ALFRED HITCHCOCK: 1899-1980
.IHI IUIIDR Of SDSPINSI by SANJEEV PRAKASH
Alfred Hitchcock's film career was as formidable in its length as it was surprising in its evenness. He has been variously described as a master of suspense, a B-movie director, a "practical joker given to pitiless mockery," and a supreme perfectionist in the meticulous art of planning and crafting a film. The French new wave directors hailed him as auteur extraordinaire and prime exponent of decoupage classique, the classical design of film narration. By turn he played the roles of a film director, an author, a television personality and a humorist with a finely honed sense of the macabre. It is difficult to accept that one
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man could have so many sharply diverging personalities. How much of this is deserved, and how much misdirected adulation? Who was the real Alfred Hitchcock? With the possible (and debatable) exception of John Ford, no American director has been so closely identified with a particular genre as Hitchcock was with the mystery thriller. Perhaps it is the essentially low-brow personality of the genre itself that accounts for part of the controversy about his stature. And yet, isn't Dostoevski's Crime and Punishment, for instance, a kind of thriller, a murder mystery? What distinguishes it from the
many forgettable novels in the same genre is the depth of treatment and resonance, the level of mastery and understanding of a medium and its particular strengths. After all, the primary themes of this genre, murder and the confrontation of good with evil, are the subject matter not only in Dostoevski, but in much of the Greek myths and the Mahabharata. Like many others, Hitchcock came to filmmaking the hard way. Born the son of a London greengrocer, he started by drafting the titles for American silent films in the early 1920s. Soon he became an assistant to the British director, Graham Cutts. His first chance to direct came about through the typically lucky accident that affords many a filmmaker his first break: The director fell ill one day, and Hitchcock took over the film. He was young then, barely 26, and looked even