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Posts Tagged ‘alfred hitchcock’

“78 / 52”  My rating: B+

91 minutes | No MPAA rating

The shower scene in Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho” required 78 camera setups and 52 individual cuts.

The upshot: The most famous movie sequence ever, equalling and ultimately surpassing the “Odessa steps” montage in the silent classic “Battleship Potemkin.”

Now we have “78 / 52,” a nerdgasm posing as a feature-length documentary about that four-minute shower scene. It’s like a master class in geek cinema obsessiveness.

It’s also pretty great.

Directed by Alexandre O. Philippe, “78 / 52” brings together dozens of film types — directors (Guillermo del Toro, Peter Bogdonovich), composers (Danny Elfman) writers (Stephen Rubello, Bret Easton Ellis), film editors, sound artists (Walter Murch), actors (Elijah Wood, Jamie Lee Curtis) — and other “Pyscho” fanatics who analyze Hitchcock’s creepy masterpiece from every artistic, commercial, historic and social angle imaginable.

Philippe even tracked down Marli Refro, the 21-year-old model who spent days nude in the shower as star Janet Leigh’s body double. (more…)

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Alfred Hitchcock, Francois Truffaut

Alfred Hitchcock, Francois Truffaut

“HITCHCOCK / TRUFFAUT” My rating: B+ (Opens Feb./ 27 at the Tivoli)

79 minutes | MPAA rating: PG-13

By now it’s an article of faith among film lovers that Alfred Hitchcock was far more than a mere maker of suspense movies.

He was a true cinema genius who used the medium to plumb the depths of his own soul, his phobias, his impish sense of humor.

There’s no shortage of film-themed documentaries that have dealt in some way with Sir Alfred and his career, but “Hitchcock / Truffaut” introduces a new element by allowing Hitch to comment on his movies.

In 1965 French NewWave filmmaker Francois Truffaut sat down with his idol in an office at the Universal Studios in Hollywood. For an entire week they talked movies, aided by a translator.  The result was Truffaut’s classic 1966 book Hitchcock by Truffaut. 

Fifty years later the audio recordings that were the basis for that book have been utilized by filmmaker Kent Jones for this documentary. (more…)

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