock skilfully seduces you into identifying with the main characters-then pulls the rug (or the bathmat) out from under you. Anthony Perkins is unforgettable as Norman Bates, the mama's boy proprietor of the Bates Motel; and so is Janet Leigh as Marion Crane, who makes an impulsive decision and becomes a fugitive from the law, hiding out at Norman's roadside inn for one fateful night. -Jim Emerson.
Actors & Directors
- Charles Laughton
- Gregory Peck
- Ann Todd
- Alfred Hitchcock
Release date: 2007-10-15 Run time: 110 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £4.21
Review Hitchcock - the Paradine Case:
Actors & Directors
- Cary Grant; Ivan Triesault; Ingrid Bergman; Claude Rains; Louis Calhern; Alexis Minotis; Moroni Olsen; Wally Brown; Reinhold Schunzel
- Alfred Hitchcock
Release date: 2000-10-30 Run time: 98 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £12.97
Review Notorious [1946] (Alfred Hitchcock) / Prism Leisure:One of Alfred Hitchcock's classics, this romantic thriller features a cast to die for: Ingrid Bergman, Cary Grant and Claude Rains. Bergman plays the daughter of a disgraced father who is recruited by American agents to infiltrate a post-World War II spy ring in Brazil. Her control agent is Grant, who treats her with disdain while developing a deep romantic bond with her. Her assignment: to marry the suspected head of the ring (Rains) and get the goods on everyone involved. Danger, deceit, betrayal-and, yes, romance-all come together in a nearly perfect blend as the film builds to a terrific (and surprising) climax. Grant and Bergman rarely have been better. -Marshall Fine.
Release date: 2005-01-11 Run time: 809 min. Price: £2.71
Review The Hitchcock Collection / Alfred Hitchcock:
Actors & Directors
- Julie Andrews
- Ludwig Donath
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Lila Kedrova
- Paul Newman
- Peter Lorre
Release date: 2005-10-17 Run time: 123 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £4.95
Review Torn Curtain [1966] / Universal Pictures UK:Paul Newman and Julie Andrews star in Torn Curtain, what must unfortunately be called one of Alfred Hitchcock's lesser efforts. Still, sub-par Hitchcock is better than a lot of what's out there, and this one is well worth a look. Newman plays cold-war physicist Michael Armstrong, while Andrews plays his lovely assistant-and-fiancée Sarah Sherman. Armstrong has been working on a missile defence system that will "make nuclear defence obsolete", and naturally both sides are very interested. All Sarah cares about is the fact that Michael has been acting awfully fishy lately. The suspense of Torn Curtain is by nature not as thrilling as that in the average Hitchcock film-much of it involves sitting still and wondering if the bad guys are getting closer. Still, Hitchcock manages to amuse himself: there is some beautifully clever camera work and an excruciating sequence that illustrates the frequent Hitchcock point that death is not a tidy business. -Ali Davis.
Actors & Directors
- Gregory Peck
- Charles Laughton
- Ann Todd
- Alfred Hitchcock
Release date: 2007-10-15 Run time: 110 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £4.21
Review Hitchcock - the Paradine Case:
Actors & Directors
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Robert Montgomery
- Carole Lombard
- Gene Raymond
- Jack Carson
- Philip Merivale
Release date: 2003-04-21 Run time: 90 min. RRP: £19.99 Price: £2.88
Review Mr & Mrs Smith [1941] / Universal Pictures UK:Before Hollywood had entirely typecast Alfred Hitchcock as the master of suspense, with Mr & Mrs Smith he was allowed to fashion an elegant romantic trifle starring Robert Montgomery and Carole Lombard. It probably won't replace Rear Window or Psycho in your affections, but the film is more than a curious footnote to the director's career. The two leads play David and Ann Smith, a devoted but endlessly squabbling couple who discover their three-year marriage isn't legal. When he unexpectedly hesitates to arrange a second wedding, she storms out in a huff and soon begins dating his solid, dependable business partner Jeff (Gene Raymond). The rest follows the formula laid down by such previous screwball comedies as The Awful Truth (1937) and Bringing Up Baby (1938): David employs fair means or foul to win back Ann's heart, causes all sorts of complicated mischief, then. well, three guesses what happens in the end. The intriguing thing about the movie is how Hitchcock takes Norman Krasna's paper-thin script and adds sly undercurrents of menace. You may note, for instance, that the ostensibly happy Smiths treat each other with subtle sadism right from the start, and that David's tactical pursuit of his ex-wife (spying on her and deliberately offending Jeff's parents) involves them both in humiliations that are really quite sinister and ugly. [+]
Violence seems about to erupt in the recurring scenes where Ann shaves her husband (suggestively holding a razor up to his throat)-and make what you will of our hero's symbolic nosebleeds. There's a touch of Vertigo in one scary moment when a jammed amusement park ride leaves two characters dangling helplessly high above the ground-and a touch of shall we say relief for Hitchcock's well-known love of toilet humour in another oddball sequence. Montgomery and Lombard keep the mood acceptably frivolous, while indicating the flawed nature of the marital relationship. From the evidence of this one-off, Hitchcock might have been among the best comedy directors in the business, had he so wished. -Peter Matthews.
| Models & Brands: The Sting/Torn Curtain, Strangers On A Train (1951), Sabotage [1936], The Pleasure Garden [1925], The Man Who Knew Too Much [1955], Lifeboat [1944], Shadow Of A Doubt [1942], Hitchcock - The British Years [1925], The Rank 70th Anniversary Collection - 8 DVD Box Set (Brief Encounter / The 39 Steps / The Wicked Lady / Genevieve / The Red Shoes / A Matter Of Life And Death / Hamlet / Henry V), I Confess, Frenzy [1972], The Ultimate Hitchcock Collection, The Early Hitchcock Collection [1929], Psycho (1960), Hitchcock - the Paradine Case, Notorious [1946] (Alfred Hitchcock), The Hitchcock Collection, Torn Curtain [1966], Hitchcock - the Paradine Case, Mr & Mrs Smith [1941] |