The Hitchcock Murders

Author:   Peter Conrad
Publisher:   Faber & Faber
Edition:   Main
ISBN:  

9780571210602


Pages:   384
Publication Date:   05 November 2001
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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The Hitchcock Murders


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Overview

Alfred Hitchcock remains the most famous of film-makers. Why was he so successful in enticing us to share his fears and desires? Cultural critic Peter Conrad can date the start of his Hitchcock obsession to his first boyhood viewing of Hitchcock's Psycho, one afternoon in Tasmania some forty years ago. The master's grip on his imagination has never slackened since. Now Conrad explains how Hitchcock's mastery of the mechanical art enabled him to unnerve and excite us in ways that no artist had previously managed.

Full Product Details

Author:   Peter Conrad
Publisher:   Faber & Faber
Imprint:   Faber & Faber
Edition:   Main
Dimensions:   Width: 12.60cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 19.80cm
Weight:   0.308kg
ISBN:  

9780571210602


ISBN 10:   0571210600
Pages:   384
Publication Date:   05 November 2001
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

'Conrad's book is as witty, energetic and captivating as North by Northwest - and you can't top that.' Sunday Times


A wide-ranging, though eccentric, tour of Alfred Hitchcock's agreeably scary cinema. Conrad (English/Christ Church, Oxford; Modern Times, Modern Places , 1999) will have no truck with the extensive literature already published on the Master of Suspense, which he dismisses as pseudo-scientific and bogus cerebration. Nor, evidently, does he have much patience with the division of Hitchcock's work into discrete films from The Pleasure Garden through Family Plot. Instead of considering the films one by one, he has pulverized them all into a puree in which, for example, an excursis about the director's preoccupation with bathrooms (in which he set scenes in The Lodger , Number Seventeen , Secret Agent , The Lady Vanishes , Mr. and Mrs. Smith , Spellbound , The Trouble with Harry , and Psycho ) can range freely over half a dozen examples before moving on to films mysteriously without bathrooms, from The 39 Steps to Lifeboat. Although his determination to avoid earlier critics leaves Conrad spending a fair amount of time reinventing the wheel, his investigation, organized loosely around the question of how Hitchcock makes fear entertaining, yields some piquant insights, such as Hitchcock's affinity with Surrealists like Andre Breton to the self-portraits he left in the fat men who peopled his films. But Conrad's cavalier annexation of literary sources for the films to provide further examples, as if Hitchcock had created Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca and Robert Bloch's Psycho as well as the films he based on them, creates an unhappy confusion of boundaries, as if he could not decide whether Hitchcock was remarkable because his films were so distinctive or because they were so exemplary. In the end, all but the largest contours of Conrad's analysis become blurred as well, sunk beneath reams of absorbing detail. Even if the argument sometimes seems like an endless series of digressions, however, it never makes less than an entertaining and illuminating case for the unity of Hitchcock's half-century of films. (20 b&w photos) (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

Peter Conrad was born in Australia, and since 1973, has taught English at Christ Church, Oxford. He has written numerous works of criticism, including Imagining America, The Everyman History of English Literature, A Song of Love and Death: The Meaning of Opera, Modern Times, Modern Places: A Cultural History of the 20th Century and The Hitchcock Murders. He has also written two autobiographical works, Down Home and Where I Fell to Earth, and in 1992, he published his first novel, Underworld.

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