Hitchcock, Second Edition: The Murderous Gaze (Suny Series, Horizons of Cinema)
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Hitchcock, Second Edition: The Murderous Gaze (Suny Series, Horizons of Cinema)
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First published in 1982, William Rothman s "Hitchcock" is a classic work of film criticism. Written in an engaging style that is philosophically sophisticated yet free of jargon, and using over nine hundred images from the films to illustrate and back up its critical claims, the book follows six different Hitchcock films as they unfold, moment by moment, from first shot to last. In addition to a thoughtful new preface and the original readings of "The Lodger" (1927), "Murder!" (1930), "The 39 Steps" (1935), "Shadow of a Doubt" (1943), and "Psycho" (1960), this expanded edition includes a groundbreaking new chapter now the book s longest on "Marnie" (1964), Hitchcock s most heartfelt yet most controversial film. Hitchcock never tired of quoting Oscar Wilde s line, And all men kill the thing they love. Dark moods therefore prevail in the five original chapters, culminating in the reading of "Psycho," but in demonstrating how "Marnie" overcomes, or transcends, the murderous aspect of Hitchcock s art, this new chapter balances the scales and gives an important new dimension to the book. With exemplary precision, "Hitchcock, Second Edition" shows how Hitchcock films express, cinematically, serious thoughts about such matters as the nature and relationships of love, murder, sexuality, marriage, and theater and about their own medium. In so doing, it keeps faith with the idea that Hitchcock was a master, perhaps "the" master, of what he called the art of pure cinema. However, insofar as it investigates philosophically the "conditions" of authorship in the medium of film, it is an auteurist study unlike any other. By attending to the films themselves and to the ways we experience them, rather than allowing some theory to dictate what to say about them, the book proves the fruitfulness of an approach that is open and responsive to the ways serious films are capable of teaching us how to think seriously about them."