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    <title>Ovation's Recent Activity - Spout</title>
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      <title>Ovation's Recent Activity - Spout</title>
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      <title>Spout Group:Spout Customer Care - Get answers to your questions here!</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Spout_Customer_Care/420/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/420.jpg?TimeStamp='8/28/2007 9:51:05 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> Spout Customer Care - Get answers to your questions here!<br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> <p style="font: normal normal normal 12px/normal Helvetica; margin: 0px">Have a general question? Need help with some thing on the site? Have a bug you would like to report? Well then, you have come to the right place. No matter what you are having trouble with, we would like to help you find a solution. And maybe, through your own experience with the site, you will want to help other users too. That&#39;s what communities are all about. </p><br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 8/1/2007<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 79<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 513<br/>
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      <title>Spout Group:HORROR MOVIES 101 -  FOR ALL WHO LOVE HORROR MOVIES</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/HORROR_MOVIES_101/222/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/222.jpg?TimeStamp='6/27/2007 7:57:31 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> HORROR MOVIES 101 -  FOR ALL WHO LOVE HORROR MOVIES<br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> &nbsp;&nbsp; &quot; I bid you welcome...&nbsp; Enter freely and of your own will...&quot;<br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 12/17/2006<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 414<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 6<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 2333<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 00:53:17 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>HORROR MOVIES 101</spout:name><spout:created>Sun, 17 Dec 2006 01:20:09 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>414</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>6</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>2333</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
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      <title>Spout Group:foureyedmonsters - Talk to Susan &amp; Arin about the movie and those addictive podcasts.</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/foureyedmonsters/338/endorsed.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/338.jpg?TimeStamp='6/20/2008 10:56:49 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> foureyedmonsters - Talk to Susan & Arin about the movie and those addictive podcasts.<br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 6/4/2007<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 322<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 56<br/>
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      <title>Spout Group:Weekly Theme - "Fighting off boredom with the Iron Fist of Variety"</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Weekly_Theme/625/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/625.jpg?TimeStamp='6/30/2008 5:19:15 PM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> Weekly Theme - "Fighting off boredom with the Iron Fist of Variety"<br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 6/30/2008<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 52<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 12<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 701<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 27 Aug 2009 20:20:23 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>Weekly Theme</spout:name><spout:created>Mon, 30 Jun 2008 15:13:45 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>52</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>12</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>701</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
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      <title>Spout Group:Spout Mavens - Spout's best movie reviewers. Membership is limited.</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Spout_Mavens/366/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/366.jpg?TimeStamp='6/27/2007 7:57:27 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> Spout Mavens - Spout's best movie reviewers. Membership is limited.<br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> <p>A group of Spout&#39;s best reviewers.<br /><a href="http://www.spout.com/groups/366/15126/ShowPost.aspx"><strong>Read the requirements.</strong></a></p><br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 6/20/2007<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 36<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 9<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 451<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 26 Aug 2009 20:10:52 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>Spout Mavens</spout:name><spout:created>Wed, 20 Jun 2007 10:13:29 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>36</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>9</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>451</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
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      <title>Spout Group:missing a film - we'll help you find a film</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/missing_a_film/263/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/263.jpg?TimeStamp='6/27/2007 7:57:28 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> missing a film - we'll help you find a film<br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 3/5/2007<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 131<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 234<br/>
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      <title>Spout Group:Friends of Foreign Flicks - Discussions of all films not American. </title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Friends_of_Foreign_Flicks/591/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/591.jpg?TimeStamp='4/7/2009 10:02:23 PM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> Friends of Foreign Flicks - Discussions of all films not American. <br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> <p>At some point you just want more than what's right in front of you.</p><br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 4/24/2008<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 30<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 92<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 26 Aug 2009 04:05:26 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>Friends of Foreign Flicks</spout:name><spout:created>Thu, 24 Apr 2008 11:44:11 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>30</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>1</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>92</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Group:The Documentary - A place to talk about the much overlooked genre of the Documentary.  </title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/The_Documentary/79/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/79.jpg?TimeStamp='6/27/2007 11:29:11 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> The Documentary - A place to talk about the much overlooked genre of the Documentary.  <br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 4/2/2006<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 49<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 53<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 25 Aug 2009 21:05:39 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>The Documentary</spout:name><spout:created>Sun, 02 Apr 2006 00:58:55 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>49</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>4</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>53</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
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      <title>Spout Group:Sound on Sight - Podcasts, movie reviews, interviews, news and more. </title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Sound_on_Sight/529/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/529.jpg?TimeStamp='4/4/2009 2:15:14 PM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> Sound on Sight - Podcasts, movie reviews, interviews, news and more. <br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> <p>Sound on Sight proudly brings you two podcasts each week. Voted best podcast in 2008, these hard working hosts cover everything from mainstream Hollywood films to noir, horror, science fiction, cult cinema, documentary film making and more. Look out for a new show added every Tuesday and Thursday morning.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.soundonsight.org/" target="_blank">http://www.soundonsight.org/</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p><br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 1/6/2008<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 104<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 150<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 25 Aug 2009 21:03:03 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>Sound on Sight</spout:name><spout:created>Sun, 06 Jan 2008 21:24:34 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>104</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>0</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>150</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Group:Worst Movie Ever - The Group is dedicated to uncovering the bombs, so you don't have too.</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Worst_Movie_Ever/104/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/104.jpg?TimeStamp='6/27/2007 7:57:52 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> Worst Movie Ever - The Group is dedicated to uncovering the bombs, so you don't have too.<br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 5/5/2006<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 200<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 10<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 412<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 25 Aug 2009 16:43:26 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>Worst Movie Ever</spout:name><spout:created>Fri, 05 May 2006 20:20:45 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>200</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>10</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>412</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Group:Movie Polls - Vote in weekly polls and discuss</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Movie_Polls/657/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/657.jpg?TimeStamp='12/1/2008 3:28:32 PM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> Movie Polls - Vote in weekly polls and discuss<br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> <p>Each week I will post a new poll.&nbsp; Please vote in the poll and reply to the discussion thread to discuss the question.&nbsp; Please do not vote more than once.</p><br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 11/25/2008<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 66<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 414<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 25 Aug 2009 02:42:29 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>Movie Polls</spout:name><spout:created>Tue, 25 Nov 2008 16:54:38 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>66</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>0</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>414</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Group:Zombie Obsession - Zombie Lovers, Unite!</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Zombie_Obsession/329/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/329.jpg?TimeStamp='6/27/2007 7:57:30 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> Zombie Obsession - Zombie Lovers, Unite!<br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> <p>Join us to discuss your favorite or most horrifying Zombie Movies or just your most memorable Zombie Moments.&nbsp; From Funny to Scary to Gory to Bizarre...</p><p>&nbsp;</p><br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 5/28/2007<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 104<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 594<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 24 Aug 2009 17:29:56 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>Zombie Obsession</spout:name><spout:created>Mon, 28 May 2007 02:04:45 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>104</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>1</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>594</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Group:A World of MSTies - Thank You, Won't We?</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/A_World_of_MSTies/590/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/590.jpg?TimeStamp='4/23/2008 8:25:28 PM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> A World of MSTies - Thank You, Won't We?<br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> <p>Glorify the best show ever (MST3K)&nbsp;with wit, wisdom and downright wackiness!</p><br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 4/23/2008<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 10<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 2<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 23<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 24 Aug 2009 17:25:25 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>A World of MSTies</spout:name><spout:created>Wed, 23 Apr 2008 20:21:48 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>10</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>2</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>23</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Group:It's a Wonderful Night for Oscar! - Devoted to everything nominated or snubbed by the Academy of Golden Guys</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/It_s_a_Wonderful_Night_for_Oscar/46/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/46.gif?TimeStamp='6/27/2007 1:45:00 PM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> It's a Wonderful Night for Oscar! - Devoted to everything nominated or snubbed by the Academy of Golden Guys<br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> Year after year, movie lovers and non movie lovers alike discuss ad nauseum the fate of films nominated for the utmost honor, the Academy Award.  Some people watch it for the fashion.  Some people watch for the haute couture.  Some people watch for their fill of celebrity sightings.

If you are a member of this group, you love everything about the Super Bowl of movies, especially the movies themselves!  You love to make predictions, guess at the politics, discuss and dissect who should have been nominated and who should have won...or, you're just an avid movie lover that likes to pay attention. Come join the group!<br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 3/4/2006<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 41<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 58<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 226<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 24 Aug 2009 11:11:33 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>It's a Wonderful Night for Oscar!</spout:name><spout:created>Sat, 04 Mar 2006 15:24:32 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>41</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>58</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>226</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Group:Movie Marathons</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Movie_Marathons/693/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/693.jpg?TimeStamp='7/22/2009 1:42:22 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> Movie Marathons<br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> <p>This is a group for members to start and organize movie marathons. Its primary purpose is to get more people exposed to more film. And to watch these films and discuss them as a group.</p>
<p>Anyone can start a marathon and marathons can be organized in many different ways to showcase the films of a director, actor, genre, theme etc...</p>
<p>Check the Guidlines and Suggestions discussion for ideas.</p><br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 7/22/2009<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 15<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 22<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 22 Aug 2009 16:33:02 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>Movie Marathons</spout:name><spout:created>Wed, 22 Jul 2009 01:35:58 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>15</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>0</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>22</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Group:Movies we do not want to see - Try to convince us to see these movies!</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Movies_we_do_not_want_to_see/70/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Groups/70.jpg?TimeStamp='6/27/2007 11:38:09 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Group Name:</strong> Movies we do not want to see - Try to convince us to see these movies!<br/>
<strong>Group Description:</strong> Want to be a member? Send me a message with a list of at least 5 movies that you do not want to see.  

There are many movies that I do not want to see.  I'm not sure if its right of me to decide never to see a movie without seeing it.  You know...like when a kid says they hate mushrooms even though they admit never trying them.  So maybe this is a good spot for people to display movies they don't think they want to see, and see if anyone can convince us to try them out. <br/>
<strong>Created:</strong> 3/22/2006<br/>
<strong>Number of Members:</strong> 20<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 3<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion posts:</strong> 190<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 19 Aug 2009 00:31:56 GMT</pubDate><spout:name>Movies we do not want to see</spout:name><spout:created>Wed, 22 Mar 2006 14:27:50 GMT</spout:created><spout:nummembers>20</spout:nummembers><spout:numlists>3</spout:numlists><spout:numposts>190</spout:numposts><spout:type>Group</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Post: Re: Top 5 Guilty Pleasure films</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/Re_Top_5_Guilty_Pleasure_films/190/19213/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/190/discussions.aspx'>Top 5</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 9/1/2007 5:44:29 AM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> Who ever said a foreign dub can&#39;t help a film?<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 01 Sep 2007 09:44:29 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Top 5</spout:postto><spout:postdate>9/1/2007 5:44:29 AM</spout:postdate><spout:body>Who ever said a foreign dub can&amp;#39;t help a film?</spout:body></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Post: Re: 5 Pre-Hays Code Films</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/Re_5_Pre_Hays_Code_Films/190/19212/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t22609x610h.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/190/discussions.aspx'>Top 5</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 9/1/2007 5:20:50 AM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> I don&#39;t know the effect that certain films have on society, but my primitive brain tells me most of the "thinking" on the subject is BS.  I don&#39;t believe there is such a thing as the "good old days," but much of the "liberal ideas" of recent  times are nothing new.  You may need to go back 2000 years to be truly progressive, but 90 years ago much of the (liberal) thinking on sex, drugs, and other fun things where much more progressive than today.<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 01 Sep 2007 09:20:50 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Top 5</spout:postto><spout:postdate>9/1/2007 5:20:50 AM</spout:postdate><spout:body>I don&amp;#39;t know the effect that certain films have on society, but my primitive brain tells me most of the "thinking" on the subject is BS.  I don&amp;#39;t believe there is such a thing as the "good old days," but much of the "liberal ideas" of recent  times are nothing new.  You may need to go back 2000 years to be truly progressive, but 90 years ago much of the (liberal) thinking on sex, drugs, and other fun things where much more progressive than today.</spout:body></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Post: 5 Pre-Hays Code Films</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/5_Pre_Hays_Code_Films/190/19206/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t95381bjbev.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/190/discussions.aspx'>Top 5</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/31/2007 10:24:25 PM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> I found this on Student Life&#39;s website and thought it was an interesting list.========================================================= Indecent and deviant: Pre-Hays Code films you should see  Daniel P. Hauesser At the dawn of motion pictures, directors had few restrictions on the subjects they were allowed to film. Raciness in the silent era extends from tranquil bathing scenes featuring naked leading ladies to the intense violence of early Cecil B. DeMille epics, or the exotic, erotic indigene dances found within some remote jungle.   The advent of &#39;talkies,&#39; coupled with a string of sex-and-drug-laden celebrity scandals, made such overt portrayals of indecency appear dangerous to society. Public outcries to ban &#39;immoral&#39; films and preliminary motions by the government to censure motion pictures led studios to voluntarily implement a series of production guidelines outlining what was acceptable to include in a film for the public. These guidelines, known as the Hays Code, were adopted in 1930, but were not vigorously enforced until 1934.   Once Code enforcement began, the question arose of what to do with earlier films that contained &#39;indecent&#39; elements. Many films, such as the Marx Brother&#39;s "Animal Crackers," were edited to remove risqu&eacute; moments and their original versions are now lost. Others, such as "The Maltese Falcon" were simply remade (in that case to remove nudity and homosexuality). Luckily, some films have had their edited portions restored, such as "King Kong." However, many films couldn&#39;t conform to the code because their inherent subject matter was taboo. Banned from public display, these Pre-Code films were often forgotten, despite being excellent movies.   Here is a partial list of some important Pre-Code films that are well-worth seeing:   1)  "Little Caesar" (1931) and "The Public Enemy" (1931)   These are the archetypical gangster films. Featured heavily on "The Sopranos", "Little Caesar" follows the rise and fall of crime boss Rico Bandello (the suspected inspiration for federal RICO statutes). "The Public Enemy," a film about prohibition-era criminality, is famous for the misogynistic grapefruit-in-the-face scene between Cagney and Mae Clarke. The frank portrayal of the violence and depravity of these gangsters was not possible after Code enforcement.   2)  "M&auml;dchen in Uniform" (1931) and "Ecstasy" (1933)   These are two controversial early imports from Europe. The German "M&auml;dchen in Uniform" is an outstanding film that was only released in the U.S. due to efforts by Eleanor Roosevelt. The story is about a young girl that is sent to boarding school and begins a romantic infatuation with one of her teachers. The tense undertones of lesbianism rise to the surface in ways now considered tame, but its positive outlook on lesbian relations made it a strong target of censorship. "Ecstasy" is a Czech film that brought Hedy Lamarr to the attention of U.S. audiences. Even without the extended scene of a naked Lamarr, and the first known shot of a female&#39;s face during orgasm, the movie transgressed the Code with its plot of infidelity.   3)  "Freaks" (1932)   One of my favorite films, this cult classic remains controversial today. Frequently referenced in pop-culture, "Freaks" featured a cast of actual circus sideshow performers. One controversial scene shows a kiss between a young man and his fianc&eacute;e, who is a conjoined twin. As she locks lips with her fianc&eacute;, we view the other sister enjoying a flutter of erotic feelings in her &#39;own&#39; body. The horrific, violent ending to "Freaks" is still shocking to modern audiences.   4)  "Trouble in Paradise" (1932) and "Bird of Paradise" (1932)   "Trouble in Paradise" is one of the great romantic comedies. Its frank discussion of sexuality was impossible once the Code went into enforcement. "Bird of Paradise" is a romantic adventure about a sailor that falls in love with a Pacific island princess. The film is dated now, particularly in its depiction of &#39;uncivilized natives&#39; and its views on women. The sexuality of the characters and the fact that Dolores del Rio goes through most of the film wearing little beyond a lei make this a prime example of Pre-Code &#39;exotic&#39; adventure films.   5)  "Born to be Bad" (1934) and "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1931)   Both of these films feature prostitutes as main characters, a formula impossible under the Code. The first features a young Cary Grant as a married man who falls for a prostitute/single mother/con artist while he cares for her deviant son. The second is my favorite adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson&#39;s tale. It features great early special effects, a strong reaction against the conservative Victorian era and symbolizes Dr. Jeykyll&#39;s transformation into darkness in terms of sexual depravity, not just violence. ==============================================My list:5. I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang 4. Hell&#39;s Angels 3. Scarface2. Freaks1. King Kong  PSYou can find more information on Pre-Code Films and a list here.  <br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 01 Sep 2007 02:24:25 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Top 5</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/31/2007 10:24:25 PM</spout:postdate><spout:body>I found this on Student Life&amp;#39;s website and thought it was an interesting list.========================================================= Indecent and deviant: Pre-Hays Code films you should see  Daniel P. Hauesser At the dawn of motion pictures, directors had few restrictions on the subjects they were allowed to film. Raciness in the silent era extends from tranquil bathing scenes featuring naked leading ladies to the intense violence of early Cecil B. DeMille epics, or the exotic, erotic indigene dances found within some remote jungle.   The advent of &amp;#39;talkies,&amp;#39; coupled with a string of sex-and-drug-laden celebrity scandals, made such overt portrayals of indecency appear dangerous to society. Public outcries to ban &amp;#39;immoral&amp;#39; films and preliminary motions by the government to censure motion pictures led studios to voluntarily implement a series of production guidelines outlining what was acceptable to include in a film for the public. These guidelines, known as the Hays Code, were adopted in 1930, but were not vigorously enforced until 1934.   Once Code enforcement began, the question arose of what to do with earlier films that contained &amp;#39;indecent&amp;#39; elements. Many films, such as the Marx Brother&amp;#39;s "Animal Crackers," were edited to remove risqu&amp;eacute; moments and their original versions are now lost. Others, such as "The Maltese Falcon" were simply remade (in that case to remove nudity and homosexuality). Luckily, some films have had their edited portions restored, such as "King Kong." However, many films couldn&amp;#39;t conform to the code because their inherent subject matter was taboo. Banned from public display, these Pre-Code films were often forgotten, despite being excellent movies.   Here is a partial list of some important Pre-Code films that are well-worth seeing:   1)  "Little Caesar" (1931) and "The Public Enemy" (1931)   These are the archetypical gangster films. Featured heavily on "The Sopranos", "Little Caesar" follows the rise and fall of crime boss Rico Bandello (the suspected inspiration for federal RICO statutes). "The Public Enemy," a film about prohibition-era criminality, is famous for the misogynistic grapefruit-in-the-face scene between Cagney and Mae Clarke. The frank portrayal of the violence and depravity of these gangsters was not possible after Code enforcement.   2)  "M&amp;auml;dchen in Uniform" (1931) and "Ecstasy" (1933)   These are two controversial early imports from Europe. The German "M&amp;auml;dchen in Uniform" is an outstanding film that was only released in the U.S. due to efforts by Eleanor Roosevelt. The story is about a young girl that is sent to boarding school and begins a romantic infatuation with one of her teachers. The tense undertones of lesbianism rise to the surface in ways now considered tame, but its positive outlook on lesbian relations made it a strong target of censorship. "Ecstasy" is a Czech film that brought Hedy Lamarr to the attention of U.S. audiences. Even without the extended scene of a naked Lamarr, and the first known shot of a female&amp;#39;s face during orgasm, the movie transgressed the Code with its plot of infidelity.   3)  "Freaks" (1932)   One of my favorite films, this cult classic remains controversial today. Frequently referenced in pop-culture, "Freaks" featured a cast of actual circus sideshow performers. One controversial scene shows a kiss between a young man and his fianc&amp;eacute;e, who is a conjoined twin. As she locks lips with her fianc&amp;eacute;, we view the other sister enjoying a flutter of erotic feelings in her &amp;#39;own&amp;#39; body. The horrific, violent ending to "Freaks" is still shocking to modern audiences.   4)  "Trouble in Paradise" (1932) and "Bird of Paradise" (1932)   "Trouble in Paradise" is one of the great romantic comedies. Its frank discussion of sexuality was impossible once the Code went into enforcement. "Bird of Paradise" is a romantic adventure about a sailor that falls in love with a Pacific island princess. The film is dated now, particularly in its depiction of &amp;#39;uncivilized natives&amp;#39; and its views on women. The sexuality of the characters and the fact that Dolores del Rio goes through most of the film wearing little beyond a lei make this a prime example of Pre-Code &amp;#39;exotic&amp;#39; adventure films.   5)  "Born to be Bad" (1934) and "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1931)   Both of these films feature prostitutes as main characters, a formula impossible under the Code. The first features a young Cary Grant as a married man who falls for a prostitute/single mother/con artist while he cares for her deviant son. The second is my favorite adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson&amp;#39;s tale. It features great early special effects, a strong reaction against the conservative Victorian era and symbolizes Dr. Jeykyll&amp;#39;s transformation into darkness in terms of sexual depravity, not just violence. ==============================================My list:5. I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang 4. Hell&amp;#39;s Angels 3. Scarface2. Freaks1. King Kong  PSYou can find more information on Pre-Code Films and a list here.  </spout:body></item>
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      <title>Spout Post: Re: Determining Favorite Movies the Existential Way</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Philosophy_of_Film/Re_Determining_Favorite_Movies_the_Existential_Wa/281/18777/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s278047.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Philosophy_of_Film/281/discussions.aspx'>Philosophy of Film</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/25/2007 10:15:51 PM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> [quote user="joem18b"]I&#39;m currently watching all the movies on the IMDB Top 250 list that I haven&#39;t already seen. Why? Because my son asked me how many of them I had seen and there were a lot of them that I hadn&#39;t. Bad faith? Am I doing it to impress him? He hardly watches movies; asked me the question out of idle curiosity. Pride? I felt embarassed that I hadn&#39;t seen more on the list, but nobody else around here cares one way or the other. Maybe a little OCD going on?Some of the movies - Sunset Blvd, Requiem for a Dream, Metropolis, for example - were a real death march. 5 or 10 minutes a day. Masochism? On the other hand, today - Hot Fuzz. In the top 100. And actually, I do feel quite satisfied about seen those 3 movies, and Double Indemity and M and Rashomon and the others that I watched in bits and pieces. On some level or other I liked them a lot. Stockholm syndrome? Can it be that I like a movie a lot after forcing myself to watch it 5 minutes at a time?And speaking of The Godfather, my wife and I were on vacation in San Diego when that movie came out. A lot of buzz because the book and Mario Puzo were so popular at the time. (Nobody knew from Coppola.) The night before, we had seen Ameracord, the Fellini film. When we came out of The Godfather, I said, "That was very entertaining, but you can certainly see and feel the difference between a master like Fellini and a beginner like Coppola." Now The Godfather is a masterpiece and who remembers Amaracord? Go figure.[/quote]I&#39;m not going to say that&#39;s a bad place to start your movie "too do list," but here is an interesting aside from Roger Ebert&#39;s review of  The Simpsons Movie.  "If "The Simpsons" is indeed the best television series of 100 years (almost half of them, to be sure, without television), I guess I shouldn&#39;t be surprised to visit the Internet Movie Database and discover that the movie has been voted the 166th best film of all time, seven places above "The Grapes of Wrath" and 10 ahead of "Gone With the Wind."     That&#39;s all the more remarkable because it was first screened for critics on Tuesday,  has had no sneak previews I&#39;ve heard about, and already has 81.4 percent perfect "10" votes. Only 4.5 percent voted "9." That&#39;s funny, since you&#39;d think more people would consider it really good but not great. Do you suppose somehow the ballot box got stuffed by "Simpsons" fans who didn&#39;t even need to see the movie to know it was a masterpiece? D&#39;oh!"  <br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 26 Aug 2007 02:15:51 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Philosophy of Film</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/25/2007 10:15:51 PM</spout:postdate><spout:body>[quote user="joem18b"]I&amp;#39;m currently watching all the movies on the IMDB Top 250 list that I haven&amp;#39;t already seen. Why? Because my son asked me how many of them I had seen and there were a lot of them that I hadn&amp;#39;t. Bad faith? Am I doing it to impress him? He hardly watches movies; asked me the question out of idle curiosity. Pride? I felt embarassed that I hadn&amp;#39;t seen more on the list, but nobody else around here cares one way or the other. Maybe a little OCD going on?Some of the movies - Sunset Blvd, Requiem for a Dream, Metropolis, for example - were a real death march. 5 or 10 minutes a day. Masochism? On the other hand, today - Hot Fuzz. In the top 100. And actually, I do feel quite satisfied about seen those 3 movies, and Double Indemity and M and Rashomon and the others that I watched in bits and pieces. On some level or other I liked them a lot. Stockholm syndrome? Can it be that I like a movie a lot after forcing myself to watch it 5 minutes at a time?And speaking of The Godfather, my wife and I were on vacation in San Diego when that movie came out. A lot of buzz because the book and Mario Puzo were so popular at the time. (Nobody knew from Coppola.) The night before, we had seen Ameracord, the Fellini film. When we came out of The Godfather, I said, "That was very entertaining, but you can certainly see and feel the difference between a master like Fellini and a beginner like Coppola." Now The Godfather is a masterpiece and who remembers Amaracord? Go figure.[/quote]I&amp;#39;m not going to say that&amp;#39;s a bad place to start your movie "too do list," but here is an interesting aside from Roger Ebert&amp;#39;s review of  The Simpsons Movie.  "If "The Simpsons" is indeed the best television series of 100 years (almost half of them, to be sure, without television), I guess I shouldn&amp;#39;t be surprised to visit the Internet Movie Database and discover that the movie has been voted the 166th best film of all time, seven places above "The Grapes of Wrath" and 10 ahead of "Gone With the Wind."     That&amp;#39;s all the more remarkable because it was first screened for critics on Tuesday,  has had no sneak previews I&amp;#39;ve heard about, and already has 81.4 percent perfect "10" votes. Only 4.5 percent voted "9." That&amp;#39;s funny, since you&amp;#39;d think more people would consider it really good but not great. Do you suppose somehow the ballot box got stuffed by "Simpsons" fans who didn&amp;#39;t even need to see the movie to know it was a masterpiece? D&amp;#39;oh!"  </spout:body></item>
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      <title>Spout Post: Re: Top 5 Bands That Get Their Names From Movies.</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/Re_Top_5_Bands_That_Get_Their_Names_From_Movies/190/18776/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t88489dls2g.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/190/discussions.aspx'>Top 5</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/25/2007 9:47:46 PM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> [quote user="tmoney"]Wow. this may be the hardest topic for top 5 anyone has come up with.  I can only think of a few and this is stretching it.1. Deerhunter - their latest album Cryptograms is unbelievable. and also a movie2. Xiu Xiu - I love this band. really really bizarre. and i&#39;ve heard of the movie, but never seen it.3. The Roots - Maybe this is after Roots?4. The Good, The Bad, and the Queen - I can only assume it was influenced by the good, bad and ugly.This topic may be a little abstract! [/quote]Alright :-)  Although I can think of many that are not on it, here is a small cheat-sheet.   Can anyone tell me a band that is named after a character from Willy Wonka &amp; the Chocolate Factory? <br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 26 Aug 2007 01:47:46 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Top 5</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/25/2007 9:47:46 PM</spout:postdate><spout:body>[quote user="tmoney"]Wow. this may be the hardest topic for top 5 anyone has come up with.  I can only think of a few and this is stretching it.1. Deerhunter - their latest album Cryptograms is unbelievable. and also a movie2. Xiu Xiu - I love this band. really really bizarre. and i&amp;#39;ve heard of the movie, but never seen it.3. The Roots - Maybe this is after Roots?4. The Good, The Bad, and the Queen - I can only assume it was influenced by the good, bad and ugly.This topic may be a little abstract! [/quote]Alright :-)  Although I can think of many that are not on it, here is a small cheat-sheet.   Can anyone tell me a band that is named after a character from Willy Wonka &amp;amp; the Chocolate Factory? </spout:body></item>
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      <title>Spout Post: Re: Top 5 Comebacks</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/Re_Top_5_Comebacks/190/18774/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/190/discussions.aspx'>Top 5</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/25/2007 9:18:03 PM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> 5. Burt Reynolds4. Richard Gere 3. Drew Barrymore2. Alec Baldwin 1. John Travolta <br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 26 Aug 2007 01:18:03 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Top 5</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/25/2007 9:18:03 PM</spout:postdate><spout:body>5. Burt Reynolds4. Richard Gere 3. Drew Barrymore2. Alec Baldwin 1. John Travolta </spout:body></item>
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      <title>Spout Post: Top 5 Bands That Get Their Names From Movies.</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/Top_5_Bands_That_Get_Their_Names_From_Movies/190/18769/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t03077diurx.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/190/discussions.aspx'>Top 5</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/25/2007 7:42:28 PM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> Top 5 Bands That Get Their Names From Movies.5. Duran Duran: A villain in Barbarella. 4. 10,000 Maniacs: B horror movie called 2000 maniacs! 3. Misfits: 1961 movie starring Clarke Gable and Marilyn Monroe.2. White Zombie:  1932 Victor Halperin classic.1. Black Sabbath: 1963 horror movie starring Boris Karloff. (edit)Although I can think of many that are not on it, here is a small cheat-sheet.   <br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 25 Aug 2007 23:42:28 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Top 5</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/25/2007 7:42:28 PM</spout:postdate><spout:body>Top 5 Bands That Get Their Names From Movies.5. Duran Duran: A villain in Barbarella. 4. 10,000 Maniacs: B horror movie called 2000 maniacs! 3. Misfits: 1961 movie starring Clarke Gable and Marilyn Monroe.2. White Zombie:  1932 Victor Halperin classic.1. Black Sabbath: 1963 horror movie starring Boris Karloff. (edit)Although I can think of many that are not on it, here is a small cheat-sheet.   </spout:body></item>
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      <title>Spout Post: Re: Latest unknown fave</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Viewing_with_a_purpose/Re_Latest_unknown_fave/288/18737/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t79399wm9uw.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Viewing_with_a_purpose/288/discussions.aspx'>Viewing with a purpose</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/24/2007 10:39:58 PM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> Although I&#39;m sure it&#39;s known to most here, Dellamorte Dellamore ( aka "Cemetery Man") is one of my all time favorites, along with another classic, Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia.<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 25 Aug 2007 02:39:58 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Viewing with a purpose</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/24/2007 10:39:58 PM</spout:postdate><spout:body>Although I&amp;#39;m sure it&amp;#39;s known to most here, Dellamorte Dellamore ( aka "Cemetery Man") is one of my all time favorites, along with another classic, Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia.</spout:body></item>
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      <title>Spout Post: Re: Top 5 Movies About Making Movies</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/Re_Top_5_Movies_About_Making_Movies/190/18556/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/190/discussions.aspx'>Top 5</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/22/2007 4:01:47 PM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> I saw 8 1/2 the second time through. I was going to edit it, but I thought I would leave the link. Spinal Tap is a streach I admit, but what the hell, I turned it up to 11:-)<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 20:01:47 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Top 5</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/22/2007 4:01:47 PM</spout:postdate><spout:body>I saw 8 1/2 the second time through. I was going to edit it, but I thought I would leave the link. Spinal Tap is a streach I admit, but what the hell, I turned it up to 11:-)</spout:body></item>
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      <title>Spout Post: Sight and Sound (1937) - My Own Methods, by Alfred Hitchcock</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Alfred_Hitchcock/Sight_and_Sound_1937_My_Own_Methods_by_Alfred/451/18515/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Alfred_Hitchcock/451/discussions.aspx'>Alfred Hitchcock</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/22/2007 12:22:10 AM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> My Own Methods, by Alfred Hitchcock Many people think a film director does all his work in the studio, drilling the actors, making them do what he wants. That is not at all true of my own methods, and I can write only of my own methods. I like to have a film complete in my mind before I go on the floor. Sometimes the first idea one has of a film is of a vague pattern, a sort of haze with a certain shape. There is possibly a colourful opening developing into something more intimate; then, perhaps in the middle, a progression to a chase or some other adventure; and sometimes at the end the big shape of a climax, or maybe some twist or surprise. You see this hazy pattern, and then you have to find a narrative idea to suit it. Or a story may give you an idea first and you have to develop it into a pattern. Imagine an example of a standard plot -- let us say a conflict between love and duty. This idea was the origin of my first talkie, "Blackmail". The hazy pattern one saw beforehand was duty-love-love versus duty -- and finally either duty or love, one or the other. The whole middle section was built up on the theme of love versus duty, after duty and love had been introduced separately in turn. So I had first to put on the screen an episode expressing duty. I showed the arrest of a criminal by Scotland Yard detectives, and tried to make it as concrete and detailed as I could. You even saw the detectives take the man to the lavatory to wash his hands -- nothing exciting, just the routine of duty. Then the young detective says he&#39;s going out that evening with his girl, and the sequence ends, pointing on from duty to love. Then you start showing the relationship between the detective and his girl: they are middle-class people. The love theme doesn&#39;t run smoothly; there is a quarrel and the girl goes off by herself, just because the young man has kept her waiting a few minutes. So your story starts; the girl falls in with the villain -- he tries to seduce her and she kills him. Now you&#39;ve got your problem prepared. Next morning, as soon as the detective is put on to the murder case, you have your conflict-love versus duty. The audience know that he will be trying to track down his own girl, who has done the murder, so you sustain their interest: they wonder what will happen next. The blackmailer was really a subsidiary theme. I wanted him to go and expose the girl. That was my idea of how the story ought to end. I wanted the pursuit to be after the girl, not after the blackmailer. That would have brought the conflict on to a climax, with the young detective, ahead of the others, trying to push the girl out through a window to get her away, and the girl turning round and saying: "You can&#39;t do that -- I must give myself up." Then the rest of the police arrive, misinterpret what he is doing, and say, "Good man, you&#39;ve got her," not knowing the relationship between them. Now the reason for the opening comes to light. You repeat every shot used first to illustrate the duty theme, only now it is the girl who is the criminal. The young man is there ostensibly as a detective, but of course the audience know he is in love with the girl. The girl is locked up in her cell and the two detectives walk away, and the older one says, "Going out with your girl tonight?" The younger one shakes his head. "No. Not tonight." That was the ending I wanted for "Blackmail", but I had to change it for commercial reasons. The girl couldn&#39;t be left to face her fate. And that shows you how the films suffer from their own power of appealing to millions. They could often be subtler than they are, but their own popularity won&#39;t let them. But to get back to the early work on a film. With the help of my wife, who does the technical continuity, I plan out a script very carefully, hoping to follow it exactly, all the way through, when shooting starts. In fact, this working on the script is the real making of the film, for me. When I&#39;ve done it, the film is finished already in my mind. Usually, too, I don&#39;t find it necessary to do more than supervise the editing myself. Settings, of course, come into the preliminary plan, and usually I have fairly clear ideas about them; I was an art student before I took up with films. Sometimes I even think of backgrounds first. "The Man Who Knew Too Much" started like that; I looked in my mind&#39;s eye at snowy Alps and dingy London alleys, and threw my characters into the middle of the contrast. Studio settings, however, are often a problem; one difficulty is that extreme effects -- extremes of luxury or extremes of squalor -- are much the easiest to register on the screen. If you try reproduce the average sitting-room in Golders Green or Streatham it is apt to come out looking like nothing in particular, just nondescript. It is true that I have tried lately to get interiors giving a real lower-middle-class atmosphere -- for instance, the Verlocs&#39; living room in "Sabotage" -- but there&#39;s always a certain risk in giving your audience humdrum truth.  However, in time the script and the sets are finished somehow and we are ready to start shooting. One great problem that occurs at once, and keeps on occurring, is to get the players to adapt themselves to film technique. Many of them, of course, come from the stage; they are not cinema-minded at all. So, quite naturally, they like to play long scenes straight ahead. But if I have to shoot a long scene continuously I always feel I am losing grip on it, from a cinematic point of view. The camera, I feel, is simply standing there, hoping to catch something with a visual point to it. I want to put my film together on the screen, not simply to photograph something that has been put together already in the form of a long piece of stage acting. This is what gives an effect of life to a picture the feeling that when you see it on the screen you are watching something that has been conceived and brought to birth directly in visual terms. You can see an example of what I mean in Sabotage. Just before Verloc is killed there is a scene made up entirely of short pieces of film, separately photographed. This scene has to show how Verloc comes to be killed -- how the thought of killing him arises in Sylvia Sidney&#39;s mind and connects itself with the carving knife she uses when they sit down to dinner. But the sympathy of the audience has to be kept with Sylvia Sidney; it must be clear that Verloc&#39;s death, finally, is an accident. So, as she serves at the table, you see her unconsciously serving vegetables with the carving knife, as though her hand were keeping hold of the knife of its own accord. The camera cuts from her hand to her eyes and back to her hand; then back to her eyes as she suddenly becomes aware of the knife, making its error. Then to a normal shot -- the man unconcernedly eating; then back to the hand holding the knife. In an older style of acting Sylvia would have had to show the audience what was passing in her mind by exaggerated facial expression. But people today in real life often don&#39;t show their feelings in their faces: so the film treatment showed the audience her mind through her hand, through its unconscious grasp on the knife. Now the camera moves again to Verloc -- back to the knife-back again to his face. You see him seeing the knife, realising its implication. The tension between the two is built up with the knife as its focus. Now when the camera has immersed the audience so closely in a scene such as this, it can&#39;t instantly become objective again. It must broaden the movement of the scene without loosening the tension. Verloc gets up and walks round the table, coming so close to the camera that you feel, if you are sitting in the audience, almost as though you must move back to make room for him. Then the camera moves to Sylvia Sidney again, then returns to the subject -- the knife. So you gradually build up the psychological situation, piece by piece, using the camera to emphasise first one detail, then another. The point is to draw the audience right inside the situation instead of leaving them to watch it from outside, from a distance. And you can do this only by breaking the action up into details and cutting from one to the other, so that each detail is forced in turn on the attention of the audience and reveals its psychological meaning. If you played the whole scene straight through, and simply made a photographic record of it with the camera always in one position, you would lose your power over the audience. They would watch the scene without becoming really involved in it, and you would have no means of concentrating their attention on those particular visual details which make them feel what the characters are feeling. One way of using the camera to give emphasis is the reaction shot. By the reaction shot I mean any dose-up which illustrates an event by showing instantly the reaction to it of a person or a group. The door opens for someone to come in, and before showing who it is you cut to the expressions of the persons already in the room. Or, while one person is talking, you keep your camera on someone else who is listening. This over-running of one person&#39;s image with another person&#39;s voice is a method peculiar to the talkies; it is one of the devices which help the talkies to tell a story faster than a silent film could tell it, and faster than it could be told on the stage. Or, again, you can use the camera to give emphasis whenever the attention of the audience has to be focused for a moment on a certain player. There is no need for him to raise his voice or move to the centre of the stage or do anything dramatic. A close-up will do it all for him -- will give him, so to speak, the stage all to himself. I must say that in recent years I have come to make much less use of obvious camera devices. I have become more commercially-minded; afraid that anything at all subtle may be missed. I have learnt from experience how easily small touches are overlooked. The film always has to deal in exaggerations. Its methods reflect the simple contrasts of black and white photography. One advantage of colour is that it would give you more intermediate shades. I should never want to fill the screen with colour: it ought to be used economically -- to put new words into the screen&#39;s visual language when there&#39;s a need for them. You could start a colour film with a boardroom scene: sombre panelling and furniture, the directors all in dark clothes and white collars. Then the chairman&#39;s wife comes in, wearing a red hat. She takes the attention of the audience at once, just because of that one note of colour. A journalist once asked me about distorted sound -- a device I tried in Blackmail when the word "knife" hammers on the consciousness of the girl at breakfast on the morning after the murder. Again, I think this kind of effect may be justified. There have always been occasions when we have needed to show a phantasmagoria of the mind in terms of visual imagery. So we may want to show someone&#39;s mental state by letting him listen to some sound -- let us say church bells -- and making them clang with distorted insistence in his head. But on the whole nowadays I try to tell a story in the simplest possible way, so that I can feel sure it will hold the attention of any audience and won&#39;t puzzle them. I know there are critics who ask why lately I have made only thrillers. Am I satisfied, they say, with putting on the screen the equivalent merely of popular novelettes? Part of the answer is that I am out to get the best stories I can which will suit the film medium, and I have usually found it necessary to take a hand in writing them myself. There is a shortage of good writing for the screen. In this country we can&#39;t usually afford to employ large writing staffs, so I have had to join in and become a writer myself. I choose crime stories because that is the kind of story I can write, or help to write, myself -- the kind of story I can turn most easily into a successful film. It is the same with Charles Bennett, who has so often worked with me; he is essentially a writer of melodrama. I am ready to use other stories, but I can&#39;t find writers who will give them to me in a suitable form. Sometimes I have been asked what films I should make if I were free to do exactly as I liked without having to think about the box-office. There are several examples I can give very easily. For one thing, I should like to make travel films with a personal element in them. Or I should like to do a verbatim of a celebrated trial. The Thompson-Bywaters case, for instance. The cinema could reconstruct the whole story. Or there is the fire at sea possibility -- that has never been tackled seriously on the screen. It might be too terrifying for some audiences, but it would make a great subject worthwhile. British producers are often urged to make more films about characteristic phases of English life.  Why, they are asked, do we see so little of the English farmer or the English seaman? Or is there not plenty of good material in the great British industries -- in mining or shipbuilding or steel? One difficulty here is that English audiences seem to take more interest in American life -- I suppose because it has a novelty value. They are rather easily bored by everyday scenes in their own country. But I certainly should like to make a film of the Derby, only it might not be quite in the popular class. It would be hard to invent a Derby story that wasn&#39;t hackneyed, conventional. I would rather do it more as a documentary -- a sort of pageant, an animated modern version of Frith&#39;s "Derby Day." I would show everything that goes on all round the course, but without a story. Perhaps the average audience isn&#39;t ready for that, yet. Popular taste, all the same, does move; today you can put over scenes that would have been ruled out a few years ago. Particularly towards comedy, nowadays, there is a different attitude. You can get comedy out of your stars, and you used not to be allowed to do anything which might knock the glamour off them. In 1926 I made a film called "Downhill", from a play by Ivor Novello, who acted in the film himself, with Ian Hunter and Isabel Jeans. There was a sequence showing a quarrel between Hunter and Novello. It started as an ordinary fight; then they began throwing things at one another. They tried to pick up heavy pedestals to throw and the pedestals bowled them over. In other words I made it comic. I even put Hunter into a morning coat and striped trousers because I felt that a man never looks so ridiculous as when he is well dressed and fighting. This whole scene was cut out; they said I was guying Ivor Novello. It was ten years before its time. I think public taste is turning to like comedy and drama more mixed up; and this is another move away from the conventions of the stage. In a play your divisions are much more rigid; you have a scene in one key -- then curtain, and after an interval another scene starts. In a film you keep your whole action flowing; you can have comedy and drama running together and weave them in and out. Audiences are much readier now than they used to be for sudden changes of mood; and this means more freedom for a director. The art of directing for the commercial market is to know just how far you can go. In many ways I am freer now to do what I want to do than I was a few years ago. I hope in time to have more freedom still -- if audiences will give it to me. <br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 04:22:10 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Alfred Hitchcock</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/22/2007 12:22:10 AM</spout:postdate><spout:body>My Own Methods, by Alfred Hitchcock Many people think a film director does all his work in the studio, drilling the actors, making them do what he wants. That is not at all true of my own methods, and I can write only of my own methods. I like to have a film complete in my mind before I go on the floor. Sometimes the first idea one has of a film is of a vague pattern, a sort of haze with a certain shape. There is possibly a colourful opening developing into something more intimate; then, perhaps in the middle, a progression to a chase or some other adventure; and sometimes at the end the big shape of a climax, or maybe some twist or surprise. You see this hazy pattern, and then you have to find a narrative idea to suit it. Or a story may give you an idea first and you have to develop it into a pattern. Imagine an example of a standard plot -- let us say a conflict between love and duty. This idea was the origin of my first talkie, "Blackmail". The hazy pattern one saw beforehand was duty-love-love versus duty -- and finally either duty or love, one or the other. The whole middle section was built up on the theme of love versus duty, after duty and love had been introduced separately in turn. So I had first to put on the screen an episode expressing duty. I showed the arrest of a criminal by Scotland Yard detectives, and tried to make it as concrete and detailed as I could. You even saw the detectives take the man to the lavatory to wash his hands -- nothing exciting, just the routine of duty. Then the young detective says he&amp;#39;s going out that evening with his girl, and the sequence ends, pointing on from duty to love. Then you start showing the relationship between the detective and his girl: they are middle-class people. The love theme doesn&amp;#39;t run smoothly; there is a quarrel and the girl goes off by herself, just because the young man has kept her waiting a few minutes. So your story starts; the girl falls in with the villain -- he tries to seduce her and she kills him. Now you&amp;#39;ve got your problem prepared. Next morning, as soon as the detective is put on to the murder case, you have your conflict-love versus duty. The audience know that he will be trying to track down his own girl, who has done the murder, so you sustain their interest: they wonder what will happen next. The blackmailer was really a subsidiary theme. I wanted him to go and expose the girl. That was my idea of how the story ought to end. I wanted the pursuit to be after the girl, not after the blackmailer. That would have brought the conflict on to a climax, with the young detective, ahead of the others, trying to push the girl out through a window to get her away, and the girl turning round and saying: "You can&amp;#39;t do that -- I must give myself up." Then the rest of the police arrive, misinterpret what he is doing, and say, "Good man, you&amp;#39;ve got her," not knowing the relationship between them. Now the reason for the opening comes to light. You repeat every shot used first to illustrate the duty theme, only now it is the girl who is the criminal. The young man is there ostensibly as a detective, but of course the audience know he is in love with the girl. The girl is locked up in her cell and the two detectives walk away, and the older one says, "Going out with your girl tonight?" The younger one shakes his head. "No. Not tonight." That was the ending I wanted for "Blackmail", but I had to change it for commercial reasons. The girl couldn&amp;#39;t be left to face her fate. And that shows you how the films suffer from their own power of appealing to millions. They could often be subtler than they are, but their own popularity won&amp;#39;t let them. But to get back to the early work on a film. With the help of my wife, who does the technical continuity, I plan out a script very carefully, hoping to follow it exactly, all the way through, when shooting starts. In fact, this working on the script is the real making of the film, for me. When I&amp;#39;ve done it, the film is finished already in my mind. Usually, too, I don&amp;#39;t find it necessary to do more than supervise the editing myself. Settings, of course, come into the preliminary plan, and usually I have fairly clear ideas about them; I was an art student before I took up with films. Sometimes I even think of backgrounds first. "The Man Who Knew Too Much" started like that; I looked in my mind&amp;#39;s eye at snowy Alps and dingy London alleys, and threw my characters into the middle of the contrast. Studio settings, however, are often a problem; one difficulty is that extreme effects -- extremes of luxury or extremes of squalor -- are much the easiest to register on the screen. If you try reproduce the average sitting-room in Golders Green or Streatham it is apt to come out looking like nothing in particular, just nondescript. It is true that I have tried lately to get interiors giving a real lower-middle-class atmosphere -- for instance, the Verlocs&amp;#39; living room in "Sabotage" -- but there&amp;#39;s always a certain risk in giving your audience humdrum truth.  However, in time the script and the sets are finished somehow and we are ready to start shooting. One great problem that occurs at once, and keeps on occurring, is to get the players to adapt themselves to film technique. Many of them, of course, come from the stage; they are not cinema-minded at all. So, quite naturally, they like to play long scenes straight ahead. But if I have to shoot a long scene continuously I always feel I am losing grip on it, from a cinematic point of view. The camera, I feel, is simply standing there, hoping to catch something with a visual point to it. I want to put my film together on the screen, not simply to photograph something that has been put together already in the form of a long piece of stage acting. This is what gives an effect of life to a picture the feeling that when you see it on the screen you are watching something that has been conceived and brought to birth directly in visual terms. You can see an example of what I mean in Sabotage. Just before Verloc is killed there is a scene made up entirely of short pieces of film, separately photographed. This scene has to show how Verloc comes to be killed -- how the thought of killing him arises in Sylvia Sidney&amp;#39;s mind and connects itself with the carving knife she uses when they sit down to dinner. But the sympathy of the audience has to be kept with Sylvia Sidney; it must be clear that Verloc&amp;#39;s death, finally, is an accident. So, as she serves at the table, you see her unconsciously serving vegetables with the carving knife, as though her hand were keeping hold of the knife of its own accord. The camera cuts from her hand to her eyes and back to her hand; then back to her eyes as she suddenly becomes aware of the knife, making its error. Then to a normal shot -- the man unconcernedly eating; then back to the hand holding the knife. In an older style of acting Sylvia would have had to show the audience what was passing in her mind by exaggerated facial expression. But people today in real life often don&amp;#39;t show their feelings in their faces: so the film treatment showed the audience her mind through her hand, through its unconscious grasp on the knife. Now the camera moves again to Verloc -- back to the knife-back again to his face. You see him seeing the knife, realising its implication. The tension between the two is built up with the knife as its focus. Now when the camera has immersed the audience so closely in a scene such as this, it can&amp;#39;t instantly become objective again. It must broaden the movement of the scene without loosening the tension. Verloc gets up and walks round the table, coming so close to the camera that you feel, if you are sitting in the audience, almost as though you must move back to make room for him. Then the camera moves to Sylvia Sidney again, then returns to the subject -- the knife. So you gradually build up the psychological situation, piece by piece, using the camera to emphasise first one detail, then another. The point is to draw the audience right inside the situation instead of leaving them to watch it from outside, from a distance. And you can do this only by breaking the action up into details and cutting from one to the other, so that each detail is forced in turn on the attention of the audience and reveals its psychological meaning. If you played the whole scene straight through, and simply made a photographic record of it with the camera always in one position, you would lose your power over the audience. They would watch the scene without becoming really involved in it, and you would have no means of concentrating their attention on those particular visual details which make them feel what the characters are feeling. One way of using the camera to give emphasis is the reaction shot. By the reaction shot I mean any dose-up which illustrates an event by showing instantly the reaction to it of a person or a group. The door opens for someone to come in, and before showing who it is you cut to the expressions of the persons already in the room. Or, while one person is talking, you keep your camera on someone else who is listening. This over-running of one person&amp;#39;s image with another person&amp;#39;s voice is a method peculiar to the talkies; it is one of the devices which help the talkies to tell a story faster than a silent film could tell it, and faster than it could be told on the stage. Or, again, you can use the camera to give emphasis whenever the attention of the audience has to be focused for a moment on a certain player. There is no need for him to raise his voice or move to the centre of the stage or do anything dramatic. A close-up will do it all for him -- will give him, so to speak, the stage all to himself. I must say that in recent years I have come to make much less use of obvious camera devices. I have become more commercially-minded; afraid that anything at all subtle may be missed. I have learnt from experience how easily small touches are overlooked. The film always has to deal in exaggerations. Its methods reflect the simple contrasts of black and white photography. One advantage of colour is that it would give you more intermediate shades. I should never want to fill the screen with colour: it ought to be used economically -- to put new words into the screen&amp;#39;s visual language when there&amp;#39;s a need for them. You could start a colour film with a boardroom scene: sombre panelling and furniture, the directors all in dark clothes and white collars. Then the chairman&amp;#39;s wife comes in, wearing a red hat. She takes the attention of the audience at once, just because of that one note of colour. A journalist once asked me about distorted sound -- a device I tried in Blackmail when the word "knife" hammers on the consciousness of the girl at breakfast on the morning after the murder. Again, I think this kind of effect may be justified. There have always been occasions when we have needed to show a phantasmagoria of the mind in terms of visual imagery. So we may want to show someone&amp;#39;s mental state by letting him listen to some sound -- let us say church bells -- and making them clang with distorted insistence in his head. But on the whole nowadays I try to tell a story in the simplest possible way, so that I can feel sure it will hold the attention of any audience and won&amp;#39;t puzzle them. I know there are critics who ask why lately I have made only thrillers. Am I satisfied, they say, with putting on the screen the equivalent merely of popular novelettes? Part of the answer is that I am out to get the best stories I can which will suit the film medium, and I have usually found it necessary to take a hand in writing them myself. There is a shortage of good writing for the screen. In this country we can&amp;#39;t usually afford to employ large writing staffs, so I have had to join in and become a writer myself. I choose crime stories because that is the kind of story I can write, or help to write, myself -- the kind of story I can turn most easily into a successful film. It is the same with Charles Bennett, who has so often worked with me; he is essentially a writer of melodrama. I am ready to use other stories, but I can&amp;#39;t find writers who will give them to me in a suitable form. Sometimes I have been asked what films I should make if I were free to do exactly as I liked without having to think about the box-office. There are several examples I can give very easily. For one thing, I should like to make travel films with a personal element in them. Or I should like to do a verbatim of a celebrated trial. The Thompson-Bywaters case, for instance. The cinema could reconstruct the whole story. Or there is the fire at sea possibility -- that has never been tackled seriously on the screen. It might be too terrifying for some audiences, but it would make a great subject worthwhile. British producers are often urged to make more films about characteristic phases of English life.  Why, they are asked, do we see so little of the English farmer or the English seaman? Or is there not plenty of good material in the great British industries -- in mining or shipbuilding or steel? One difficulty here is that English audiences seem to take more interest in American life -- I suppose because it has a novelty value. They are rather easily bored by everyday scenes in their own country. But I certainly should like to make a film of the Derby, only it might not be quite in the popular class. It would be hard to invent a Derby story that wasn&amp;#39;t hackneyed, conventional. I would rather do it more as a documentary -- a sort of pageant, an animated modern version of Frith&amp;#39;s "Derby Day." I would show everything that goes on all round the course, but without a story. Perhaps the average audience isn&amp;#39;t ready for that, yet. Popular taste, all the same, does move; today you can put over scenes that would have been ruled out a few years ago. Particularly towards comedy, nowadays, there is a different attitude. You can get comedy out of your stars, and you used not to be allowed to do anything which might knock the glamour off them. In 1926 I made a film called "Downhill", from a play by Ivor Novello, who acted in the film himself, with Ian Hunter and Isabel Jeans. There was a sequence showing a quarrel between Hunter and Novello. It started as an ordinary fight; then they began throwing things at one another. They tried to pick up heavy pedestals to throw and the pedestals bowled them over. In other words I made it comic. I even put Hunter into a morning coat and striped trousers because I felt that a man never looks so ridiculous as when he is well dressed and fighting. This whole scene was cut out; they said I was guying Ivor Novello. It was ten years before its time. I think public taste is turning to like comedy and drama more mixed up; and this is another move away from the conventions of the stage. In a play your divisions are much more rigid; you have a scene in one key -- then curtain, and after an interval another scene starts. In a film you keep your whole action flowing; you can have comedy and drama running together and weave them in and out. Audiences are much readier now than they used to be for sudden changes of mood; and this means more freedom for a director. The art of directing for the commercial market is to know just how far you can go. In many ways I am freer now to do what I want to do than I was a few years ago. I hope in time to have more freedom still -- if audiences will give it to me. </spout:body></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Post: Interview: Alfred Hitchcock and Roger Ebert</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Alfred_Hitchcock/Interview_Alfred_Hitchcock_and_Roger_Ebert/451/18514/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Alfred_Hitchcock/451/discussions.aspx'>Alfred Hitchcock</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/22/2007 12:18:10 AM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> Interview with Alfred Hitchcock Roger Ebert, December 14, 1969 Alfred Hitchcock waited in a deep chair by the window, like a judge in chambers preparing for a last word with a strangler. The pale morning sunlight struggled into the room and collapsed at his feet. It was a grey morning, a foggy Chicago morning. On such mornings, he said, he is reminded sometimes of the Acid Bath Murders... "Committed by a man named Haig, I believe his name was. Did his jobs in a little garage halfway between London and the coast. He was tripped up when the under-manageress of the Hounslow Court Hotel, Kensington, noticed him going out with women and not coming back in with them, or something of the sort. "Of course once the police had a look into that garage, they&#39;d solved their case. They found everything: the bills for the acid, the tub where he did his work, and even some plastic dentures that hadn&#39;t been eaten up by the acid... "In court, Haig claimed he drank his victim&#39;s blood. Of course he did nothing of the sort. Those tales are always... ah, unlikely. He was tried before Mr. Justice Humphries and brought in guilty." Hitchcock leaned forward slightly, his hands still crossed on his paunch, and his voice lowered. "The touch that fascinated me didn&#39;t take place until years afterward. Mr. Justice Humphries finally retired, and then his wife died, and so he closed up his big house and moved into... the Hounslow Court Hotel!" Hitchcock bounced back in his chair and beamed with satisfaction. "I read his biography," Hitchcock said. "It tells us that when he was informed of the coincidence, Mr. Justice Humphries laughed sardonically." Hitchcock permitted himself a small sardonic laugh in demonstration. Have you ever committed a murder? I asked him. "No, he said soberly, and shook his head. "Too scared. But I do believe the perfect crime is being committed at this minute. It would have to be, of course, totally without emotion. So few crimes are. We all of us have emotion stirring about there somewhere. That was the case in Marnie, of course, which was about a man who wanted to go to bed with a thief." Hitchcock pursed his lips. "Reminds me," he said, "of the case reported in the British papers about a one-armed woman who sued a woman with no legs for the alienation of her husband&#39;s affections. Of course, as it turned out, the poor man had a proclivity for maimed women. His wife had no recourse, really, except perhaps to cut off her other arm... Hitchcock smiled, and it was a warm and benign smile. You had the feeling he would helpfully have assisted the woman with her saw. "If I had not been what I am," he said, "I think I would have preferred to have been a criminal lawyer. That would have been fascinating, finding out about criminals and their crimes, and being a ham actor in court! I have such a dread of the law, you know. Of policemen. I did not drive a car for 11 years after coming to this country for fear of being stopped and given a ticket. Psychiatrists tell me my phobia can be cured, but I doubt it. So many of my pictures have been about wrongly accused men on the run." He shuddered. "That&#39;s the most dreadful thing of all." Hitchcock was in Chicago to promote his latest picture, Topaz, which opens here after the first of the year. Unfortunately, it was not previewed for any of the critics before his visit, and so it was impossible to ask specific questions about it. "No matter," he said. "You&#39;ll see it soon enough. You&#39;ll only like it the second time... that&#39;s what I think. My pictures become classics, magically, with age. The critics never like them first time around. I remember when Psycho first came out, one of the London critics called it a blot on an honorable career. And Time magazine panned it so badly that I was surprised, a year later, to find them referring to someone else&#39;s thriller as being &#39;in the classic Psycho tradition&#39;. "Still, some of my pictures have never quite been accepted, I&#39;m afraid. To this day I&#39;m disappointed by the reception for The Trouble with Harry. It was an English-type comedy of the macabre, which I made in 1955. All about a body that gets dug up and buried about four times. I shot it in Vermont, during the fall, to get all the autumn colors: yellow, red, there was beauty in the trees. And then a French intellectual asked me why I shot it in the autumn. His theory was that I was using the season of decay as a counterpoint to poor Harry&#39;s own decay." Hitchcock snuffled to show how ridiculous that was. "The only message in the picture," he said, "was that you should never mess about with a dead body - you may be one yourself someday." The French intellectual in question was doubtless Francois Truffaut, who conducted 50 hours of meticulously detailed interviews with Hitchcock and compiled them in the fascinating book "Hitchcock/Truffaut". Not content, Truffaut then made a film in homage to Hitchcock: "The Bride Wore Black" (1968), in which he deliberately tried to copy Hitchcock&#39;s style in a story of a widow who set out to murder the five killers of her husband. I asked Hitchcock how he liked Truffaut&#39;s film. "Very much," he said. "Very much yes. Of course, I worried a little bit as to how the bride knew there were five men. That&#39;s never explained, you know. Certain things, of course, you do leave out in order not to give the story away. But you should never leave out your basic premise, I should think... "Still, Truffaut understood very well that I depend on style more than plot. It is how you do it, and not your content that makes you an artist. A story is simply a motif, just as a painter might paint a bowl of fruit just to give him something to be painting." Hitchcock said his own primary contribution to a film occurs while the script is being written. "Once the screenplay is finished," he said, "I&#39;d just as soon not make the film at all. All the fun is over. I have a strongly visual mind. I visualize a picture right down to the final cuts. I write all this out in the greatest detail in the script, and then I don&#39;t look at the script while I&#39;m shooting. I know it off by heart, just as an orchestra conductor needs not look at the score. It&#39;s melancholy to shoot a picture. When you finish the script, the film is perfect. But in shooting it you lose perhaps 40 per cent of your original conception." He sighed. "Still, there are challenges. In The Birds, for example, we solved some delightful technical problems. Remember that scene where the gulls swoop down on the town? That was actually three separate elements of film, brought together. "First we shot a parking lot with people hurrying across it. Then we had an artist paint an aerial view of the town, which we superimposed over the people. Then we went out to a cliff and threw a lot of garbage off it, and pointed our camera straight down to catch the gulls swooping down for it. Then two women went to work for three months, copying the gulls from the rest of those pictures, frame by frame. Then we added them to our other pictures, and we had gulls swooping down on the town - or so it seemed. It used to enrage me when people suggested those were mechanical birds. "But times have changed in Hollywood. I remember in the old days we had more fun writing movies. You could bring in three or four writers and have them polish a script. Now they all want credit, Robert Benchley did some of the dialog for Foreign Correspondent, I recall. And Dorothy Parker, of course, contributed some very funny lines to Saboteur, including the quarrel between the thin man and the midget. He smiled. "Dorothy Parker. Now there was an extraordinary woman. I remember once we were all sitting in the Stork Club in New York, conducting some perfectly ridiculous argument about whether the word &#39;ski&#39; should be pronounced &#39;ski&#39; or &#39;she.&#39; Somebody took the position that skiing was a Norwegian sport, and that in Norway they pronounced it &#39;she&#39; and so we should too. The argument went on forever, until Dorothy finally wearied of it, She pounded on the table and shouted out: &#39;Oh, skit!&#39;" Hitchcock enjoyed his joke enormously, and was still laughing as he put on his overcoat and headed for a limousine that would deliver him to a taping session for Kup&#39;s Show. "I remember once I was on Kup&#39;s Show," he said, "and I agreed to appear on condition I not say one single word for a full hour. Jack Paar was on the same program, and I didn&#39;t want to have to compete with him. So for a full hour I sat there in stony silence, saying not a single word. Of course I obtained my objective. I drove Paar utterly crazy." <br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 04:18:10 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Alfred Hitchcock</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/22/2007 12:18:10 AM</spout:postdate><spout:body>Interview with Alfred Hitchcock Roger Ebert, December 14, 1969 Alfred Hitchcock waited in a deep chair by the window, like a judge in chambers preparing for a last word with a strangler. The pale morning sunlight struggled into the room and collapsed at his feet. It was a grey morning, a foggy Chicago morning. On such mornings, he said, he is reminded sometimes of the Acid Bath Murders... "Committed by a man named Haig, I believe his name was. Did his jobs in a little garage halfway between London and the coast. He was tripped up when the under-manageress of the Hounslow Court Hotel, Kensington, noticed him going out with women and not coming back in with them, or something of the sort. "Of course once the police had a look into that garage, they&amp;#39;d solved their case. They found everything: the bills for the acid, the tub where he did his work, and even some plastic dentures that hadn&amp;#39;t been eaten up by the acid... "In court, Haig claimed he drank his victim&amp;#39;s blood. Of course he did nothing of the sort. Those tales are always... ah, unlikely. He was tried before Mr. Justice Humphries and brought in guilty." Hitchcock leaned forward slightly, his hands still crossed on his paunch, and his voice lowered. "The touch that fascinated me didn&amp;#39;t take place until years afterward. Mr. Justice Humphries finally retired, and then his wife died, and so he closed up his big house and moved into... the Hounslow Court Hotel!" Hitchcock bounced back in his chair and beamed with satisfaction. "I read his biography," Hitchcock said. "It tells us that when he was informed of the coincidence, Mr. Justice Humphries laughed sardonically." Hitchcock permitted himself a small sardonic laugh in demonstration. Have you ever committed a murder? I asked him. "No, he said soberly, and shook his head. "Too scared. But I do believe the perfect crime is being committed at this minute. It would have to be, of course, totally without emotion. So few crimes are. We all of us have emotion stirring about there somewhere. That was the case in Marnie, of course, which was about a man who wanted to go to bed with a thief." Hitchcock pursed his lips. "Reminds me," he said, "of the case reported in the British papers about a one-armed woman who sued a woman with no legs for the alienation of her husband&amp;#39;s affections. Of course, as it turned out, the poor man had a proclivity for maimed women. His wife had no recourse, really, except perhaps to cut off her other arm... Hitchcock smiled, and it was a warm and benign smile. You had the feeling he would helpfully have assisted the woman with her saw. "If I had not been what I am," he said, "I think I would have preferred to have been a criminal lawyer. That would have been fascinating, finding out about criminals and their crimes, and being a ham actor in court! I have such a dread of the law, you know. Of policemen. I did not drive a car for 11 years after coming to this country for fear of being stopped and given a ticket. Psychiatrists tell me my phobia can be cured, but I doubt it. So many of my pictures have been about wrongly accused men on the run." He shuddered. "That&amp;#39;s the most dreadful thing of all." Hitchcock was in Chicago to promote his latest picture, Topaz, which opens here after the first of the year. Unfortunately, it was not previewed for any of the critics before his visit, and so it was impossible to ask specific questions about it. "No matter," he said. "You&amp;#39;ll see it soon enough. You&amp;#39;ll only like it the second time... that&amp;#39;s what I think. My pictures become classics, magically, with age. The critics never like them first time around. I remember when Psycho first came out, one of the London critics called it a blot on an honorable career. And Time magazine panned it so badly that I was surprised, a year later, to find them referring to someone else&amp;#39;s thriller as being &amp;#39;in the classic Psycho tradition&amp;#39;. "Still, some of my pictures have never quite been accepted, I&amp;#39;m afraid. To this day I&amp;#39;m disappointed by the reception for The Trouble with Harry. It was an English-type comedy of the macabre, which I made in 1955. All about a body that gets dug up and buried about four times. I shot it in Vermont, during the fall, to get all the autumn colors: yellow, red, there was beauty in the trees. And then a French intellectual asked me why I shot it in the autumn. His theory was that I was using the season of decay as a counterpoint to poor Harry&amp;#39;s own decay." Hitchcock snuffled to show how ridiculous that was. "The only message in the picture," he said, "was that you should never mess about with a dead body - you may be one yourself someday." The French intellectual in question was doubtless Francois Truffaut, who conducted 50 hours of meticulously detailed interviews with Hitchcock and compiled them in the fascinating book "Hitchcock/Truffaut". Not content, Truffaut then made a film in homage to Hitchcock: "The Bride Wore Black" (1968), in which he deliberately tried to copy Hitchcock&amp;#39;s style in a story of a widow who set out to murder the five killers of her husband. I asked Hitchcock how he liked Truffaut&amp;#39;s film. "Very much," he said. "Very much yes. Of course, I worried a little bit as to how the bride knew there were five men. That&amp;#39;s never explained, you know. Certain things, of course, you do leave out in order not to give the story away. But you should never leave out your basic premise, I should think... "Still, Truffaut understood very well that I depend on style more than plot. It is how you do it, and not your content that makes you an artist. A story is simply a motif, just as a painter might paint a bowl of fruit just to give him something to be painting." Hitchcock said his own primary contribution to a film occurs while the script is being written. "Once the screenplay is finished," he said, "I&amp;#39;d just as soon not make the film at all. All the fun is over. I have a strongly visual mind. I visualize a picture right down to the final cuts. I write all this out in the greatest detail in the script, and then I don&amp;#39;t look at the script while I&amp;#39;m shooting. I know it off by heart, just as an orchestra conductor needs not look at the score. It&amp;#39;s melancholy to shoot a picture. When you finish the script, the film is perfect. But in shooting it you lose perhaps 40 per cent of your original conception." He sighed. "Still, there are challenges. In The Birds, for example, we solved some delightful technical problems. Remember that scene where the gulls swoop down on the town? That was actually three separate elements of film, brought together. "First we shot a parking lot with people hurrying across it. Then we had an artist paint an aerial view of the town, which we superimposed over the people. Then we went out to a cliff and threw a lot of garbage off it, and pointed our camera straight down to catch the gulls swooping down for it. Then two women went to work for three months, copying the gulls from the rest of those pictures, frame by frame. Then we added them to our other pictures, and we had gulls swooping down on the town - or so it seemed. It used to enrage me when people suggested those were mechanical birds. "But times have changed in Hollywood. I remember in the old days we had more fun writing movies. You could bring in three or four writers and have them polish a script. Now they all want credit, Robert Benchley did some of the dialog for Foreign Correspondent, I recall. And Dorothy Parker, of course, contributed some very funny lines to Saboteur, including the quarrel between the thin man and the midget. He smiled. "Dorothy Parker. Now there was an extraordinary woman. I remember once we were all sitting in the Stork Club in New York, conducting some perfectly ridiculous argument about whether the word &amp;#39;ski&amp;#39; should be pronounced &amp;#39;ski&amp;#39; or &amp;#39;she.&amp;#39; Somebody took the position that skiing was a Norwegian sport, and that in Norway they pronounced it &amp;#39;she&amp;#39; and so we should too. The argument went on forever, until Dorothy finally wearied of it, She pounded on the table and shouted out: &amp;#39;Oh, skit!&amp;#39;" Hitchcock enjoyed his joke enormously, and was still laughing as he put on his overcoat and headed for a limousine that would deliver him to a taping session for Kup&amp;#39;s Show. "I remember once I was on Kup&amp;#39;s Show," he said, "and I agreed to appear on condition I not say one single word for a full hour. Jack Paar was on the same program, and I didn&amp;#39;t want to have to compete with him. So for a full hour I sat there in stony silence, saying not a single word. Of course I obtained my objective. I drove Paar utterly crazy." </spout:body></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Post: Peter Bogdanovich Interviews Alfred Hitchcock - The legendary interview from 1963</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Alfred_Hitchcock/Peter_Bogdanovich_Interviews_Alfred_Hitchcock_Th/451/18513/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t06128hmj0h.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Alfred_Hitchcock/451/discussions.aspx'>Alfred Hitchcock</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/22/2007 12:05:42 AM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> Peter Bogdanovich Interviews Alfred Hitchcock                   The legendary interview from 1963        PB: You never watch your films with an audience. Don&#39;t you miss hearing          them scream?        AH: No. I can hear them when I&#39;m making the picture.        Do you feel that the American film remains the most vital cinema?        Worldwide, yes. Because when we make films for the United States, we          are automatically making them for all the world--because America is full          of foreigners. It&#39;s a melting pot. Which brings us to another point. I          don&#39;t know what they mean when they talk about "Hollywood" pictures.          I say, "Where are they conceived?" Look at this room--you can&#39;t          see out the windows. We might just as well be in a hotel room in London,          or anywhere you like. So here is where we get it down on paper.        Now where do we go? We go on location, perhaps; and then where do we          work? We&#39;re inside on a stage, the big doors are closed, and we&#39;re down          in a coal mine: we don&#39;t know what the weather is like outside. Again          we don&#39;t know where we are--only within our film, within the thing we&#39;re          making. That&#39;s why it&#39;s such nonsense to talk about locale. "Hollywood."          That doesn&#39;t mean anything to me. If you say, "Why do you like working          in Hollywood?" I would say, because I can get home at six o&#39;clock          for dinner.        How would you define pure cinema?        Pure cinema is complementary pieces of film put together, like notes          of music make a melody. There are two primary uses of cutting or montage          in film: montage to create ideas--and montage to create violence and emotions.          For example, in Rear Window, where Jimmy Stewart is thrown out of the          window in the end, I just photographed that with feet, legs, arms, heads.          Completely montage. I also photographed it from a distance, the complete          action. There was no comparison between the two. There never is. Barroom          fights, or whatever they do in westerns, when they knock out the heavy          or when one man knocks another across the table which breaks--they always          break a table in bars--they are always shot at a distance. But it is much          more effective if it&#39;s done in montage, because you involve the audience          much more--that&#39;s the secret to that type of montage in film. And the          other, of course, is the juxtaposition of imagery relating to the mind          of the individual. You have a man look, you show what he sees, you go          back to the man. You can make him react in various ways. You see, you          can make him look at one thing, look at another--without his speaking,          you can show his mind at work, comparing things--any way you run there&#39;s          complete freedom. It&#39;s limitless, I would say, the power of cutting and          the assembly of the images. Like the man with no eyes in The Birds--zooming          the camera in--the staccato jumps are almost like catching the breath.          Is it? Gasp. Gasp. Yes. Young directors always come up with the idea,          "Let the camera be someone and let it move as though it&#39;s the person,          and you put the guy in front of a mirror and then you see him." It&#39;s          a terrible mistake. Bob Montgomery did that in Lady in the Lake--I don&#39;t          believe in it myself. What are you really doing? You are keeping back          from the audience who it is. What for? That&#39;s all you are doing. Why not          show who it is?        How do you work when you are shooting?        Well, I never look through the camera, you know. The cameraman knows          me well enough to know what I want--and when in doubt, draw a rectangle          and then draw the shot out for him. You see, the point is that you are,          first of all, in a two-dimensional medium. Mustn&#39;t forget that. You have          a rectangle to fill. Fill it. Compose it. I don&#39;t have to look through          a camera for that. First of all, the cameraman knows very well that when          I compose I object to air, space around figures or above their heads,          because I think that&#39;s redundant. It&#39;s like a newspaperman taking a still          and trimming it down to its essentials. They have standing instructions          from me--they never give any air around the figures. If I want air, I&#39;ll          say so. Now, you see, when I&#39;m on the set, I&#39;m not on the set. If I&#39;m          looking at acting or looking at a scene--the way its played, or where          they are--I am looking at a screen, I am not confused by the set and the          movement of the people across the set. In other words, I follow the geography          of the screen. I can only think of the screen. Most directors say, "Well,          he&#39;s got to come in that door so he&#39;s got to walk from there to there."          Which is as dull as hell. And not only that, it makes the shot itself          so empty and so loose that I say, "Well, if he&#39;s still in a mood--whatever          mood he&#39;s in--take him across in a close-up, but keep the mood on the          screen." We&#39;re not interested in distance. I don&#39;t care how he got          across the room. What&#39;s the state of mind? You can only think of the screen.          You cannot think of the set or where you are in the studio--nothing of          that sort.        What is your technique of working with actors?        I don&#39;t direct them. I talk to them and explain to them what the scene          is, what it&#39;s purpose is, why they are doing certain things--because they          relate to the story--not to the scene. The whole scene relates to the          story but that little look does this or that for the story. As I tried          to explain to that girl, Kim Novak, "You have got a lot of expression          in your face. Don&#39;t want any of it. I only want on your face what we want          to tell to the audience--what you are thinking." I said, "Let          me explain to you. If you put a lot of redundant expressions on your face,          it&#39;s like taking a piece of paper and scribbling all over it--full of          scribble, the whole piece of paper. You want to write a sentence for somebody          to read. They can&#39;t read it--too much scribble on the face. Much easier          to read if the piece of paper is blank. That&#39;s what your face ought to          be when we need the expression." Take The Birds. There is not one          redundant expression on Hedren&#39;s face. Every expression makes a point.          Even the slight nuance of a smile when she says, "What can I do for          you, sir?" One look says, "I&#39;m going to play a gag on him."          That&#39;s the economy of it.        You&#39;ve said that your pictures are finished before you set foot on the          set--that is, once the script is completed. What is your working process          with the writers?        In the early days--way, way back in the English period, I would always          work on a treatment with a writer who would be a plot maker, or story          man. I would work weeks and weeks on this treatment and what it would          amount to would be a complete narrative, even indicating shots, but not          in the words of long-shot or close-up. It would have everything in it,          all the details. Then I used to give it to a top writer to dialogue it.          When he sent in his dialogue, I would sit down and dictate the shots in          a complete continuity. But the film had to be made on paper in this narrative          form. It would describe the film, shot by shot, beginning to end. Sometimes          with drawings, sometimes without. I abandoned this method when I came          to America. I found that American writers wouldn&#39;t go for that sort of          thing. I do it verbally now, with the writer, and then I make corrections          and adjustments afterwards. I work many weeks with him and he takes notes.          And I describe the picture for the production designers as well. Marnie          has all been finished as far as the layout of the picture, but there&#39;s          no dialogue in it. I would say I apply myself two-thirds before he writes          and one-third after he writes. But I will not and do not photograph anything          that he puts in the script on his own, apart from words. I mean any cinematic          method of telling it--how can he know? On North by Northwest, Ernie Lehman          wouldn&#39;t let me out of the office for a whole year. I was with him on          every shot, every scene. Because it wasn&#39;t his material.        I&#39;ve heard a story about your having been put in jail by your father          at an early age. Did this have any particular effect on your development,          do you think?        It could have--I must have been five when I was sent along with a note          to the chief of police, who read the note and promptly put me into a cell          and locked the door for five minutes; and then let me out, saying, "That&#39;s          what we do to naughty little boys, you see." What effect that had          on me at the time I can&#39;t remember, but they say psychiatrically if you          can discover the origins of this or that, it releases everything. I don&#39;t          think it released me from a natural fear of the police.        What influence, if any, do you think the Jesuit schooling has had on          your work?        The Jesuits taught me organization, control, and to some degree, analysis.          Their education is very strict, and orderliness is one of the things that          come out of that, I suppose. Although my orderliness is spasmodic. I remember          when I was at the age of eighteen or nineteen I was a senior estimator          at an electrical engineering firm, and the requests for estimates used          to come in, and I was kind of lazy so I&#39;d pile them up on my desk and          they&#39;d go up to a big pile. And I used to say, "Well, I&#39;ve got to          get down to this," and then I polished them off like anything. And          used to get praised for the prodigious amount of work I&#39;d done in that          particular day. That lasted until the complaints began to come in about          the delay in answering. That&#39;s the way I feel about working. Certain writers          want to work every hour of the day: they&#39;re very facile. I&#39;m not that          way. I want to say, "Let&#39;s lay off for several hours, let&#39;s play."          And then we get down to it again. I&#39;m sure the Jesuits did not teach that.          As far as any religious influence, at the time I think it was fear. But          I&#39;ve grown out of religious fear now. I think I have. I don&#39;t know. I          don&#39;t think the religious side of the Jesuit education impressed itself          so much upon me as the strict discipline one endured at the time.        [Bogdanovich names all of Hitchcocks films and they discuss each one:]       Number 13 (1921)   [Hitchcock worked on production and direction of this          film, which was never completed.]        I was talked into Number Thirteen by the publicity woman of Famous Players-Lasky,          who began to see something in me even before I&#39;d got to writing or art          direction, when I was just a young man around the editorial department.          She had worked with Chaplin, and in those days they thought anyone who&#39;d          worked with Chaplin knew everything. She wrote this comedy and we tried          to put it together. It wasn&#39;t any, and it never saw the light of day.               Always Tell Your Wife (1922)   [When the director of this film became ill,          Hitchcock completed it, in collaboration with the producer.]        The interesting thing was that I gravitated from the American film training          at Famous Players into a position with a new company, so I didn&#39;t have          to move into an existing company which had certain rules and organizational          patterns. I really was fortunate in that sense, because as a young man          and as an art director, I was quite dogmatic. I mean, I would build a          set and say to the director, "Here&#39;s where it&#39;s shot from."               Woman to Woman (1922)         [Hitchcock wrote the scenario with Graham Cutts          and acted as designer and assistant director.]        All my early training was American, which was far superior to the British.          The London Daily Express had a review of this film which was headlined          "Best American Picture Made in England." Now of course Cutts          directed, but I was art director and writer, and my wife was the editor.               [After listing credits for five films which Hitchcock said could not          be labeled as "Hitchcock picture[s]," and briefly mentioning          his association with Erich Pommer and experience making films in Germany,          Bogdanovich includes the following comment on how Hitchcock became a director.]               I had no intention of becoming a film director, you know. It was quite          a surprise to me. Sir Michael Balcon is really the man responsible for          Hitchcock. At the time, I had been a script writer, and when I finished          that job I became the art director or production designer. And I did that          for several pictures, until one day Balcon said that the director (I worked          with the same director all the time) didn&#39;t want me any more. I don&#39;t          know what the reason was, some political reason. And it was then that          Balcon said, "How would you like to become a director?" I had          been quite content at the time, writing scripts and designing. I enjoyed          it very much.        The Pleasure Garden (1925)        The Pleasure Garden was just an assignment, but again there was the American          influence. Balcon came out to Munich, where I had shot it, to see the          first cut. He hadn&#39;t seen the rushes or anything. And his first remark          was, "Well, it doesn&#39;t look like a continental picture. It looks          like an American picture." The cameraman, although he was Italian,          had worked with American directors and was very conscious of American          techniques. I think the headline in the Daily Express on The Pleasure          Garden was "Young Man With a Master Mind." That was the first          picture.        The Lodger (1926)       Did you want the audience to believe without doubt that Novello was the          murderer?        That was one of the commercial drawbacks one encountered. Of course,          strictly speaking, he should have been the ripper and gone on his way.          That&#39;s how Mrs. Belloc-Lowndes wrote the book. But Ivor Novello was the          matinee idol of the period and could not be the murderer. The same thing          was true of Cary Grant in Suspicion many years later. So, obviously, putting          that kind of actor into this sort of film is a mistake because you just          have to compromise.        In The Lodger you were quite conscious of the German school of filmmaking,          weren&#39;t you?        Very much so. You have to remember that a year before, I was working          on the Ufa lot--I worked there for many months, at the same time as Jannings          was making The Last Laugh with Murnau. And I was able to absorb a lot          of the methods and style.          How did you achieve the shot of Novello pacing back and forth above their          heads?          I had a floor made of one-inch thick plate-glass, about six feet square.          This was the visual substitution for sound, you see. Just as much as the          set I had built for when the lodger went out late at night--almost to          the ceiling of the studio, showing four flights of stairs and a handrail.          And all you see is a hand going down. That was, of course, from the point          of view of the mother listening. Today we would substitute sound for that.          Although I think that the handrail shot would be worthy of today in addition          to sound.        The Ring (1927)       How did you decide to do a boxing story?        I was interested--I used to go to the Albert Hall. I think the thing,          strangely enough, that fascinated me about boxing in those days was the          English audience that would go all dressed up in black tie to sit around          the ring. It wasn&#39;t the boxing that fascinated me so much, although I          was interested in the shop, all the details connected with it. Like pouring          champagne over the head of the boxer at the thirteenth round, if he was          going a bit groggy. You&#39;d hear them uncork the champagne bottle and pour          the whole bottle over his head. All that kind of thing I was interested          in, and put it all in the picture. The Ring had a montage sequence, it          was piano playing or something, and it got a round of applause at the          premiere. I never heard a montage get a round of applause before, but          this did. Also I began to experiment with little pictorial touches, things          like the dirty old "Round One" card being pulled out of the          slot and a brand new "Round Two" card going in--that&#39;s how I          indicated the sudden change in the fortunes of "One Round Jack"          as he was called.        The Farmer&#39;s Wife (1928)        The Farmer&#39;s Wife, I would say, was again merely a photograph of a stage          play with lots of titles instead of dialogue. It was just a routine job.               Champagne (1928)        Someone had this idea, let&#39;s make a film about champagne. Any my thought          was--it&#39;s kind of a corny idea really--why don&#39;t we do one about a little          girl who works at Reims in the cellars and always watches the train go          off carrying champagne. And then she eventually gravitated to the city          and became a kind of whore and was put through the mill and eventually          went back to her job, and then every time she saw champagne go out, she          knew, "Well, that&#39;s going to cause some trouble for somebody."          That was scrapped. They thought it was much too, they didn&#39;t use the word          "highbrow," but, oh, that wasn&#39;t entertainment. So we ended          up with a hodge-podge of a story that was written as we went through the          film and I thought it was dreadful.        The Manxman (1929)        The Manxman again was a kind of old-fashioned story. An assignment, more          or less. It was a domestic melodrama, you know, the illegitimate child          and the brother and the judge--one of those things full of coincidences--the          brother happens to be a lawyer and the poor girl gets involved with a          fisherman and so on.        Blackmail (1929)       Having shot Blackmail as a silent film, did you welcome the shift to          sound?        Yes. I was looking forward to it. In fact, while I was shooting it as          a silent picture, they told me that the last reel was going to be done          in sound. I didn&#39;t let them know up front, but I knew there was so much          of the visual in it that here and there I could go back and drop certain          sounds into scenes that were completed. Having seen it once since then,          I think it shows a little bit that there&#39;s no flow of dialogue where it          should flow. The dialogue almost comes in like titles in the early part          of the picture. But I think what sound brought of value to the cinema          was to complete the realism of the image on the screen. It made everyone          in the audience deaf mutes.        The whole first sequence is silent, except for the music.        Yes. Now, here&#39;s another compromise--see, my life&#39;s full of compromises.          I had intended to end Blackmail just as it began. Only this time with          the girl being arrested. I was going to repeat every shot. But they wouldn&#39;t          go for it in those days. A happy ending--had to be. As I wanted to do          it, the detective was never going to disclose to his superior that this          was his girl. He had to go through with his duty--the old love-and-duty          theme. I was going to repeat all the shots of the mugging, the interview,          and finally--bang! goes the cell door on the girl, and the detective and          his superior walk down the corridor. I was going to hang on and let them          wash their hands in the men&#39;s room and go way down the corridor to right          where he met her at the opening of the picture, in the lobby. And the          superior says, "Well, what are you doing tonight, going out with          your girl?" And he says, "No, not tonight." And he walks          out.        Ritchard doesn&#39;t play the murder-seduction scene at all like a villain,          does he?        No. I did a kind of naive thing there. Even in those days, I though,          "Oh, we can&#39;t have a man behaving like a heavy." But then what          I did was let him stand in the shadow of a wrought iron chandelier and          the shadow put a black moustache on him.        Was the chase through the British Museum shot there?        No, it was all process. You see, there was never enough light in the          British Museum, so we used what is known as the Schufftan process. You          have a mirror at an angle of 45 degrees and in it you reflect a full picture          of the British Museum. I had some pictures taken with half-hour exposures.          I had nine photographs taken in various rooms in the museum and we made          then into transparencies so that we could back-light them. That is more          luminous than a flat photograph. It was like a big lantern slide, about          12 by 14. And then I scraped the silvering away in the mirror only in          the portions where I wanted the man to be seen running, and those portions          we built on the stage. For example, one room was the Egyptian room, there          were glass cases in there. All we built were the door frames from one          room to another. We even had a man looking into a case, and he wasn&#39;t          looking into anything on the stage. I did nine shots like this, but there          was barely any set that could be seen on the stage. The front office was          worrying about when the picture was going to be finished. So I did it          all secretly because the studio heads knew nothing about the Schufftan          process. I had another camera set up on the side photographing an insert          of a letter, and a look-out stationed at the door. When the big-shot from          the front office would walk through, we would just be shooting the insert          of the letter. They&#39;d go on through and I&#39;d say, "All right, bring          back the Schufftan." I did the whole none shots that way. The chase          on the roof was a miniature. We just built a skeleton ramp for him to          run on.        Was your appearance in the subway in Blackmail the first time you used          this personal joke?        No, I&#39;m seen in The Lodger, seated in the foreground at a desk in the          newspaper office scene. And that was done just because we didn&#39;t bother          to engage actors for that kind of scene. But the first big appearance          was in Blackmail. It really started with the talking pictures. I didn&#39;t          do it in many of the silent films.        Juno and the Paycock (1930)       How did you come to make Juno and the Paycock?        Because I liked the play very much. I think the picture&#39;s all right,          though personally it wasn&#39;t my meat. But it was one of my favorite plays,          so I thought I had to do it. It was just a photograph of a stage play.          We had all the Irish players. It was interesting the trouble one went          to for sound at that time. I remember a close-up in this very tiny studio,          a close-up of the sun huddled beside the fire, and I wanted to dolly in.          The camera was encased in what looked like a telephone booth in those          days for reasons of sound-proofing. So I had this booth on a dolly. The          off-stage sounds were the family talking in the room, they&#39;d bought a          phonograph and they were playing a tune called "If You&#39;re Irish,          Come Into the Parlor." Suddenly they stopped because the funeral          was going by and then there was a rattle of machine-gun fire. All those          sounds had to be in the studio at the same time, and the studio was packed.          There was a small orchestra, and I had the prop-man sing the song holding          his note so that you got a tinny effect as on a phonograph record. There          were the actors with their lines. Then, on the other side, I had a choir          of about twenty people for the funeral, and another man with the machine-gun          effect. We could barely move in that little studio for all those effects          just on one close-up.        Murder (1930)        Murder was the first important who-done-it picture I made. It&#39;s the first          time I ever used the voice over the face--without the lips moving--for          stream-of-consciousness. Before O&#39;Neill. And there was a scene where Marshall          was shaving, and he had the radio on and I wanted to have the Prelude          from Tristan playing. I had a thirty-piece orchestra in the studio, just          for this little radio he&#39;s playing in his bathroom. You see, you couldn&#39;t          add it later, it had to be done at the same time and balanced on the stage.               The Skin Game (1931)        I didn&#39;t alter the Galsworthy play very much. It opened up a little bit          more than Juno. Not too much, though. Photographed theatre, really.        Rich and Strange (1932)        It wasn&#39;t a thriller. It was just an adventure story. A young couple          take a trip around the world. I actually sent a crew around the world          to cover everything. There was an amusing sequence at the end. Their cargo          ship is wrecked and abandoned in the South China Sea, and they are rescued          by some looters on a Chinese junk. Then, after it&#39;s all over, they meet          me in the lounge. This is my most devastating appearance in a picture.          They tell me their story, and I say, "No, I don&#39;t think it&#39;ll make          a movie." And it didn&#39;t.        Number Seventeen (1932)        That was just another stage play that they&#39;d bought and it just didn&#39;t          transfer. It was a very cheap melodrama. The only good thing in that picture          was a chase between a motorcoach and a train at the end--that&#39;s all.        Lord Camber&#39;s Ladies (1932) [Produced but not directed          by Hitchcock.]        By that time, British International Pictures were drawing in their horns,          and they decided to make what are called "quota pictures." They          asked me to produce a couple and I did one. Quota pictures were made very          cheap, you know. This was a poison thing. I gave it to Benn Levy to direct."               Waltzes from Vienna (1933)        This was my lowest ebb. A musical, and they really couldn&#39;t afford the          music. You know, they say a man is no better than his last picture. But,          ironically enough, prior to making Waltzes from Vienna and reaching this          low ebb, I had written The Man Who Knew Too Much with a couple of other          writers. But it was on the shelf. When I made The Man Who Knew Too Much,          it was acclaimed, and it looked as though I had recovered. But the irony          was that it was made, in my mind, anyway, before Waltzes from Vienna.               The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934)        You&#39;ve said that you could get away with a lotmore things in the early          days than you can now. What did you mean?        I suppose that&#39;s why there&#39;s a certain amount of nostalgia, especially          in England, for the Hitchcock English period. Around that 1935 period,          the audience would accept more, the films of the period were full of fantasy,          and one didn&#39;t have to worry too much about logic or truth. When I came          to America, the first thing I had to learn was that the audience were          more questioning. I&#39;ll put it another way. Less avant-garde. In the first          Man Who Knew Too Much, the characters jump around from one place to another--you&#39;re          in a chapel, and you&#39;ve got old ladies with guns--and one didn&#39;t care.          One said, "An old lady with a gun, that&#39;s be amusing." There          was more underlying humor, at least for me, and less logic. If the idea          appealed to one, however outrageous it was, do it! They wouldn&#39;t go for          that in America.        Do you prefer the old Man Who Knew Too Much to the new one?        No, I don&#39;t really. The old one is fairly slipshod structurally.        What was the purpose of the unraveling sweater towards the start?        It&#39;s the thread of life that gets broken. One could still get pretentious          in those days. It was also comic. You combine a little comic action with          a break in the thread when the man falls dead.        The final street fight is based on a true happening, isn&#39;t it?        It was a very famous incident, called the Sydney Street Siege. There          were anarchists holed up in a house there, and they had to bring the soldiers          out because the police couldn&#39;t handle it. Winston Churchill went down          and directed operations. I had great difficulty getting that one on the          screen because the censor wouldn&#39;t pass it. He called it a black spot          on English police history. He said, "You can&#39;t have the soldiers."          And I said, "Well, then we will have to have the police do the shooting."          "No, you can&#39;t do that. The police don&#39;t carry firearms in England.          If you want to do those Chicago things, we won&#39;t allow it here."          Finally the censor relented and said I could do it if I had the police          go to the local gunsmith and take out mixed guns and show that they&#39;re          not familiar with the weapons. Silly. I ignored it, and I had a truck          come up with a load of rifles.        How did you do the Albert Hall sequence?        Schufftan process again. I photographed about nine angles around the          Albert Hall when it was empty, with the same type of lens that we would          use ultimately, using long exposures to get clear, sharp pictures, which          were then blown up to 14 x 18. I gave them to a famous artist, Matania,          who did pictures that were completely representational. I asked him to          paint the audience into each photo. The reason I chose more than one angle          was so that I didn&#39;t have to repeat myself, otherwise the audience would          have gotten used to it and realized that the people were not moving. I          had the photos made into transparencies and we went back to the Albert          Hall and set up the Schufftan in exactly the same spots where the original          photographs were taken--lining it up exactly. Now the mirror reflected          this little transparency with a full audience, and we scraped the silvering          here and there, a box near the entrance, and the whole of the orchestra.          Then in the box we had a woman opening a program, and so forth, and the          eye immediately went to the movement. All the rest was static. We had          to do it this way because we had no money.        The Thirty-Nine Steps (1935)        In all your chase films, why do you have the hero fleeing from both          the police and the real criminals?        One of the reasons is a structural one. The audience must be in tremendous          sympathy with the man on the run. But the basic reason is that the audience          will wonder, "Why doesn&#39;t he go for the police?" Well, the police          are after him, so he can&#39;t go to them, can he?        Isn&#39;t it his sense of guilt that makes him so fervent?        Well, yes, to some degree. In Thirty-Nine Steps maybe he feels guilt          because the woman is so desperate and he doesn&#39;t protect her enough, he&#39;s          careless.        Is The Thirty-Nine Steps one of your favorite films?        Yes. Pretty much. What I liked about Thirty-Nine Steps were the sudden          switches and the jumping from one situation to another with such rapidity.          Donat leaping out of the window of the police station with half of a handcuff          on, and immediately walking into a Salvation Army Band, darting down an          alley-way and into a room. "Thank God you&#39;ve come, Mr. So-and-so,"          they say, and put him onto a platform. A girl comes along with two men,          takes him in a car to the police station, but not really to the police          station--they are two spies. You know, the rapidity of the switches, that&#39;s          the great thing about it. If I did The Thirty-Nine Steps again, I would          stick to that formula, but it really takes a lot of work. You have to          use one idea after another, and with such rapidity.        Secret Agent (1936)        I liked The Secret Agent quite a bit. I&#39;m sorry it wasn&#39;t more of a success,          but I believe it was unsuccessful because it was the story of a man who          did not want to do something. He was sent out to kill a German spy and          was given a killer to do it and he botched it the first time--killed the          wrong man. You can&#39;t root for a hero who doesn&#39;t want to be a hero. So          it&#39;s a negative thing. I think that&#39;s why it didn&#39;t really succeed.        Sabotage (1936)        Sabotage had a grimmer aspect than most of the other British films. Is          this because of the bomb incident?        Oh, that was a big error. I made a cardinal error there in terms of suspense.          The bomb should never have gone off. If you build an audience up to that          point, the explosion becomes strangely anti-climactic. You work the audience          up to such a degree that they need the relief. The critics were very angry.          One woman said, "I could hit you." I found everybody protesting          against it. Now the boy had to be killed for the sake of the story. One          should have done the killing a different way, off the screen or something.          I shouldn&#39;t have made a suspense thing of it.        Young and Innocent (1937)        When you are dealing with melodrama, you mustn&#39;t let the characters take          themselves where they want to go. They must come where you want to go.          So it&#39;s really an inverted process. It is a bastard form of story-telling.          You lay out your story and you put the characters in afterwards. That&#39;s          why you don&#39;t get really good characterizations. There isn&#39;t time, and          in any case, you know, they may not want to go.        The Lady Vanishes (1938)        The Lady Vanishes is one of your least complex films. Do you agree?               It is a very light film. Of course, it doesn&#39;t make sense. Why didn&#39;t          they send the message by carrier pigeon? The story is inspired by that          legend of an Englishwoman who went with her daughter to the Palace Hotel          in Paris in the 1880&#39;s, at the time of the Great Exposition. The woman          was taken sick and they sent the girl across Paris to get some medicine,          in a horse-vehicle, so it took about four hours, and when she came back          she asked, "How&#39;s my mother?" "What mother?" "My          mother. She&#39;s here, she&#39;s in her room. Room 22." They go up there.          Different room, different wallpaper, everything. And the payoff of the          whole story is, so the legend goes, that the woman had Bubonic plague          and they daren&#39;t let anybody know she died, otherwise all of Paris would          have emptied. That was the original situation and pictures like Lady Vanishes          were all variations on it.        Jamaica Inn (1939)        How did you come to make Jamaica Inn?        I was talked into it. After I&#39;d signed with Selznick, I had time to make          another picture. When I saw what this was going to be, I tried to get          out, but I&#39;d already taken money from them so I couldn&#39;t. The root problem          was that there was no mystery. This is the story of the parson who preaches          in the pulpit; and the mystery of who is the wrecker, the man who puts          a light on the rocks, causing ships to approach the rocks and be wrecked          so they could be looted. Of course, the parson turns out to be the wrecker.          And in Jamaica Inn, you have Charles Laughton playing the parson. Who&#39;s          the wrecker? Who&#39;s the wrecker? What are you going to do--have a little          bit-player turn out to be the central figure? Doesn&#39;t make sense. It&#39;s          very difficult to make a who-done-it. You see, this was like doing a who-done-it          and making Charles Laughton the butler.        Rebecca (1940)        Rebecca was a Bront&euml; thing really, a romantic Victorian novel in          modern dress. In a sense you could get annoyed with the Joan Fontaine          character because she never stood up for herself, she let Mrs. Danvers          override her. But after all that&#39;s applying a modern point of view to          what I say is a Victorian heroine.        Wasn&#39;t Rebecca the first film in which you experimented with a tracking          camera as opposed to the use of montage?        Pretty well, yes. But only because we were going around a big house.          I don&#39;t think it was really right, because after all, the eye must look          at the character. It must not be conscious of a camera dollying unless          you are dollying or zooming in for a particular purpose.        Foreign Correspondent (1940)        I had offered Gary Cooper the Joel McCrea part in Foreign Correspondent.          I had a terrible job casting the thriller-suspense films in America, because          over here this kind of story was looked on as second-rate. In England,          they&#39;re part of the literature, and I had no trouble casting Donat or          anybody else there. Here I ran into it all the time--until Gary--who&#39;s          really English. Afterward, Cooper said, "Well, I should have done          that, shouldn&#39;t I?" Of course I don&#39;t think it was Cooper himself,          I think the people around him advised him against it.        How did you get the idea of the windmill sequence?        When I am given a locale--and this is very important in my mind--it&#39;s          got to be used, and used dramatically. We&#39;re in Holland. What have they          got in Holland? Windmills? Tulips? If the picture had been in color, I          would have worked in the shot I&#39;ve always wanted to do and never have          yet. The murder in a tulip field. Two figures. The assassin--say it&#39;s          Jack-the-Ripper--comes up behind the girl. The shadow creeps up on her,          she turns, screams. Immediately we pan down to the struggling feet, in          the tulip bed. We dolly the camera in to one of the flowers, sounds of          the struggle heard in the background. We go right to one petal--it fills          the screen--and, splash! a drop of red blood comes over the petal. And          that would be the end of the murder.        Mr. and Mrs. Smith (1941)        This picture I made as a gesture to Carole Lombard. She asked me to do          it. The script was already written, and I just came in and did it. She          had heard my remark, "Actors are cattle," so when I arrived          on the set, I found a little corral with some cattle in it. She had arranged          that.        Suspicion (1941)        The correct ending of Suspicion -- which was never shot but which I wanted          to do--was that Fontaine writes a letter to her mother, saying that she          is in love with her husband, but she feels he is a murderer. She doesn&#39;t          want to live anymore and she&#39;s willing to die by his hand. But she thinks          society should be protected from him. He comes up with the fatal glass          of milk, gives it to her. Before she drinks, she says, "Will you          mail this letter to mother for me?" And she drinks the milk and dies.          Fade out. Fade in on one short shot: a cheerful, whistling Cary Grant          coming to the mail box and popping the letter in. Finish. But, you see,          Cary Grant couldn&#39;t be a murderer. It was the same problem as I had with          Novello in The Lodger.        Saboteur (1942)        Saboteur was not successful to my mind because I don&#39;t think Cummings          was right. He was too undramatic, he had what I call a "comedy face,"          and half the time you don&#39;t believe the situations. Think of the difference          between that and Robert Donat in The Thirty-Nine Steps. From an audience          point-of-view, I should have reversed the positions of Cummings and Lloyd          on the Statue of Liberty at the end of the picture. The audience would          have been much more anxious if the hero had been in danger, not the villain.          The picture was overloaded with too many ideas. But what annoyed me most          was the casting of the heavy, Otto Kruger. I had a concept: fascists in          those days were middle-westerners, America-Firsters, and I wanted Harry          Carey, western style, a rich rancher. His wife came to see me and she          said, I couldn&#39;t let my husband play a role like that, when all the youth          in America look up to him. So I couldn&#39;t get him, and Kruger was all wrong.          I also tried to get Barbara Stanwyck, but I had to take Priscilla Lane.          I wasted Barbara Stanwyck and Gary Cooper to lift the picture up.          Shadow of a Doubt (1943) Teresa Wright makes a lot out of the fact that          she and her uncle are similar, and yet she is the most eager to suspect          him of the worst.          Only because her attention is drawn to him more than anybody else. You          look at your adoring uncle long enough, and you find something.        Isn&#39;t Cotten rather sympathetic in the film?        There is sympathy for any murderer, or let&#39;s call it compassion. You          hear of murderers who feel they&#39;ve been sent to destroy. Maybe those women          deserved what they got, but it wasn&#39;t his job to do it. There is a moral          judgment--he is destroyed at the end, isn&#39;t he? The girl unwittingly kills          her own uncle. She is the instrument by which he falls in front of the          train. It comes under the heading that all villains are not black and          all heroes are not white. There are grays everywhere.        Does Cotten really love Wright in the film?        I don&#39;t really think so. Not as much as she loves him. And yet she destroys          him. She has to. Wasn&#39;t it Oscar Wilde who said, "You destroy the          thing you love?" Shadow of a Doubt was a most satisfying picture          for me--one of my favorite films--because for once there was time to get          characters into it. It was the blending of character and thriller at the          same time. That&#39;s very hard to do.        Lifeboat (1944)        In this film I wanted to prove that most pictures are shot in close-ups.          It was really a film without scenery. I made it for the challenge. And          it was topical. There were screams because I appeared to make the Nazi          stronger than anyone else. I had two reasons for that: a) the Nazi was          a submarine commander and knew something about navigation, more than the          others did; b) in the analogy of war, he was the victor at the time. The          others, representing the democracies, hadn&#39;t gotten together yet, hadn&#39;t          summoned their strength. Even John Hodiak, playing the communist, wasn&#39;t          sure. It took a coalition of them to finally gang up on that guy and get          rid of him. Did you know that Tallulah really hated Slezak? She really          used the boot on him. She used to sit across from him in the boat and          say, "You God-damn Nazi!" Poor fellow, he really wasn&#39;t, you          know.        Why didn&#39;t the Negro join in when they attacked the Nazi?        I wouldn&#39;t let him. He was rather a religious figure, he did recite the          23rd Psalm, and I felt he was a gentle character and had feeling. It would          have been out of character.        Spellbound (1945)        What did the doors opening at their first embrace signify?        I asked Ben Hecht to find out for me the psychiatric symbol for the beginning          of love between two people, and he came back with the doors.        Why did you go to Dali for the dream sequence?        Selznick thought I only wanted Dali for publicity purposes. That wasn&#39;t          true. I felt that if I was going to have dream sequences, they should          be vivid. I didn&#39;t think that we should resort to the old-fashioned blurry          effect that they got by putting vaseline around the lens. What I really          wanted to do, and they wouldn&#39;t do it because of the expense, was to have          the dream sequences shot on the back lot in bright sunshine, so they would          have to stop-down the camera to such a degree that the pictures would          have been needle-sharp, as contrast to the rest of the picture, which          was slightly diffused because that was the cameraman&#39;s particular style.          But I used Dali for his draftmanship and the infinity which he introduces          into his subject.        Notorious (1946)        This is the old love-and-duty theme. Grant&#39;s job is to get Bergman in          bed with Rains, the other man. It&#39;s ironic, really, and Grant is a bitter          man all the way through. Rains was sympathetic because he&#39;s the victim          of a confidence trick and we always have sympathy for the victim, no matter          how foolish he is. Also I would think Rains&#39; love for Bergman was very          much stronger than Grant&#39;s.        How did that long tracking shot for the famous balcony love scene develop?               I felt that they should remain in an embrace and that we should join          them. So when they go to the phone the camera follows them, never leaving          the close-up all the way, right up to the phone and over to the door--continuous          shot. The whole idea was based on not breaking the romantic moment. I          didn&#39;t want to cut it up. It was an emotional thing, the movement of that          camera. The idea came to me many, many years ago when I was on a train          going from Boulogne to Paris. It was a Sunday afternoon and the train          goes slowly through a town called Ataples, which is just outside Boulogne.          There&#39;s a big, old, red brick factory, and ta one end of the factory was          this huge, high brick wall. There were two little figures at the bottom          of the wall--very small--a boy and a girl. The boy was urinating against          the wall, but the girl had a hold of his arm and she never let go. She&#39;d          look down at what he was doing, and then look around at the scenery, and          down again to see how far he&#39;d got on. And that was what gave me the idea.          She couldn&#39;t let go. Romance must not be interrupted, even by urinating.               How did the idea develop for that remarkable crane-shot, down to the          key?        That&#39;s again using the visual. That&#39;s a statement which says, "In          this crowded atmosphere there is a very vital item, the crux of everything."          So taking that sentence as it is, in this crowded atmosphere, you go to          the widest possible expression of that phrase and then you come down to          the most vital thing--a tiny little key in the hand. That&#39;s merely the          visual expression to say, "Everybody is having a good time, but they          don&#39;t realize there is a big drama going on here." And that big drama          epitomizes itself in a little key.        The Paradine Case (1947)        For me, the casting screwed up all the values and the whole basic situation.          Any beautiful woman is a compromise for evil--sometimes the externals          of evil can obscure the real woman. Valli&#39;s character was pretty low in          the original story. She was fine, but they had Louis Jourdan under contract          and he could never have played that part. His real character, which reflected          the woman&#39;s immorality, should have been a manure-smelling stable-hand          and should have been played by Robert Newton or somebody like that. Peck          wasn&#39;t right for the lead. It should have been Ronald Colman or Olivier,          someone more dignified and less earthy. The point is, Peck degrades himself          by falling for a woman who can take any man--even a groom. Obviously the          woman must have been a nymphomaniac. But for Peck to give up an elegant          wife for this woman, he must be obsessed by her.        Rope (1948)        Do you consider Rope one of your most experimental films, technically?               Only because I abandoned pure cinema in an effort to make the stage play          mobile. With a flowing camera, the film played in its own time, there          were no dissolves, no time-lapses in it, it was continuous action. And          I thought it also ought to have a continuous flow of camera narrative          as well. I think it was an error technically because one abandoned pure          cinema for it. But when you take a stage play in one room, it is very          hard to cut it up.        Your approach to Rope was not comic as it was for Psycho?        No, the nature of the crime was too horrible. There was no humor in that          respect.        Under Capricorn (1949)       This picture was not a success, but why do you think many French critics          consider it one of your finest films?        Because they looked at it for what it was and not what people expected.          Here you get a Hitchcock picture which is a costume-picture and not approached          from a thriller or excitement point of view until towards the end. I remember          some remark by a Hollywood critic who said, "We had to wait 105 minutes          for the first thrill." They went in expecting something and didn&#39;t          get it. That was the main fault with that picture. Also the casting was          wrong. This was the lady-and-the groom story again. Bergman fell in love          with the groom, Joe Cotten, and he got shipped to Australia as a convict          and she followed him. It was her getting degraded for love--that was the          main thing here. Cotten wasn&#39;t right. I wanted Burt Lancaster. It was          compromise casting again. Also I used a fluid camera--mistakenly perhaps          because it intensified the fact that it wasn&#39;t a thriller--it flowed too          easily.        Stage Fright (1950)        Why do you dislike this picture?        Again, the lack of reality in one of the characters--the Jane Wyman part--should          have been a pimply-faced girl. She just refused to be that and I was stuck          with her. The other fault was that the menace wasn&#39;t strong enough. The          menace came from Dietrich and her partner--they were the villains--and          they had no menace in them because they were afraid. So what were you          doing in that story? You were concealing the menace entirely. The values          got confused. Also a lot of people complained because the opening flashback          was a lie. Now why can&#39;t a man tell a lie? I don&#39;t know. But people complained,          "AH, you cheated us on the flashback." Can&#39;t he be a liar? You          see, if you break tradition, you are in trouble every time.        Strangers on a Train (1951)        Granger was miscast. Warners insisted I take him. It should have been          a much stronger man. The stronger the man, the more frustrated he would          have been in the situation.          Isn&#39;t the irony of the picture that Walker actual does free Granger from          his impossible wife?        Sure. Granger didn&#39;t pay back, did he? He didn&#39;t kill Walker&#39;s father.          He ratted on Walker.        How did you achieve that stunning carousel sequence?        This was a most complicated sequence. For rear-projection shooting there          is a screen and behind it is an enormous projector throwing an image on          the screen. On the studio floor is a narrow white line right in line with          the projector lens and the lens of the camera must be right on that white          line. That camera is not photographing the screen and what&#39;s on it, it          is photographing light in certain colors, therefore the camera lens must          be level and in line with the projector lens. Many of the shots on the          merry-go-round were low camera set-ups. Therefore you can imagine the          problem. The projector had to be put up on a high platform, pointing down,          and the screen had to be exactly at right angles to the level-line from          the lens. All the shots took nearly half a day to line up, for each set-up.          We had to change the projector every time the angle changed. When the          carousel broke, that was a miniature blown up on a big screen and we put          live people in front of the screen. But I did the most dangerous thing          I&#39;ve ever done in that picture and I&#39;ll never, never do it again. When          the little man crawled underneath the moving carousel--that was actual.          If he had raised his head an inch, two inches--finish. My hands sweat          now when I think of it--what a dreadful chance I took. I knew what I was          doing then, you know, but I thought, "Oh, well, maybe he won&#39;t raise          his head too high.        Doesn&#39;t Granger chase after Walker mainly to expiate his own feelings          of guilt about the murder of his wife?        Sure he does. He felt like killing her himself.        I Confess (1953)        There were two things wrong with I Confess. I didn&#39;t enjoy working with          Clift because he was too obscure, and Anne Baxter was completely miscast.          I imported a girl from Sweden--Anita Bjork, who played the lead in Miss          Julie--I wanted an unknown. When you go to Quebec and a film star pops          up, it&#39;s ridiculous. But Bjork arrived with an illegitimate child and          a lover. And the thing came out and Warners said, "We can&#39;t use her."          We had to ship her back. By this time I was a week away from Quebec. I          got messages that we should take Baxter, that they didn&#39;t have anybody          else. It was all wrong. I didn&#39;t believe her as a member of Quebec society.          I wanted a foreign girl with an accent.        How did you achieve the shimmering effect of the first flashback?        That was done in slow motion. I slowed it up tremendously.        Do you think Clift had already decided to become a priest before his          return from the war?        Yes. I think he&#39;d already decided.        Do you think they slept together during the storm?        I hope so. Far be it from me as a Jesuit to encourage that kind of behavior.               Do you think Clift was tempted with the idea of becoming a martyr?        Yes, he was tempted by the idea. Of course, in the end, he was a martyr.               Don&#39;t Clift and Baxter feel a strong sense of guilt because in a way          they&#39;re glad that the man was murdered and therefore out of their hair?               Yes, but he isn&#39;t really, because of their conscience. You know, killing          is one thing, but it is not out of their conscience, not out of their          mind.        Dial M for Murder (1954)       What was your main reason for making Dial M for Murder?        I was running for cover. When your batteries run dry, when you are out          creatively, and you have to go on, that&#39;s what I call running for cover.          Take a comparatively successful play that requires no great creative effort          on your part and make it. Keep your hand in, that&#39;s all. When you&#39;re in          this business, don&#39;t make anything unless it looks like it&#39;s going to          promise something. If you have to make a film--as I was under contract          to Warners at the time--play safe. Go get a play and make an average movie--photographs          of people talking. It&#39;s ordinary craftsmanship. But there is another interesting          facet about the photographed stage play. Some people make the mistake,          I think, of trying to open the play up for the screen. That&#39;s a big mistake.          I think the whole conception of a play is confinement within the proscenium--and          that&#39;s what the author uses dramatically. Now you are undoing a newly-knitted          sweater. Pull it apart and you have nothing. In Dial M, I made sure that          I would go outside as little as possible. I had a real tile floor laid          down, the crack under the door, the shadow of the feet, all part of the          stage play and I made sure I didn&#39;t lose that. Otherwise, if you go outside,          what do you end up with? A taxi arrives outside, the door opens, and they          get out and go in.        Rear Window (1954)        The critic on The Observer called this a horrible film because a man          was looking out a window at other people. I thought that was a crappy          remark. Everyone does it, it&#39;s a known fact, and provided it is not made          too vulgar, it is just curiosity. People don&#39;t care who you are, they          can&#39;t resist looking.        Isn&#39;t there something sympathetic about the murderer in his confrontation          scene with Stewart?        Well, the poor man. It&#39;s the climax of peeping tomism, isn&#39;t it? "Why          did you do it?" he says. "If you hadn&#39;t been a peeping tom,          I would have gotten away with it." Stewart can&#39;t answer. What can          he say? He&#39;s caught. Caught with his plaster down.        Kelly is the dominant partner in the relationship, isn&#39;t she?        Yes, rather. She&#39;s a typical, active New Yorker. There are many of those          women in New York, more like men, some of them.        To Catch a Thief (1955)        Kelly is an American in the film, but she wasn&#39;t frigid like the typical          American woman who is a tease--dresses for sex and doesn&#39;t give it. A          man puts his hand on her and she runs screaming for mother immediately.          The English women are the opposite of that. They are the best. They look          like nothing--they look like school mistresses. Kelly is the English woman          in that film. Outwardly, cold as ice, but, boy, underneath! And that was          epitomized by the kiss in the corridor. Of course, the fireworks scene          is pure orgasm. Just as the tunnel at the end of North by Northwest is          a sexual symbol.        Wouldn&#39;t Kelly prefer Grant were really guilty of the robberies?        Oh, of course, Let&#39;s put a mild word to it--it&#39;s more piquant that way,          more in the nature of her fetish.        [After listing some of the television shows directed by Hitchcock, Bogdanovich          notes that the introductions to the shows were written by James Allardice,          prompting the following comment.]        When he came to see me and asked what kind of introductions did I want          him to write for me, I said, "Well, I won&#39;t tell you, but I&#39;ll run          a film that should give you an idea of the kind of thing I want."          So I ran The Trouble With Harry for him.        The Trouble With Harry (1956)        I think The Trouble With Harry needed special handling. It wouldn&#39;t have          failed commercially if the people in the distribution organization had          known what to do with the picture; but it got into the assembly line and          that was that. It was shot in autumn for the contrapunctal use of beauty          against the sordidness and muddiness of death. Harry is very personal          to me because it involves my own sense of humor about the macabre. It          has in it my favorite line of all the pictures I ever made: when Teddy          Gwenn is pulling the body by the legs like a wheelbarrow, and the spinster          comes up and says, "What seems to be the trouble, Captain?&#39;"               The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956)        Of all your pictures, why did you choose to remake The Man Who Knew          Too Much?        I felt that for an American audience, it contained sentimental elements          that would be more interesting than some of the others. The second Man          Who Knew Too Much was more carefully worked out than the first one. The          first one was, shall we say, a spontaneous creation, without examination.               Doris Day, like many of your characters, complains about a lack of excitement          in her life, and then is thrown into a terrible dilemma. Is this your          comment on the virtues of the simple life?        I think there&#39;s a lot to be said for that. Let&#39;s look at me psychologically.          I don&#39;t feel any of the things that my characters feel, I have no such          desires. My God, I&#39;ve been happily married to the same woman for thirty-six          years. I have no identification with my characters. If I did, I couldn&#39;t          picture them as objectively as I do.        The Wrong Man (1957)        I enjoyed making this film because, after all, this is my greatest fear--fear          of the police. And I had all of that going for me. I&#39;ve often thought          of a scene of a man being taken to jail in England in what they used to          call the Black Maria, and able to see out the grill window at the back          all the things people were doing, going to restaurants, going home, lining          up to go into a theatre. And this man is on the way to jail for probably          ten, fifteen years, getting a kind of last glimpse of every-day life.          In truth, perhaps The Wrong Man should have been done as a documentary,          without any cinematic consciousness, by a newsreel cameraman with a camera          in one position all the time. I felt the front part of the picture very          much, and I liked the climax when the right man is discovered, while the          wrong man is praying to the picture on the wall. I liked the ironic coincidence.          I was disturbed by the fact that, due to the documentary line, we had          to follow the wife&#39;s story, and his story kind of collapsed.        Vertigo (1958)        Isn&#39;t Vertigo about the conflict between illusion and reality?        Oh, yes. I was interested by the basic situation, because it contained          so much analogy to sex. Stewart&#39;s efforts to recreate the woman were,          cinematically, exactly the same as though he were trying to undress the          woman, instead of dressing her. He couldn&#39;t get the other woman out of          his mind. Now, in the book, they didn&#39;t reveal that she was one and the          same woman until the end of the story. I shocked Sam Taylor, who worked          on it, when I said, "When Stewart comes upon this brunette girl,          Sam, this is the time for us to blow the whole truth." He said, "Good          God, why?" I told him, if we don&#39;t what is the rest of our story          until we do reveal the truth. A man has picked up a brunette and sees          in her the possibilities of resemblance to the other woman.        Let&#39;s put ourselves in the minds of our audience here: "So you&#39;ve          got a brunette and you&#39;re going to change her." What story are we          telling now? A man wants to make a girl over and then, at the very end,          finds out it is the same woman. Maybe he kills her, or whatever. Here          we are, back in our old situation: surprise or suspense. And we come to          our old analogy of the bomb: you and I sit talking and there&#39;s a bomb          in the room. We&#39;re having a very innocuous conversation about nothing.          Boring. Doesn&#39;t mean a thing. Suddenly, boom! the bomb goes off and they&#39;re          shocked--for fifteen seconds. Now you change it. Play the same scene,          insert the bomb, show that the bomb is placed there, establish that it&#39;s          going to go off at one o&#39;clock--it&#39;s now a quarter of one, ten of one--show          a clock on the wall, back to the same scene. Now our conversation becomes          very vital, by its sheer nonsense. "Look under the table! You fool!"          Now they&#39;re working for ten minutes, instead of being surprised for fifteen          seconds. Now let&#39;s go back to Vertigo. If we don&#39;t let them know, they          will speculate. They will get a very blurred impression as to what is          going on.        "Now," I said, "one of the fatal things, Sam, in all          suspense is to have a mind that is confused. Otherwise the audience won&#39;t          emote. Clarify, clarify, clarify. Don&#39;t let them say, "I don&#39;t know          which woman that is, who&#39;s that?" So," I said, "we are          going to take the bull by the horns and put it all in a flashback, bang!          right then and there--show it&#39;s one and the same woman." Then, when          Stewart comes to the hotel for her, the audience says, "Little does          he know." Second, the girl&#39;s resistance in the earlier part of the          film had no reason. Now you have the reason--she doesn&#39;t want to be uncovered.          That&#39;s why she doesn&#39;t want the gray suit, doesn&#39;t want to go blond--because          the moment she does, she&#39;s in for it. So now you&#39;ve got extra values working          for you. We play on his fetish in creating this dead woman, and he is          so obsessed with the pride he has in making her over. Even when she comes          back from the hairdresser, the blond hair is still down. And he says,          "Put your hair up." She says, "No." He says, "Please."          Now what is he saying to her? "You&#39;ve taken everything off except          your bra and your panties, please take those off." She says, "All          right." She goes into the bathroom. He&#39;s only waiting to see a nude          woman come out, ready to get in bed with. That&#39;s what the scene is. Now,          as soon as she comes out, he sees a ghost--he sees the other woman.        That&#39;s why I played her in a green light. You see, in the earlier part--which          is purely in the mind of Stewart--when he is watching this girl go from          place to place, when she is really faking, behaving like a woman of the          past--in order to get this slightly subtle quality of a dreamlike nature          although it was bright sunshine, I shot the film through a fog filter          and I got a green effect--fog over bright sunshine. That&#39;s why, when she          comes out of the bathroom, I played her in the green light. That&#39;s why          I chose the Empire Hotel in Post Street--because it had a green neon sign          outside the window. I wanted to establish that green light flashing all          the time. So that when we need it, we&#39;ve got it. I slid the soft, fog          lens over, and as she came forward, for a moment he got the image of the          past. Then as her face came up to him, I slipped the soft effect away,          and he came back to reality. She had come back from the dead, and he felt          it, and knew it, and probably was even bewildered--until he saw the locket--and          then he knew he had been tricked.        North By Northwest (1959)         It&#39;s the American Thirty-Nine Steps--I&#39;d thought about it for a long          time. It&#39;s a fantasy. The whole film is epitomized in the title--there          is no such thing as north-by-northwest on the compass. The area in which          we get near to the free abstract in movie making is the free use of fantasy,          which is what I deal in. I don&#39;t deal in that slice-of-life stuff. Only          one sequence was missing from that picture: the assembly-line in Detroit.          Never got that in. I wanted to have a dialogue scene--two men talking,          walking along the assembly line--and behind them is a car being assembled.          Starts with a bare frame and continues to be built. And the men talk on--their          conversation should have a little bit to do with automobiles--and finally          the car is loaded up with gas and one of the men drives it off. Well,          I wanted to see the car finally come off the line, and they open the door          and look in, and a dead body falls out. Also I wanted to get in a shot          of Cary Grant hiding in Lincoln&#39;s nose and having a sneezing fit!        How did you get the idea for the plane sequence?        This comes under the heading of avoiding the clich&eacute;s. The clich&eacute;          of that kind of scene is in The Third Man. Under a street lamp, in a medieval          setting, black cat slithers by, somebody opens a blind and looks out,          eerie music. Now, what is the antithesis of this? Nothing! No music, bright          sunshine, and nothing. Now put a man in a business suit in this setting.               Mason really doesn&#39;t act like a villain, does he?        No, I didn&#39;t make him do a dastardly thing in the whole picture. I split          him into three in an effort to keep him from behaving like a heavy: there&#39;s          Mason himself, who only had to nod. I gave him a rather saturnine looking          secretary--there was the face of Mason. And the third man--Adam Williams--he          was the brutality.        Psycho (1960)       Do you really consider Psycho an essentially humorous film?        Well, when I say humorous, I mean it&#39;s my humor that enabled me to tackle          the outrageousness of it. If I were telling the same story seriously,          I&#39;d tell a case history and never treat it in terms of mystery or suspense.          It would simply be what the psychiatrist relates at the end.        In Psycho, aren&#39;t you really directing the audience more than the actors?               Yes. It&#39;s using pure cinema to cause the audience to emote. It was done          by visual means designed in every possible way for an audience. That&#39;s          why the murder in the bathroom is so violent, because as the film proceeds,          there is less violence. But that scene was in the minds of the audience          so strongly that one didn&#39;t have to do much more. I think that in Psycho          there is no identification with the characters. There wasn&#39;t time to develop          them and there was no need to. The audience goes through the paroxysms          in the film without consciousness of Vera Miles or John Gavin. They&#39;re          just characters that lead the audience through the final part of the picture.          I wasn&#39;t interested in them. And you know, nobody ever mentions that they          were ever in the film. It&#39;s rather sad for them. Can you imagine how the          people in the front office would have cast the picture? They&#39;d say, "Well,          she gets killed off in the first reel, let&#39;s put anybody in there, and          give Janet Leigh the second part with the love interest." Of course,          this is idiot thinking. The whole point is to kill off the star, that          is what makes it so unexpected. This was the basic reason for making the          audience see it from the beginning. If they came in half-way through the          picture, they would say, "When&#39;s Janet Leigh coming on?" You          can&#39;t have blurred thinking in suspense.        Didn&#39;t you experiment with TV techniques in Psycho?        It was made by a TV unit, but that was only a matter of economics really,          speed and economy of shooting, achieved by minimizing the number of set-ups.          We slowed up whenever it became really cinematic. The bathroom scene took          seven days, whereas the psychiatrist&#39;s scene at the end was all done in          one day.        How much did Saul Bass contribute to the picture?        Only the main title, the credits. He asked me if he could do one sequence          in Psycho and I said yes. So he did a sequence on paper, little drawings          of the detective going up the stairs before he is killed. One day on the          picture, I was sick, and I called up and told the assistant to make those          shots as Bass had planned them. There were about twenty of them and when          I saw them, I said, "You can&#39;t use any of them." The sequence          told his way would indicate that the detective is a menace. He&#39;s not.          He is an innocent man, therefore the shot should be innocent. We don&#39;t          have to work the audience up. We&#39;ve done that. The mere fact that he&#39;s          going up the stairs is enough. Keep it simple. No complications. One shot.               Did you intend any moral implications in the picture?        I don&#39;t think you can take any moral stand because you&#39;re dealing with          distorted people. You can&#39;t apply morality to insane persons.        The Birds (1963)        In The Birds, as in a lot of your films, you take ordinary, basically          average people, and put them into extraordinary situations.        This is for audience identification. In The Birds, there is a very light          beginning, girl meets boy, and then she walks right into a complicated          situation: the boy&#39;s mother&#39;s unnatural relationship to him, and the school          teacher who&#39;s carrying a torch for him. This girl, who is just a fly-by-night,          a playgirl, comes up against reality for the first time. That transmits          itself into a catastrophe, and the girl&#39;s transition takes place.        What do you feel the picture is really about?        Generally speaking, that people are too complacent. The girl represents          complacency. But I believe that when people rise to the occasion, when          catastrophe comes, they are all right. The mother panics because she starts          off being so strong, but she is not strong, it is a facade: she has been          substituting her son for her husband. She is the weak character in the          story. But the girl shows that people can be strong when they face up          to the situation. It&#39;s like the people in London, during the wartime air          raids.        Isn&#39;t the film also a vision of Judgment Day?        Yes, it is. And we don&#39;t know how they are going to come out. Certainly,          the mother was scared to the end. The girl was brave enough to face the          birds and try to beat them off. But as a group they were the victims of          Judgment Day. For the ordinary public--they got away to San Francisco--but          I toyed with the idea of lap-dissolving on them in the car, looking, and          there is the Golden Gate Bridge--covered in birds.        How did you come to choose The Birds as a vehicle?        I felt that after Psycho people would expect something to top it before          going on to something else. I&#39;ve noticed that in other "catastrophe"          films, such as On the Beach, the personal stories were never really part          of it at all. I remember a film called The Pride and the Passion, which          was about pulling that huge gun. Well, they stopped every night to have          a bit of personal story; then the next morning they went back to the gun          again. It was terribly devised, no integration at all. They don&#39;t realize          that people are still living, emoting, while pushing the gun. That was          one of the things I made up my mind to avoid in The Birds. I deliberately          started off with light, ordinary, inconsequential behavior. I even compromised          by the nature of the opening titles, making them ominous. I wanted to          use very light, simple Chinese paintings of birds--delicate little drawings.          I didn&#39;t because I felt people might get impatient, having seen the advertising          campaign and ask, "When are the birds coming on?" That&#39;s why          I give them a sock now and again--the bird against the door, bang! birds          up on the wires, the bird that bites the girl. But I felt it was vital          to get to know the people, the mother especially, she&#39;s the key figure.          And we must take our time, get absorbed in the atmosphere before the birds          come. Once more, it is fantasy. But everything had to be as real as possible,          the surroundings, the settings, the people. And the birds themselves had          to be domestic birds--no vultures, no wild birds of any kind.        Aren&#39;t there a lot of trick-shots in the picture?        Had to be. There are 371 trick-shots in it, and the most difficult one          was the last shot. That took 32 different pieces of film. We had a limited          number of gulls allowed. Therefore, the foreground was shot in three panel          sections, left to right, up to the birds on the rail. The few gulls we          had were in the first third, we re-shot it for the middle third, and for          the right-hand third, using the same gulls. Just above the heads of the          crows was a long, slender middle section where the gulls were spread again.          Then the car going down the driveway, with the birds on each side of it,          was another piece of film. The sky was another piece of film, as was the          barn on the left, and so on. These were all put together in the lab.        How do you feel, on the whole, about using trick-effects and process-shots?               It is a means to an end. You must arrive at it somehow. A very important          thing about The Birds: I never raised the point, "Can it be done?"          Because then it would never have been made. Any technician would have          said "impossible." So I didn&#39;t even bring that up, I simply          said, "Here&#39;s what we&#39;re going to do." No one will ever realize          that had the pioneering technical work on it not been attempted, the film          would not have been made. Cleopatra or Ben Hur is nothing to this--just          quantities of people and scenery. Just what the bird trainer has done          is phenomenal. Look at the way the crows chase the children down the street,          dive all around them, land on their backs. It took days to organize those          birds on the hood of the car and to make them fly away at the right time.          The Birds could easily have cost $5,000,000 if Bob Burks and the rest          of us hadn&#39;t been technicians ourselves.        Marnie [in preparation at the time of the interview]               What will Marnie be like?        It is the story of a girl who doesn&#39;t know who she is. She is a psychotic,          a compulsive thief, and afraid of sex, and in the end she finds out why.          In terms of style, it will be a bit like Notorious.        Marnie is a thief, but evidently we are in sympathy with her. How is          this achieved?          This comes under the heading of rooting for the evildoer to succeed--because          in all of us we have that eleventh commandment nagging us: "Thou          shalt not be found out." The average person looking at someone doing          evil or wrong wants the person to get away with it. There&#39;s something          that makes them say, "Look out! Look out! They&#39;re coming!" I          think it&#39;s the most amazing instinct-doesn&#39;t matter how evil it is, you          know. Can&#39;t go as far as murder, but anything up to that point. The audience          can&#39;t bear the suspense of the person being discovered. "Hurry up!          Quick! You&#39;re going to be caught!"        [Bogdanovich concludes by listing several "unrealized projects,"          Frances Iles&#39; 1931 novel Malice Afterthought, David Duncan&#39;s story The          Bramble Bush, which Hitchcock worked on during 1953-54, Life of a City,          and Ernest Raymond&#39;s We, the Accused, based on the Crippen case. Hitchcock          commented on the last two projects.]        Life of a City        This is something I&#39;ve wanted to do since 1928. I want to do it in terms          of what lies behind the face of a city--what makes it tick--in other words,          backstage of a city. But it&#39;s so enormous that it is practically impossible          to get the story right. Two or three people had a go at it for me but          all failed. It must be done in terms of personalities and people, and          with my techniques, everything would have to be used dramatically.        We, the Accused        This was the story of a man who murdered his wife, ran off with his secretary,          and was arrested on board ship, in about 1910. It is almost the definitive          case of murder, trial and execution. It would be a very long picture,          with detailed characterization, but I&#39;m afraid it&#39;s terribly downbeat--and          the man is middle-aged--so it wouldn&#39;t be very commercial. And you would          have to spend some money on it.<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 04:05:42 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Alfred Hitchcock</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/22/2007 12:05:42 AM</spout:postdate><spout:body>Peter Bogdanovich Interviews Alfred Hitchcock                   The legendary interview from 1963        PB: You never watch your films with an audience. Don&amp;#39;t you miss hearing          them scream?        AH: No. I can hear them when I&amp;#39;m making the picture.        Do you feel that the American film remains the most vital cinema?        Worldwide, yes. Because when we make films for the United States, we          are automatically making them for all the world--because America is full          of foreigners. It&amp;#39;s a melting pot. Which brings us to another point. I          don&amp;#39;t know what they mean when they talk about "Hollywood" pictures.          I say, "Where are they conceived?" Look at this room--you can&amp;#39;t          see out the windows. We might just as well be in a hotel room in London,          or anywhere you like. So here is where we get it down on paper.        Now where do we go? We go on location, perhaps; and then where do we          work? We&amp;#39;re inside on a stage, the big doors are closed, and we&amp;#39;re down          in a coal mine: we don&amp;#39;t know what the weather is like outside. Again          we don&amp;#39;t know where we are--only within our film, within the thing we&amp;#39;re          making. That&amp;#39;s why it&amp;#39;s such nonsense to talk about locale. "Hollywood."          That doesn&amp;#39;t mean anything to me. If you say, "Why do you like working          in Hollywood?" I would say, because I can get home at six o&amp;#39;clock          for dinner.        How would you define pure cinema?        Pure cinema is complementary pieces of film put together, like notes          of music make a melody. There are two primary uses of cutting or montage          in film: montage to create ideas--and montage to create violence and emotions.          For example, in Rear Window, where Jimmy Stewart is thrown out of the          window in the end, I just photographed that with feet, legs, arms, heads.          Completely montage. I also photographed it from a distance, the complete          action. There was no comparison between the two. There never is. Barroom          fights, or whatever they do in westerns, when they knock out the heavy          or when one man knocks another across the table which breaks--they always          break a table in bars--they are always shot at a distance. But it is much          more effective if it&amp;#39;s done in montage, because you involve the audience          much more--that&amp;#39;s the secret to that type of montage in film. And the          other, of course, is the juxtaposition of imagery relating to the mind          of the individual. You have a man look, you show what he sees, you go          back to the man. You can make him react in various ways. You see, you          can make him look at one thing, look at another--without his speaking,          you can show his mind at work, comparing things--any way you run there&amp;#39;s          complete freedom. It&amp;#39;s limitless, I would say, the power of cutting and          the assembly of the images. Like the man with no eyes in The Birds--zooming          the camera in--the staccato jumps are almost like catching the breath.          Is it? Gasp. Gasp. Yes. Young directors always come up with the idea,          "Let the camera be someone and let it move as though it&amp;#39;s the person,          and you put the guy in front of a mirror and then you see him." It&amp;#39;s          a terrible mistake. Bob Montgomery did that in Lady in the Lake--I don&amp;#39;t          believe in it myself. What are you really doing? You are keeping back          from the audience who it is. What for? That&amp;#39;s all you are doing. Why not          show who it is?        How do you work when you are shooting?        Well, I never look through the camera, you know. The cameraman knows          me well enough to know what I want--and when in doubt, draw a rectangle          and then draw the shot out for him. You see, the point is that you are,          first of all, in a two-dimensional medium. Mustn&amp;#39;t forget that. You have          a rectangle to fill. Fill it. Compose it. I don&amp;#39;t have to look through          a camera for that. First of all, the cameraman knows very well that when          I compose I object to air, space around figures or above their heads,          because I think that&amp;#39;s redundant. It&amp;#39;s like a newspaperman taking a still          and trimming it down to its essentials. They have standing instructions          from me--they never give any air around the figures. If I want air, I&amp;#39;ll          say so. Now, you see, when I&amp;#39;m on the set, I&amp;#39;m not on the set. If I&amp;#39;m          looking at acting or looking at a scene--the way its played, or where          they are--I am looking at a screen, I am not confused by the set and the          movement of the people across the set. In other words, I follow the geography          of the screen. I can only think of the screen. Most directors say, "Well,          he&amp;#39;s got to come in that door so he&amp;#39;s got to walk from there to there."          Which is as dull as hell. And not only that, it makes the shot itself          so empty and so loose that I say, "Well, if he&amp;#39;s still in a mood--whatever          mood he&amp;#39;s in--take him across in a close-up, but keep the mood on the          screen." We&amp;#39;re not interested in distance. I don&amp;#39;t care how he got          across the room. What&amp;#39;s the state of mind? You can only think of the screen.          You cannot think of the set or where you are in the studio--nothing of          that sort.        What is your technique of working with actors?        I don&amp;#39;t direct them. I talk to them and explain to them what the scene          is, what it&amp;#39;s purpose is, why they are doing certain things--because they          relate to the story--not to the scene. The whole scene relates to the          story but that little look does this or that for the story. As I tried          to explain to that girl, Kim Novak, "You have got a lot of expression          in your face. Don&amp;#39;t want any of it. I only want on your face what we want          to tell to the audience--what you are thinking." I said, "Let          me explain to you. If you put a lot of redundant expressions on your face,          it&amp;#39;s like taking a piece of paper and scribbling all over it--full of          scribble, the whole piece of paper. You want to write a sentence for somebody          to read. They can&amp;#39;t read it--too much scribble on the face. Much easier          to read if the piece of paper is blank. That&amp;#39;s what your face ought to          be when we need the expression." Take The Birds. There is not one          redundant expression on Hedren&amp;#39;s face. Every expression makes a point.          Even the slight nuance of a smile when she says, "What can I do for          you, sir?" One look says, "I&amp;#39;m going to play a gag on him."          That&amp;#39;s the economy of it.        You&amp;#39;ve said that your pictures are finished before you set foot on the          set--that is, once the script is completed. What is your working process          with the writers?        In the early days--way, way back in the English period, I would always          work on a treatment with a writer who would be a plot maker, or story          man. I would work weeks and weeks on this treatment and what it would          amount to would be a complete narrative, even indicating shots, but not          in the words of long-shot or close-up. It would have everything in it,          all the details. Then I used to give it to a top writer to dialogue it.          When he sent in his dialogue, I would sit down and dictate the shots in          a complete continuity. But the film had to be made on paper in this narrative          form. It would describe the film, shot by shot, beginning to end. Sometimes          with drawings, sometimes without. I abandoned this method when I came          to America. I found that American writers wouldn&amp;#39;t go for that sort of          thing. I do it verbally now, with the writer, and then I make corrections          and adjustments afterwards. I work many weeks with him and he takes notes.          And I describe the picture for the production designers as well. Marnie          has all been finished as far as the layout of the picture, but there&amp;#39;s          no dialogue in it. I would say I apply myself two-thirds before he writes          and one-third after he writes. But I will not and do not photograph anything          that he puts in the script on his own, apart from words. I mean any cinematic          method of telling it--how can he know? On North by Northwest, Ernie Lehman          wouldn&amp;#39;t let me out of the office for a whole year. I was with him on          every shot, every scene. Because it wasn&amp;#39;t his material.        I&amp;#39;ve heard a story about your having been put in jail by your father          at an early age. Did this have any particular effect on your development,          do you think?        It could have--I must have been five when I was sent along with a note          to the chief of police, who read the note and promptly put me into a cell          and locked the door for five minutes; and then let me out, saying, "That&amp;#39;s          what we do to naughty little boys, you see." What effect that had          on me at the time I can&amp;#39;t remember, but they say psychiatrically if you          can discover the origins of this or that, it releases everything. I don&amp;#39;t          think it released me from a natural fear of the police.        What influence, if any, do you think the Jesuit schooling has had on          your work?        The Jesuits taught me organization, control, and to some degree, analysis.          Their education is very strict, and orderliness is one of the things that          come out of that, I suppose. Although my orderliness is spasmodic. I remember          when I was at the age of eighteen or nineteen I was a senior estimator          at an electrical engineering firm, and the requests for estimates used          to come in, and I was kind of lazy so I&amp;#39;d pile them up on my desk and          they&amp;#39;d go up to a big pile. And I used to say, "Well, I&amp;#39;ve got to          get down to this," and then I polished them off like anything. And          used to get praised for the prodigious amount of work I&amp;#39;d done in that          particular day. That lasted until the complaints began to come in about          the delay in answering. That&amp;#39;s the way I feel about working. Certain writers          want to work every hour of the day: they&amp;#39;re very facile. I&amp;#39;m not that          way. I want to say, "Let&amp;#39;s lay off for several hours, let&amp;#39;s play."          And then we get down to it again. I&amp;#39;m sure the Jesuits did not teach that.          As far as any religious influence, at the time I think it was fear. But          I&amp;#39;ve grown out of religious fear now. I think I have. I don&amp;#39;t know. I          don&amp;#39;t think the religious side of the Jesuit education impressed itself          so much upon me as the strict discipline one endured at the time.        [Bogdanovich names all of Hitchcocks films and they discuss each one:]       Number 13 (1921)   [Hitchcock worked on production and direction of this          film, which was never completed.]        I was talked into Number Thirteen by the publicity woman of Famous Players-Lasky,          who began to see something in me even before I&amp;#39;d got to writing or art          direction, when I was just a young man around the editorial department.          She had worked with Chaplin, and in those days they thought anyone who&amp;#39;d          worked with Chaplin knew everything. She wrote this comedy and we tried          to put it together. It wasn&amp;#39;t any, and it never saw the light of day.               Always Tell Your Wife (1922)   [When the director of this film became ill,          Hitchcock completed it, in collaboration with the producer.]        The interesting thing was that I gravitated from the American film training          at Famous Players into a position with a new company, so I didn&amp;#39;t have          to move into an existing company which had certain rules and organizational          patterns. I really was fortunate in that sense, because as a young man          and as an art director, I was quite dogmatic. I mean, I would build a          set and say to the director, "Here&amp;#39;s where it&amp;#39;s shot from."               Woman to Woman (1922)         [Hitchcock wrote the scenario with Graham Cutts          and acted as designer and assistant director.]        All my early training was American, which was far superior to the British.          The London Daily Express had a review of this film which was headlined          "Best American Picture Made in England." Now of course Cutts          directed, but I was art director and writer, and my wife was the editor.               [After listing credits for five films which Hitchcock said could not          be labeled as "Hitchcock picture[s]," and briefly mentioning          his association with Erich Pommer and experience making films in Germany,          Bogdanovich includes the following comment on how Hitchcock became a director.]               I had no intention of becoming a film director, you know. It was quite          a surprise to me. Sir Michael Balcon is really the man responsible for          Hitchcock. At the time, I had been a script writer, and when I finished          that job I became the art director or production designer. And I did that          for several pictures, until one day Balcon said that the director (I worked          with the same director all the time) didn&amp;#39;t want me any more. I don&amp;#39;t          know what the reason was, some political reason. And it was then that          Balcon said, "How would you like to become a director?" I had          been quite content at the time, writing scripts and designing. I enjoyed          it very much.        The Pleasure Garden (1925)        The Pleasure Garden was just an assignment, but again there was the American          influence. Balcon came out to Munich, where I had shot it, to see the          first cut. He hadn&amp;#39;t seen the rushes or anything. And his first remark          was, "Well, it doesn&amp;#39;t look like a continental picture. It looks          like an American picture." The cameraman, although he was Italian,          had worked with American directors and was very conscious of American          techniques. I think the headline in the Daily Express on The Pleasure          Garden was "Young Man With a Master Mind." That was the first          picture.        The Lodger (1926)       Did you want the audience to believe without doubt that Novello was the          murderer?        That was one of the commercial drawbacks one encountered. Of course,          strictly speaking, he should have been the ripper and gone on his way.          That&amp;#39;s how Mrs. Belloc-Lowndes wrote the book. But Ivor Novello was the          matinee idol of the period and could not be the murderer. The same thing          was true of Cary Grant in Suspicion many years later. So, obviously, putting          that kind of actor into this sort of film is a mistake because you just          have to compromise.        In The Lodger you were quite conscious of the German school of filmmaking,          weren&amp;#39;t you?        Very much so. You have to remember that a year before, I was working          on the Ufa lot--I worked there for many months, at the same time as Jannings          was making The Last Laugh with Murnau. And I was able to absorb a lot          of the methods and style.          How did you achieve the shot of Novello pacing back and forth above their          heads?          I had a floor made of one-inch thick plate-glass, about six feet square.          This was the visual substitution for sound, you see. Just as much as the          set I had built for when the lodger went out late at night--almost to          the ceiling of the studio, showing four flights of stairs and a handrail.          And all you see is a hand going down. That was, of course, from the point          of view of the mother listening. Today we would substitute sound for that.          Although I think that the handrail shot would be worthy of today in addition          to sound.        The Ring (1927)       How did you decide to do a boxing story?        I was interested--I used to go to the Albert Hall. I think the thing,          strangely enough, that fascinated me about boxing in those days was the          English audience that would go all dressed up in black tie to sit around          the ring. It wasn&amp;#39;t the boxing that fascinated me so much, although I          was interested in the shop, all the details connected with it. Like pouring          champagne over the head of the boxer at the thirteenth round, if he was          going a bit groggy. You&amp;#39;d hear them uncork the champagne bottle and pour          the whole bottle over his head. All that kind of thing I was interested          in, and put it all in the picture. The Ring had a montage sequence, it          was piano playing or something, and it got a round of applause at the          premiere. I never heard a montage get a round of applause before, but          this did. Also I began to experiment with little pictorial touches, things          like the dirty old "Round One" card being pulled out of the          slot and a brand new "Round Two" card going in--that&amp;#39;s how I          indicated the sudden change in the fortunes of "One Round Jack"          as he was called.        The Farmer&amp;#39;s Wife (1928)        The Farmer&amp;#39;s Wife, I would say, was again merely a photograph of a stage          play with lots of titles instead of dialogue. It was just a routine job.               Champagne (1928)        Someone had this idea, let&amp;#39;s make a film about champagne. Any my thought          was--it&amp;#39;s kind of a corny idea really--why don&amp;#39;t we do one about a little          girl who works at Reims in the cellars and always watches the train go          off carrying champagne. And then she eventually gravitated to the city          and became a kind of whore and was put through the mill and eventually          went back to her job, and then every time she saw champagne go out, she          knew, "Well, that&amp;#39;s going to cause some trouble for somebody."          That was scrapped. They thought it was much too, they didn&amp;#39;t use the word          "highbrow," but, oh, that wasn&amp;#39;t entertainment. So we ended          up with a hodge-podge of a story that was written as we went through the          film and I thought it was dreadful.        The Manxman (1929)        The Manxman again was a kind of old-fashioned story. An assignment, more          or less. It was a domestic melodrama, you know, the illegitimate child          and the brother and the judge--one of those things full of coincidences--the          brother happens to be a lawyer and the poor girl gets involved with a          fisherman and so on.        Blackmail (1929)       Having shot Blackmail as a silent film, did you welcome the shift to          sound?        Yes. I was looking forward to it. In fact, while I was shooting it as          a silent picture, they told me that the last reel was going to be done          in sound. I didn&amp;#39;t let them know up front, but I knew there was so much          of the visual in it that here and there I could go back and drop certain          sounds into scenes that were completed. Having seen it once since then,          I think it shows a little bit that there&amp;#39;s no flow of dialogue where it          should flow. The dialogue almost comes in like titles in the early part          of the picture. But I think what sound brought of value to the cinema          was to complete the realism of the image on the screen. It made everyone          in the audience deaf mutes.        The whole first sequence is silent, except for the music.        Yes. Now, here&amp;#39;s another compromise--see, my life&amp;#39;s full of compromises.          I had intended to end Blackmail just as it began. Only this time with          the girl being arrested. I was going to repeat every shot. But they wouldn&amp;#39;t          go for it in those days. A happy ending--had to be. As I wanted to do          it, the detective was never going to disclose to his superior that this          was his girl. He had to go through with his duty--the old love-and-duty          theme. I was going to repeat all the shots of the mugging, the interview,          and finally--bang! goes the cell door on the girl, and the detective and          his superior walk down the corridor. I was going to hang on and let them          wash their hands in the men&amp;#39;s room and go way down the corridor to right          where he met her at the opening of the picture, in the lobby. And the          superior says, "Well, what are you doing tonight, going out with          your girl?" And he says, "No, not tonight." And he walks          out.        Ritchard doesn&amp;#39;t play the murder-seduction scene at all like a villain,          does he?        No. I did a kind of naive thing there. Even in those days, I though,          "Oh, we can&amp;#39;t have a man behaving like a heavy." But then what          I did was let him stand in the shadow of a wrought iron chandelier and          the shadow put a black moustache on him.        Was the chase through the British Museum shot there?        No, it was all process. You see, there was never enough light in the          British Museum, so we used what is known as the Schufftan process. You          have a mirror at an angle of 45 degrees and in it you reflect a full picture          of the British Museum. I had some pictures taken with half-hour exposures.          I had nine photographs taken in various rooms in the museum and we made          then into transparencies so that we could back-light them. That is more          luminous than a flat photograph. It was like a big lantern slide, about          12 by 14. And then I scraped the silvering away in the mirror only in          the portions where I wanted the man to be seen running, and those portions          we built on the stage. For example, one room was the Egyptian room, there          were glass cases in there. All we built were the door frames from one          room to another. We even had a man looking into a case, and he wasn&amp;#39;t          looking into anything on the stage. I did nine shots like this, but there          was barely any set that could be seen on the stage. The front office was          worrying about when the picture was going to be finished. So I did it          all secretly because the studio heads knew nothing about the Schufftan          process. I had another camera set up on the side photographing an insert          of a letter, and a look-out stationed at the door. When the big-shot from          the front office would walk through, we would just be shooting the insert          of the letter. They&amp;#39;d go on through and I&amp;#39;d say, "All right, bring          back the Schufftan." I did the whole none shots that way. The chase          on the roof was a miniature. We just built a skeleton ramp for him to          run on.        Was your appearance in the subway in Blackmail the first time you used          this personal joke?        No, I&amp;#39;m seen in The Lodger, seated in the foreground at a desk in the          newspaper office scene. And that was done just because we didn&amp;#39;t bother          to engage actors for that kind of scene. But the first big appearance          was in Blackmail. It really started with the talking pictures. I didn&amp;#39;t          do it in many of the silent films.        Juno and the Paycock (1930)       How did you come to make Juno and the Paycock?        Because I liked the play very much. I think the picture&amp;#39;s all right,          though personally it wasn&amp;#39;t my meat. But it was one of my favorite plays,          so I thought I had to do it. It was just a photograph of a stage play.          We had all the Irish players. It was interesting the trouble one went          to for sound at that time. I remember a close-up in this very tiny studio,          a close-up of the sun huddled beside the fire, and I wanted to dolly in.          The camera was encased in what looked like a telephone booth in those          days for reasons of sound-proofing. So I had this booth on a dolly. The          off-stage sounds were the family talking in the room, they&amp;#39;d bought a          phonograph and they were playing a tune called "If You&amp;#39;re Irish,          Come Into the Parlor." Suddenly they stopped because the funeral          was going by and then there was a rattle of machine-gun fire. All those          sounds had to be in the studio at the same time, and the studio was packed.          There was a small orchestra, and I had the prop-man sing the song holding          his note so that you got a tinny effect as on a phonograph record. There          were the actors with their lines. Then, on the other side, I had a choir          of about twenty people for the funeral, and another man with the machine-gun          effect. We could barely move in that little studio for all those effects          just on one close-up.        Murder (1930)        Murder was the first important who-done-it picture I made. It&amp;#39;s the first          time I ever used the voice over the face--without the lips moving--for          stream-of-consciousness. Before O&amp;#39;Neill. And there was a scene where Marshall          was shaving, and he had the radio on and I wanted to have the Prelude          from Tristan playing. I had a thirty-piece orchestra in the studio, just          for this little radio he&amp;#39;s playing in his bathroom. You see, you couldn&amp;#39;t          add it later, it had to be done at the same time and balanced on the stage.               The Skin Game (1931)        I didn&amp;#39;t alter the Galsworthy play very much. It opened up a little bit          more than Juno. Not too much, though. Photographed theatre, really.        Rich and Strange (1932)        It wasn&amp;#39;t a thriller. It was just an adventure story. A young couple          take a trip around the world. I actually sent a crew around the world          to cover everything. There was an amusing sequence at the end. Their cargo          ship is wrecked and abandoned in the South China Sea, and they are rescued          by some looters on a Chinese junk. Then, after it&amp;#39;s all over, they meet          me in the lounge. This is my most devastating appearance in a picture.          They tell me their story, and I say, "No, I don&amp;#39;t think it&amp;#39;ll make          a movie." And it didn&amp;#39;t.        Number Seventeen (1932)        That was just another stage play that they&amp;#39;d bought and it just didn&amp;#39;t          transfer. It was a very cheap melodrama. The only good thing in that picture          was a chase between a motorcoach and a train at the end--that&amp;#39;s all.        Lord Camber&amp;#39;s Ladies (1932) [Produced but not directed          by Hitchcock.]        By that time, British International Pictures were drawing in their horns,          and they decided to make what are called "quota pictures." They          asked me to produce a couple and I did one. Quota pictures were made very          cheap, you know. This was a poison thing. I gave it to Benn Levy to direct."               Waltzes from Vienna (1933)        This was my lowest ebb. A musical, and they really couldn&amp;#39;t afford the          music. You know, they say a man is no better than his last picture. But,          ironically enough, prior to making Waltzes from Vienna and reaching this          low ebb, I had written The Man Who Knew Too Much with a couple of other          writers. But it was on the shelf. When I made The Man Who Knew Too Much,          it was acclaimed, and it looked as though I had recovered. But the irony          was that it was made, in my mind, anyway, before Waltzes from Vienna.               The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934)        You&amp;#39;ve said that you could get away with a lotmore things in the early          days than you can now. What did you mean?        I suppose that&amp;#39;s why there&amp;#39;s a certain amount of nostalgia, especially          in England, for the Hitchcock English period. Around that 1935 period,          the audience would accept more, the films of the period were full of fantasy,          and one didn&amp;#39;t have to worry too much about logic or truth. When I came          to America, the first thing I had to learn was that the audience were          more questioning. I&amp;#39;ll put it another way. Less avant-garde. In the first          Man Who Knew Too Much, the characters jump around from one place to another--you&amp;#39;re          in a chapel, and you&amp;#39;ve got old ladies with guns--and one didn&amp;#39;t care.          One said, "An old lady with a gun, that&amp;#39;s be amusing." There          was more underlying humor, at least for me, and less logic. If the idea          appealed to one, however outrageous it was, do it! They wouldn&amp;#39;t go for          that in America.        Do you prefer the old Man Who Knew Too Much to the new one?        No, I don&amp;#39;t really. The old one is fairly slipshod structurally.        What was the purpose of the unraveling sweater towards the start?        It&amp;#39;s the thread of life that gets broken. One could still get pretentious          in those days. It was also comic. You combine a little comic action with          a break in the thread when the man falls dead.        The final street fight is based on a true happening, isn&amp;#39;t it?        It was a very famous incident, called the Sydney Street Siege. There          were anarchists holed up in a house there, and they had to bring the soldiers          out because the police couldn&amp;#39;t handle it. Winston Churchill went down          and directed operations. I had great difficulty getting that one on the          screen because the censor wouldn&amp;#39;t pass it. He called it a black spot          on English police history. He said, "You can&amp;#39;t have the soldiers."          And I said, "Well, then we will have to have the police do the shooting."          "No, you can&amp;#39;t do that. The police don&amp;#39;t carry firearms in England.          If you want to do those Chicago things, we won&amp;#39;t allow it here."          Finally the censor relented and said I could do it if I had the police          go to the local gunsmith and take out mixed guns and show that they&amp;#39;re          not familiar with the weapons. Silly. I ignored it, and I had a truck          come up with a load of rifles.        How did you do the Albert Hall sequence?        Schufftan process again. I photographed about nine angles around the          Albert Hall when it was empty, with the same type of lens that we would          use ultimately, using long exposures to get clear, sharp pictures, which          were then blown up to 14 x 18. I gave them to a famous artist, Matania,          who did pictures that were completely representational. I asked him to          paint the audience into each photo. The reason I chose more than one angle          was so that I didn&amp;#39;t have to repeat myself, otherwise the audience would          have gotten used to it and realized that the people were not moving. I          had the photos made into transparencies and we went back to the Albert          Hall and set up the Schufftan in exactly the same spots where the original          photographs were taken--lining it up exactly. Now the mirror reflected          this little transparency with a full audience, and we scraped the silvering          here and there, a box near the entrance, and the whole of the orchestra.          Then in the box we had a woman opening a program, and so forth, and the          eye immediately went to the movement. All the rest was static. We had          to do it this way because we had no money.        The Thirty-Nine Steps (1935)        In all your chase films, why do you have the hero fleeing from both          the police and the real criminals?        One of the reasons is a structural one. The audience must be in tremendous          sympathy with the man on the run. But the basic reason is that the audience          will wonder, "Why doesn&amp;#39;t he go for the police?" Well, the police          are after him, so he can&amp;#39;t go to them, can he?        Isn&amp;#39;t it his sense of guilt that makes him so fervent?        Well, yes, to some degree. In Thirty-Nine Steps maybe he feels guilt          because the woman is so desperate and he doesn&amp;#39;t protect her enough, he&amp;#39;s          careless.        Is The Thirty-Nine Steps one of your favorite films?        Yes. Pretty much. What I liked about Thirty-Nine Steps were the sudden          switches and the jumping from one situation to another with such rapidity.          Donat leaping out of the window of the police station with half of a handcuff          on, and immediately walking into a Salvation Army Band, darting down an          alley-way and into a room. "Thank God you&amp;#39;ve come, Mr. So-and-so,"          they say, and put him onto a platform. A girl comes along with two men,          takes him in a car to the police station, but not really to the police          station--they are two spies. You know, the rapidity of the switches, that&amp;#39;s          the great thing about it. If I did The Thirty-Nine Steps again, I would          stick to that formula, but it really takes a lot of work. You have to          use one idea after another, and with such rapidity.        Secret Agent (1936)        I liked The Secret Agent quite a bit. I&amp;#39;m sorry it wasn&amp;#39;t more of a success,          but I believe it was unsuccessful because it was the story of a man who          did not want to do something. He was sent out to kill a German spy and          was given a killer to do it and he botched it the first time--killed the          wrong man. You can&amp;#39;t root for a hero who doesn&amp;#39;t want to be a hero. So          it&amp;#39;s a negative thing. I think that&amp;#39;s why it didn&amp;#39;t really succeed.        Sabotage (1936)        Sabotage had a grimmer aspect than most of the other British films. Is          this because of the bomb incident?        Oh, that was a big error. I made a cardinal error there in terms of suspense.          The bomb should never have gone off. If you build an audience up to that          point, the explosion becomes strangely anti-climactic. You work the audience          up to such a degree that they need the relief. The critics were very angry.          One woman said, "I could hit you." I found everybody protesting          against it. Now the boy had to be killed for the sake of the story. One          should have done the killing a different way, off the screen or something.          I shouldn&amp;#39;t have made a suspense thing of it.        Young and Innocent (1937)        When you are dealing with melodrama, you mustn&amp;#39;t let the characters take          themselves where they want to go. They must come where you want to go.          So it&amp;#39;s really an inverted process. It is a bastard form of story-telling.          You lay out your story and you put the characters in afterwards. That&amp;#39;s          why you don&amp;#39;t get really good characterizations. There isn&amp;#39;t time, and          in any case, you know, they may not want to go.        The Lady Vanishes (1938)        The Lady Vanishes is one of your least complex films. Do you agree?               It is a very light film. Of course, it doesn&amp;#39;t make sense. Why didn&amp;#39;t          they send the message by carrier pigeon? The story is inspired by that          legend of an Englishwoman who went with her daughter to the Palace Hotel          in Paris in the 1880&amp;#39;s, at the time of the Great Exposition. The woman          was taken sick and they sent the girl across Paris to get some medicine,          in a horse-vehicle, so it took about four hours, and when she came back          she asked, "How&amp;#39;s my mother?" "What mother?" "My          mother. She&amp;#39;s here, she&amp;#39;s in her room. Room 22." They go up there.          Different room, different wallpaper, everything. And the payoff of the          whole story is, so the legend goes, that the woman had Bubonic plague          and they daren&amp;#39;t let anybody know she died, otherwise all of Paris would          have emptied. That was the original situation and pictures like Lady Vanishes          were all variations on it.        Jamaica Inn (1939)        How did you come to make Jamaica Inn?        I was talked into it. After I&amp;#39;d signed with Selznick, I had time to make          another picture. When I saw what this was going to be, I tried to get          out, but I&amp;#39;d already taken money from them so I couldn&amp;#39;t. The root problem          was that there was no mystery. This is the story of the parson who preaches          in the pulpit; and the mystery of who is the wrecker, the man who puts          a light on the rocks, causing ships to approach the rocks and be wrecked          so they could be looted. Of course, the parson turns out to be the wrecker.          And in Jamaica Inn, you have Charles Laughton playing the parson. Who&amp;#39;s          the wrecker? Who&amp;#39;s the wrecker? What are you going to do--have a little          bit-player turn out to be the central figure? Doesn&amp;#39;t make sense. It&amp;#39;s          very difficult to make a who-done-it. You see, this was like doing a who-done-it          and making Charles Laughton the butler.        Rebecca (1940)        Rebecca was a Bront&amp;euml; thing really, a romantic Victorian novel in          modern dress. In a sense you could get annoyed with the Joan Fontaine          character because she never stood up for herself, she let Mrs. Danvers          override her. But after all that&amp;#39;s applying a modern point of view to          what I say is a Victorian heroine.        Wasn&amp;#39;t Rebecca the first film in which you experimented with a tracking          camera as opposed to the use of montage?        Pretty well, yes. But only because we were going around a big house.          I don&amp;#39;t think it was really right, because after all, the eye must look          at the character. It must not be conscious of a camera dollying unless          you are dollying or zooming in for a particular purpose.        Foreign Correspondent (1940)        I had offered Gary Cooper the Joel McCrea part in Foreign Correspondent.          I had a terrible job casting the thriller-suspense films in America, because          over here this kind of story was looked on as second-rate. In England,          they&amp;#39;re part of the literature, and I had no trouble casting Donat or          anybody else there. Here I ran into it all the time--until Gary--who&amp;#39;s          really English. Afterward, Cooper said, "Well, I should have done          that, shouldn&amp;#39;t I?" Of course I don&amp;#39;t think it was Cooper himself,          I think the people around him advised him against it.        How did you get the idea of the windmill sequence?        When I am given a locale--and this is very important in my mind--it&amp;#39;s          got to be used, and used dramatically. We&amp;#39;re in Holland. What have they          got in Holland? Windmills? Tulips? If the picture had been in color, I          would have worked in the shot I&amp;#39;ve always wanted to do and never have          yet. The murder in a tulip field. Two figures. The assassin--say it&amp;#39;s          Jack-the-Ripper--comes up behind the girl. The shadow creeps up on her,          she turns, screams. Immediately we pan down to the struggling feet, in          the tulip bed. We dolly the camera in to one of the flowers, sounds of          the struggle heard in the background. We go right to one petal--it fills          the screen--and, splash! a drop of red blood comes over the petal. And          that would be the end of the murder.        Mr. and Mrs. Smith (1941)        This picture I made as a gesture to Carole Lombard. She asked me to do          it. The script was already written, and I just came in and did it. She          had heard my remark, "Actors are cattle," so when I arrived          on the set, I found a little corral with some cattle in it. She had arranged          that.        Suspicion (1941)        The correct ending of Suspicion -- which was never shot but which I wanted          to do--was that Fontaine writes a letter to her mother, saying that she          is in love with her husband, but she feels he is a murderer. She doesn&amp;#39;t          want to live anymore and she&amp;#39;s willing to die by his hand. But she thinks          society should be protected from him. He comes up with the fatal glass          of milk, gives it to her. Before she drinks, she says, "Will you          mail this letter to mother for me?" And she drinks the milk and dies.          Fade out. Fade in on one short shot: a cheerful, whistling Cary Grant          coming to the mail box and popping the letter in. Finish. But, you see,          Cary Grant couldn&amp;#39;t be a murderer. It was the same problem as I had with          Novello in The Lodger.        Saboteur (1942)        Saboteur was not successful to my mind because I don&amp;#39;t think Cummings          was right. He was too undramatic, he had what I call a "comedy face,"          and half the time you don&amp;#39;t believe the situations. Think of the difference          between that and Robert Donat in The Thirty-Nine Steps. From an audience          point-of-view, I should have reversed the positions of Cummings and Lloyd          on the Statue of Liberty at the end of the picture. The audience would          have been much more anxious if the hero had been in danger, not the villain.          The picture was overloaded with too many ideas. But what annoyed me most          was the casting of the heavy, Otto Kruger. I had a concept: fascists in          those days were middle-westerners, America-Firsters, and I wanted Harry          Carey, western style, a rich rancher. His wife came to see me and she          said, I couldn&amp;#39;t let my husband play a role like that, when all the youth          in America look up to him. So I couldn&amp;#39;t get him, and Kruger was all wrong.          I also tried to get Barbara Stanwyck, but I had to take Priscilla Lane.          I wasted Barbara Stanwyck and Gary Cooper to lift the picture up.          Shadow of a Doubt (1943) Teresa Wright makes a lot out of the fact that          she and her uncle are similar, and yet she is the most eager to suspect          him of the worst.          Only because her attention is drawn to him more than anybody else. You          look at your adoring uncle long enough, and you find something.        Isn&amp;#39;t Cotten rather sympathetic in the film?        There is sympathy for any murderer, or let&amp;#39;s call it compassion. You          hear of murderers who feel they&amp;#39;ve been sent to destroy. Maybe those women          deserved what they got, but it wasn&amp;#39;t his job to do it. There is a moral          judgment--he is destroyed at the end, isn&amp;#39;t he? The girl unwittingly kills          her own uncle. She is the instrument by which he falls in front of the          train. It comes under the heading that all villains are not black and          all heroes are not white. There are grays everywhere.        Does Cotten really love Wright in the film?        I don&amp;#39;t really think so. Not as much as she loves him. And yet she destroys          him. She has to. Wasn&amp;#39;t it Oscar Wilde who said, "You destroy the          thing you love?" Shadow of a Doubt was a most satisfying picture          for me--one of my favorite films--because for once there was time to get          characters into it. It was the blending of character and thriller at the          same time. That&amp;#39;s very hard to do.        Lifeboat (1944)        In this film I wanted to prove that most pictures are shot in close-ups.          It was really a film without scenery. I made it for the challenge. And          it was topical. There were screams because I appeared to make the Nazi          stronger than anyone else. I had two reasons for that: a) the Nazi was          a submarine commander and knew something about navigation, more than the          others did; b) in the analogy of war, he was the victor at the time. The          others, representing the democracies, hadn&amp;#39;t gotten together yet, hadn&amp;#39;t          summoned their strength. Even John Hodiak, playing the communist, wasn&amp;#39;t          sure. It took a coalition of them to finally gang up on that guy and get          rid of him. Did you know that Tallulah really hated Slezak? She really          used the boot on him. She used to sit across from him in the boat and          say, "You God-damn Nazi!" Poor fellow, he really wasn&amp;#39;t, you          know.        Why didn&amp;#39;t the Negro join in when they attacked the Nazi?        I wouldn&amp;#39;t let him. He was rather a religious figure, he did recite the          23rd Psalm, and I felt he was a gentle character and had feeling. It would          have been out of character.        Spellbound (1945)        What did the doors opening at their first embrace signify?        I asked Ben Hecht to find out for me the psychiatric symbol for the beginning          of love between two people, and he came back with the doors.        Why did you go to Dali for the dream sequence?        Selznick thought I only wanted Dali for publicity purposes. That wasn&amp;#39;t          true. I felt that if I was going to have dream sequences, they should          be vivid. I didn&amp;#39;t think that we should resort to the old-fashioned blurry          effect that they got by putting vaseline around the lens. What I really          wanted to do, and they wouldn&amp;#39;t do it because of the expense, was to have          the dream sequences shot on the back lot in bright sunshine, so they would          have to stop-down the camera to such a degree that the pictures would          have been needle-sharp, as contrast to the rest of the picture, which          was slightly diffused because that was the cameraman&amp;#39;s particular style.          But I used Dali for his draftmanship and the infinity which he introduces          into his subject.        Notorious (1946)        This is the old love-and-duty theme. Grant&amp;#39;s job is to get Bergman in          bed with Rains, the other man. It&amp;#39;s ironic, really, and Grant is a bitter          man all the way through. Rains was sympathetic because he&amp;#39;s the victim          of a confidence trick and we always have sympathy for the victim, no matter          how foolish he is. Also I would think Rains&amp;#39; love for Bergman was very          much stronger than Grant&amp;#39;s.        How did that long tracking shot for the famous balcony love scene develop?               I felt that they should remain in an embrace and that we should join          them. So when they go to the phone the camera follows them, never leaving          the close-up all the way, right up to the phone and over to the door--continuous          shot. The whole idea was based on not breaking the romantic moment. I          didn&amp;#39;t want to cut it up. It was an emotional thing, the movement of that          camera. The idea came to me many, many years ago when I was on a train          going from Boulogne to Paris. It was a Sunday afternoon and the train          goes slowly through a town called Ataples, which is just outside Boulogne.          There&amp;#39;s a big, old, red brick factory, and ta one end of the factory was          this huge, high brick wall. There were two little figures at the bottom          of the wall--very small--a boy and a girl. The boy was urinating against          the wall, but the girl had a hold of his arm and she never let go. She&amp;#39;d          look down at what he was doing, and then look around at the scenery, and          down again to see how far he&amp;#39;d got on. And that was what gave me the idea.          She couldn&amp;#39;t let go. Romance must not be interrupted, even by urinating.               How did the idea develop for that remarkable crane-shot, down to the          key?        That&amp;#39;s again using the visual. That&amp;#39;s a statement which says, "In          this crowded atmosphere there is a very vital item, the crux of everything."          So taking that sentence as it is, in this crowded atmosphere, you go to          the widest possible expression of that phrase and then you come down to          the most vital thing--a tiny little key in the hand. That&amp;#39;s merely the          visual expression to say, "Everybody is having a good time, but they          don&amp;#39;t realize there is a big drama going on here." And that big drama          epitomizes itself in a little key.        The Paradine Case (1947)        For me, the casting screwed up all the values and the whole basic situation.          Any beautiful woman is a compromise for evil--sometimes the externals          of evil can obscure the real woman. Valli&amp;#39;s character was pretty low in          the original story. She was fine, but they had Louis Jourdan under contract          and he could never have played that part. His real character, which reflected          the woman&amp;#39;s immorality, should have been a manure-smelling stable-hand          and should have been played by Robert Newton or somebody like that. Peck          wasn&amp;#39;t right for the lead. It should have been Ronald Colman or Olivier,          someone more dignified and less earthy. The point is, Peck degrades himself          by falling for a woman who can take any man--even a groom. Obviously the          woman must have been a nymphomaniac. But for Peck to give up an elegant          wife for this woman, he must be obsessed by her.        Rope (1948)        Do you consider Rope one of your most experimental films, technically?               Only because I abandoned pure cinema in an effort to make the stage play          mobile. With a flowing camera, the film played in its own time, there          were no dissolves, no time-lapses in it, it was continuous action. And          I thought it also ought to have a continuous flow of camera narrative          as well. I think it was an error technically because one abandoned pure          cinema for it. But when you take a stage play in one room, it is very          hard to cut it up.        Your approach to Rope was not comic as it was for Psycho?        No, the nature of the crime was too horrible. There was no humor in that          respect.        Under Capricorn (1949)       This picture was not a success, but why do you think many French critics          consider it one of your finest films?        Because they looked at it for what it was and not what people expected.          Here you get a Hitchcock picture which is a costume-picture and not approached          from a thriller or excitement point of view until towards the end. I remember          some remark by a Hollywood critic who said, "We had to wait 105 minutes          for the first thrill." They went in expecting something and didn&amp;#39;t          get it. That was the main fault with that picture. Also the casting was          wrong. This was the lady-and-the groom story again. Bergman fell in love          with the groom, Joe Cotten, and he got shipped to Australia as a convict          and she followed him. It was her getting degraded for love--that was the          main thing here. Cotten wasn&amp;#39;t right. I wanted Burt Lancaster. It was          compromise casting again. Also I used a fluid camera--mistakenly perhaps          because it intensified the fact that it wasn&amp;#39;t a thriller--it flowed too          easily.        Stage Fright (1950)        Why do you dislike this picture?        Again, the lack of reality in one of the characters--the Jane Wyman part--should          have been a pimply-faced girl. She just refused to be that and I was stuck          with her. The other fault was that the menace wasn&amp;#39;t strong enough. The          menace came from Dietrich and her partner--they were the villains--and          they had no menace in them because they were afraid. So what were you          doing in that story? You were concealing the menace entirely. The values          got confused. Also a lot of people complained because the opening flashback          was a lie. Now why can&amp;#39;t a man tell a lie? I don&amp;#39;t know. But people complained,          "AH, you cheated us on the flashback." Can&amp;#39;t he be a liar? You          see, if you break tradition, you are in trouble every time.        Strangers on a Train (1951)        Granger was miscast. Warners insisted I take him. It should have been          a much stronger man. The stronger the man, the more frustrated he would          have been in the situation.          Isn&amp;#39;t the irony of the picture that Walker actual does free Granger from          his impossible wife?        Sure. Granger didn&amp;#39;t pay back, did he? He didn&amp;#39;t kill Walker&amp;#39;s father.          He ratted on Walker.        How did you achieve that stunning carousel sequence?        This was a most complicated sequence. For rear-projection shooting there          is a screen and behind it is an enormous projector throwing an image on          the screen. On the studio floor is a narrow white line right in line with          the projector lens and the lens of the camera must be right on that white          line. That camera is not photographing the screen and what&amp;#39;s on it, it          is photographing light in certain colors, therefore the camera lens must          be level and in line with the projector lens. Many of the shots on the          merry-go-round were low camera set-ups. Therefore you can imagine the          problem. The projector had to be put up on a high platform, pointing down,          and the screen had to be exactly at right angles to the level-line from          the lens. All the shots took nearly half a day to line up, for each set-up.          We had to change the projector every time the angle changed. When the          carousel broke, that was a miniature blown up on a big screen and we put          live people in front of the screen. But I did the most dangerous thing          I&amp;#39;ve ever done in that picture and I&amp;#39;ll never, never do it again. When          the little man crawled underneath the moving carousel--that was actual.          If he had raised his head an inch, two inches--finish. My hands sweat          now when I think of it--what a dreadful chance I took. I knew what I was          doing then, you know, but I thought, "Oh, well, maybe he won&amp;#39;t raise          his head too high.        Doesn&amp;#39;t Granger chase after Walker mainly to expiate his own feelings          of guilt about the murder of his wife?        Sure he does. He felt like killing her himself.        I Confess (1953)        There were two things wrong with I Confess. I didn&amp;#39;t enjoy working with          Clift because he was too obscure, and Anne Baxter was completely miscast.          I imported a girl from Sweden--Anita Bjork, who played the lead in Miss          Julie--I wanted an unknown. When you go to Quebec and a film star pops          up, it&amp;#39;s ridiculous. But Bjork arrived with an illegitimate child and          a lover. And the thing came out and Warners said, "We can&amp;#39;t use her."          We had to ship her back. By this time I was a week away from Quebec. I          got messages that we should take Baxter, that they didn&amp;#39;t have anybody          else. It was all wrong. I didn&amp;#39;t believe her as a member of Quebec society.          I wanted a foreign girl with an accent.        How did you achieve the shimmering effect of the first flashback?        That was done in slow motion. I slowed it up tremendously.        Do you think Clift had already decided to become a priest before his          return from the war?        Yes. I think he&amp;#39;d already decided.        Do you think they slept together during the storm?        I hope so. Far be it from me as a Jesuit to encourage that kind of behavior.               Do you think Clift was tempted with the idea of becoming a martyr?        Yes, he was tempted by the idea. Of course, in the end, he was a martyr.               Don&amp;#39;t Clift and Baxter feel a strong sense of guilt because in a way          they&amp;#39;re glad that the man was murdered and therefore out of their hair?               Yes, but he isn&amp;#39;t really, because of their conscience. You know, killing          is one thing, but it is not out of their conscience, not out of their          mind.        Dial M for Murder (1954)       What was your main reason for making Dial M for Murder?        I was running for cover. When your batteries run dry, when you are out          creatively, and you have to go on, that&amp;#39;s what I call running for cover.          Take a comparatively successful play that requires no great creative effort          on your part and make it. Keep your hand in, that&amp;#39;s all. When you&amp;#39;re in          this business, don&amp;#39;t make anything unless it looks like it&amp;#39;s going to          promise something. If you have to make a film--as I was under contract          to Warners at the time--play safe. Go get a play and make an average movie--photographs          of people talking. It&amp;#39;s ordinary craftsmanship. But there is another interesting          facet about the photographed stage play. Some people make the mistake,          I think, of trying to open the play up for the screen. That&amp;#39;s a big mistake.          I think the whole conception of a play is confinement within the proscenium--and          that&amp;#39;s what the author uses dramatically. Now you are undoing a newly-knitted          sweater. Pull it apart and you have nothing. In Dial M, I made sure that          I would go outside as little as possible. I had a real tile floor laid          down, the crack under the door, the shadow of the feet, all part of the          stage play and I made sure I didn&amp;#39;t lose that. Otherwise, if you go outside,          what do you end up with? A taxi arrives outside, the door opens, and they          get out and go in.        Rear Window (1954)        The critic on The Observer called this a horrible film because a man          was looking out a window at other people. I thought that was a crappy          remark. Everyone does it, it&amp;#39;s a known fact, and provided it is not made          too vulgar, it is just curiosity. People don&amp;#39;t care who you are, they          can&amp;#39;t resist looking.        Isn&amp;#39;t there something sympathetic about the murderer in his confrontation          scene with Stewart?        Well, the poor man. It&amp;#39;s the climax of peeping tomism, isn&amp;#39;t it? "Why          did you do it?" he says. "If you hadn&amp;#39;t been a peeping tom,          I would have gotten away with it." Stewart can&amp;#39;t answer. What can          he say? He&amp;#39;s caught. Caught with his plaster down.        Kelly is the dominant partner in the relationship, isn&amp;#39;t she?        Yes, rather. She&amp;#39;s a typical, active New Yorker. There are many of those          women in New York, more like men, some of them.        To Catch a Thief (1955)        Kelly is an American in the film, but she wasn&amp;#39;t frigid like the typical          American woman who is a tease--dresses for sex and doesn&amp;#39;t give it. A          man puts his hand on her and she runs screaming for mother immediately.          The English women are the opposite of that. They are the best. They look          like nothing--they look like school mistresses. Kelly is the English woman          in that film. Outwardly, cold as ice, but, boy, underneath! And that was          epitomized by the kiss in the corridor. Of course, the fireworks scene          is pure orgasm. Just as the tunnel at the end of North by Northwest is          a sexual symbol.        Wouldn&amp;#39;t Kelly prefer Grant were really guilty of the robberies?        Oh, of course, Let&amp;#39;s put a mild word to it--it&amp;#39;s more piquant that way,          more in the nature of her fetish.        [After listing some of the television shows directed by Hitchcock, Bogdanovich          notes that the introductions to the shows were written by James Allardice,          prompting the following comment.]        When he came to see me and asked what kind of introductions did I want          him to write for me, I said, "Well, I won&amp;#39;t tell you, but I&amp;#39;ll run          a film that should give you an idea of the kind of thing I want."          So I ran The Trouble With Harry for him.        The Trouble With Harry (1956)        I think The Trouble With Harry needed special handling. It wouldn&amp;#39;t have          failed commercially if the people in the distribution organization had          known what to do with the picture; but it got into the assembly line and          that was that. It was shot in autumn for the contrapunctal use of beauty          against the sordidness and muddiness of death. Harry is very personal          to me because it involves my own sense of humor about the macabre. It          has in it my favorite line of all the pictures I ever made: when Teddy          Gwenn is pulling the body by the legs like a wheelbarrow, and the spinster          comes up and says, "What seems to be the trouble, Captain?&amp;#39;"               The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956)        Of all your pictures, why did you choose to remake The Man Who Knew          Too Much?        I felt that for an American audience, it contained sentimental elements          that would be more interesting than some of the others. The second Man          Who Knew Too Much was more carefully worked out than the first one. The          first one was, shall we say, a spontaneous creation, without examination.               Doris Day, like many of your characters, complains about a lack of excitement          in her life, and then is thrown into a terrible dilemma. Is this your          comment on the virtues of the simple life?        I think there&amp;#39;s a lot to be said for that. Let&amp;#39;s look at me psychologically.          I don&amp;#39;t feel any of the things that my characters feel, I have no such          desires. My God, I&amp;#39;ve been happily married to the same woman for thirty-six          years. I have no identification with my characters. If I did, I couldn&amp;#39;t          picture them as objectively as I do.        The Wrong Man (1957)        I enjoyed making this film because, after all, this is my greatest fear--fear          of the police. And I had all of that going for me. I&amp;#39;ve often thought          of a scene of a man being taken to jail in England in what they used to          call the Black Maria, and able to see out the grill window at the back          all the things people were doing, going to restaurants, going home, lining          up to go into a theatre. And this man is on the way to jail for probably          ten, fifteen years, getting a kind of last glimpse of every-day life.          In truth, perhaps The Wrong Man should have been done as a documentary,          without any cinematic consciousness, by a newsreel cameraman with a camera          in one position all the time. I felt the front part of the picture very          much, and I liked the climax when the right man is discovered, while the          wrong man is praying to the picture on the wall. I liked the ironic coincidence.          I was disturbed by the fact that, due to the documentary line, we had          to follow the wife&amp;#39;s story, and his story kind of collapsed.        Vertigo (1958)        Isn&amp;#39;t Vertigo about the conflict between illusion and reality?        Oh, yes. I was interested by the basic situation, because it contained          so much analogy to sex. Stewart&amp;#39;s efforts to recreate the woman were,          cinematically, exactly the same as though he were trying to undress the          woman, instead of dressing her. He couldn&amp;#39;t get the other woman out of          his mind. Now, in the book, they didn&amp;#39;t reveal that she was one and the          same woman until the end of the story. I shocked Sam Taylor, who worked          on it, when I said, "When Stewart comes upon this brunette girl,          Sam, this is the time for us to blow the whole truth." He said, "Good          God, why?" I told him, if we don&amp;#39;t what is the rest of our story          until we do reveal the truth. A man has picked up a brunette and sees          in her the possibilities of resemblance to the other woman.        Let&amp;#39;s put ourselves in the minds of our audience here: "So you&amp;#39;ve          got a brunette and you&amp;#39;re going to change her." What story are we          telling now? A man wants to make a girl over and then, at the very end,          finds out it is the same woman. Maybe he kills her, or whatever. Here          we are, back in our old situation: surprise or suspense. And we come to          our old analogy of the bomb: you and I sit talking and there&amp;#39;s a bomb          in the room. We&amp;#39;re having a very innocuous conversation about nothing.          Boring. Doesn&amp;#39;t mean a thing. Suddenly, boom! the bomb goes off and they&amp;#39;re          shocked--for fifteen seconds. Now you change it. Play the same scene,          insert the bomb, show that the bomb is placed there, establish that it&amp;#39;s          going to go off at one o&amp;#39;clock--it&amp;#39;s now a quarter of one, ten of one--show          a clock on the wall, back to the same scene. Now our conversation becomes          very vital, by its sheer nonsense. "Look under the table! You fool!"          Now they&amp;#39;re working for ten minutes, instead of being surprised for fifteen          seconds. Now let&amp;#39;s go back to Vertigo. If we don&amp;#39;t let them know, they          will speculate. They will get a very blurred impression as to what is          going on.        "Now," I said, "one of the fatal things, Sam, in all          suspense is to have a mind that is confused. Otherwise the audience won&amp;#39;t          emote. Clarify, clarify, clarify. Don&amp;#39;t let them say, "I don&amp;#39;t know          which woman that is, who&amp;#39;s that?" So," I said, "we are          going to take the bull by the horns and put it all in a flashback, bang!          right then and there--show it&amp;#39;s one and the same woman." Then, when          Stewart comes to the hotel for her, the audience says, "Little does          he know." Second, the girl&amp;#39;s resistance in the earlier part of the          film had no reason. Now you have the reason--she doesn&amp;#39;t want to be uncovered.          That&amp;#39;s why she doesn&amp;#39;t want the gray suit, doesn&amp;#39;t want to go blond--because          the moment she does, she&amp;#39;s in for it. So now you&amp;#39;ve got extra values working          for you. We play on his fetish in creating this dead woman, and he is          so obsessed with the pride he has in making her over. Even when she comes          back from the hairdresser, the blond hair is still down. And he says,          "Put your hair up." She says, "No." He says, "Please."          Now what is he saying to her? "You&amp;#39;ve taken everything off except          your bra and your panties, please take those off." She says, "All          right." She goes into the bathroom. He&amp;#39;s only waiting to see a nude          woman come out, ready to get in bed with. That&amp;#39;s what the scene is. Now,          as soon as she comes out, he sees a ghost--he sees the other woman.        That&amp;#39;s why I played her in a green light. You see, in the earlier part--which          is purely in the mind of Stewart--when he is watching this girl go from          place to place, when she is really faking, behaving like a woman of the          past--in order to get this slightly subtle quality of a dreamlike nature          although it was bright sunshine, I shot the film through a fog filter          and I got a green effect--fog over bright sunshine. That&amp;#39;s why, when she          comes out of the bathroom, I played her in the green light. That&amp;#39;s why          I chose the Empire Hotel in Post Street--because it had a green neon sign          outside the window. I wanted to establish that green light flashing all          the time. So that when we need it, we&amp;#39;ve got it. I slid the soft, fog          lens over, and as she came forward, for a moment he got the image of the          past. Then as her face came up to him, I slipped the soft effect away,          and he came back to reality. She had come back from the dead, and he felt          it, and knew it, and probably was even bewildered--until he saw the locket--and          then he knew he had been tricked.        North By Northwest (1959)         It&amp;#39;s the American Thirty-Nine Steps--I&amp;#39;d thought about it for a long          time. It&amp;#39;s a fantasy. The whole film is epitomized in the title--there          is no such thing as north-by-northwest on the compass. The area in which          we get near to the free abstract in movie making is the free use of fantasy,          which is what I deal in. I don&amp;#39;t deal in that slice-of-life stuff. Only          one sequence was missing from that picture: the assembly-line in Detroit.          Never got that in. I wanted to have a dialogue scene--two men talking,          walking along the assembly line--and behind them is a car being assembled.          Starts with a bare frame and continues to be built. And the men talk on--their          conversation should have a little bit to do with automobiles--and finally          the car is loaded up with gas and one of the men drives it off. Well,          I wanted to see the car finally come off the line, and they open the door          and look in, and a dead body falls out. Also I wanted to get in a shot          of Cary Grant hiding in Lincoln&amp;#39;s nose and having a sneezing fit!        How did you get the idea for the plane sequence?        This comes under the heading of avoiding the clich&amp;eacute;s. The clich&amp;eacute;          of that kind of scene is in The Third Man. Under a street lamp, in a medieval          setting, black cat slithers by, somebody opens a blind and looks out,          eerie music. Now, what is the antithesis of this? Nothing! No music, bright          sunshine, and nothing. Now put a man in a business suit in this setting.               Mason really doesn&amp;#39;t act like a villain, does he?        No, I didn&amp;#39;t make him do a dastardly thing in the whole picture. I split          him into three in an effort to keep him from behaving like a heavy: there&amp;#39;s          Mason himself, who only had to nod. I gave him a rather saturnine looking          secretary--there was the face of Mason. And the third man--Adam Williams--he          was the brutality.        Psycho (1960)       Do you really consider Psycho an essentially humorous film?        Well, when I say humorous, I mean it&amp;#39;s my humor that enabled me to tackle          the outrageousness of it. If I were telling the same story seriously,          I&amp;#39;d tell a case history and never treat it in terms of mystery or suspense.          It would simply be what the psychiatrist relates at the end.        In Psycho, aren&amp;#39;t you really directing the audience more than the actors?               Yes. It&amp;#39;s using pure cinema to cause the audience to emote. It was done          by visual means designed in every possible way for an audience. That&amp;#39;s          why the murder in the bathroom is so violent, because as the film proceeds,          there is less violence. But that scene was in the minds of the audience          so strongly that one didn&amp;#39;t have to do much more. I think that in Psycho          there is no identification with the characters. There wasn&amp;#39;t time to develop          them and there was no need to. The audience goes through the paroxysms          in the film without consciousness of Vera Miles or John Gavin. They&amp;#39;re          just characters that lead the audience through the final part of the picture.          I wasn&amp;#39;t interested in them. And you know, nobody ever mentions that they          were ever in the film. It&amp;#39;s rather sad for them. Can you imagine how the          people in the front office would have cast the picture? They&amp;#39;d say, "Well,          she gets killed off in the first reel, let&amp;#39;s put anybody in there, and          give Janet Leigh the second part with the love interest." Of course,          this is idiot thinking. The whole point is to kill off the star, that          is what makes it so unexpected. This was the basic reason for making the          audience see it from the beginning. If they came in half-way through the          picture, they would say, "When&amp;#39;s Janet Leigh coming on?" You          can&amp;#39;t have blurred thinking in suspense.        Didn&amp;#39;t you experiment with TV techniques in Psycho?        It was made by a TV unit, but that was only a matter of economics really,          speed and economy of shooting, achieved by minimizing the number of set-ups.          We slowed up whenever it became really cinematic. The bathroom scene took          seven days, whereas the psychiatrist&amp;#39;s scene at the end was all done in          one day.        How much did Saul Bass contribute to the picture?        Only the main title, the credits. He asked me if he could do one sequence          in Psycho and I said yes. So he did a sequence on paper, little drawings          of the detective going up the stairs before he is killed. One day on the          picture, I was sick, and I called up and told the assistant to make those          shots as Bass had planned them. There were about twenty of them and when          I saw them, I said, "You can&amp;#39;t use any of them." The sequence          told his way would indicate that the detective is a menace. He&amp;#39;s not.          He is an innocent man, therefore the shot should be innocent. We don&amp;#39;t          have to work the audience up. We&amp;#39;ve done that. The mere fact that he&amp;#39;s          going up the stairs is enough. Keep it simple. No complications. One shot.               Did you intend any moral implications in the picture?        I don&amp;#39;t think you can take any moral stand because you&amp;#39;re dealing with          distorted people. You can&amp;#39;t apply morality to insane persons.        The Birds (1963)        In The Birds, as in a lot of your films, you take ordinary, basically          average people, and put them into extraordinary situations.        This is for audience identification. In The Birds, there is a very light          beginning, girl meets boy, and then she walks right into a complicated          situation: the boy&amp;#39;s mother&amp;#39;s unnatural relationship to him, and the school          teacher who&amp;#39;s carrying a torch for him. This girl, who is just a fly-by-night,          a playgirl, comes up against reality for the first time. That transmits          itself into a catastrophe, and the girl&amp;#39;s transition takes place.        What do you feel the picture is really about?        Generally speaking, that people are too complacent. The girl represents          complacency. But I believe that when people rise to the occasion, when          catastrophe comes, they are all right. The mother panics because she starts          off being so strong, but she is not strong, it is a facade: she has been          substituting her son for her husband. She is the weak character in the          story. But the girl shows that people can be strong when they face up          to the situation. It&amp;#39;s like the people in London, during the wartime air          raids.        Isn&amp;#39;t the film also a vision of Judgment Day?        Yes, it is. And we don&amp;#39;t know how they are going to come out. Certainly,          the mother was scared to the end. The girl was brave enough to face the          birds and try to beat them off. But as a group they were the victims of          Judgment Day. For the ordinary public--they got away to San Francisco--but          I toyed with the idea of lap-dissolving on them in the car, looking, and          there is the Golden Gate Bridge--covered in birds.        How did you come to choose The Birds as a vehicle?        I felt that after Psycho people would expect something to top it before          going on to something else. I&amp;#39;ve noticed that in other "catastrophe"          films, such as On the Beach, the personal stories were never really part          of it at all. I remember a film called The Pride and the Passion, which          was about pulling that huge gun. Well, they stopped every night to have          a bit of personal story; then the next morning they went back to the gun          again. It was terribly devised, no integration at all. They don&amp;#39;t realize          that people are still living, emoting, while pushing the gun. That was          one of the things I made up my mind to avoid in The Birds. I deliberately          started off with light, ordinary, inconsequential behavior. I even compromised          by the nature of the opening titles, making them ominous. I wanted to          use very light, simple Chinese paintings of birds--delicate little drawings.          I didn&amp;#39;t because I felt people might get impatient, having seen the advertising          campaign and ask, "When are the birds coming on?" That&amp;#39;s why          I give them a sock now and again--the bird against the door, bang! birds          up on the wires, the bird that bites the girl. But I felt it was vital          to get to know the people, the mother especially, she&amp;#39;s the key figure.          And we must take our time, get absorbed in the atmosphere before the birds          come. Once more, it is fantasy. But everything had to be as real as possible,          the surroundings, the settings, the people. And the birds themselves had          to be domestic birds--no vultures, no wild birds of any kind.        Aren&amp;#39;t there a lot of trick-shots in the picture?        Had to be. There are 371 trick-shots in it, and the most difficult one          was the last shot. That took 32 different pieces of film. We had a limited          number of gulls allowed. Therefore, the foreground was shot in three panel          sections, left to right, up to the birds on the rail. The few gulls we          had were in the first third, we re-shot it for the middle third, and for          the right-hand third, using the same gulls. Just above the heads of the          crows was a long, slender middle section where the gulls were spread again.          Then the car going down the driveway, with the birds on each side of it,          was another piece of film. The sky was another piece of film, as was the          barn on the left, and so on. These were all put together in the lab.        How do you feel, on the whole, about using trick-effects and process-shots?               It is a means to an end. You must arrive at it somehow. A very important          thing about The Birds: I never raised the point, "Can it be done?"          Because then it would never have been made. Any technician would have          said "impossible." So I didn&amp;#39;t even bring that up, I simply          said, "Here&amp;#39;s what we&amp;#39;re going to do." No one will ever realize          that had the pioneering technical work on it not been attempted, the film          would not have been made. Cleopatra or Ben Hur is nothing to this--just          quantities of people and scenery. Just what the bird trainer has done          is phenomenal. Look at the way the crows chase the children down the street,          dive all around them, land on their backs. It took days to organize those          birds on the hood of the car and to make them fly away at the right time.          The Birds could easily have cost $5,000,000 if Bob Burks and the rest          of us hadn&amp;#39;t been technicians ourselves.        Marnie [in preparation at the time of the interview]               What will Marnie be like?        It is the story of a girl who doesn&amp;#39;t know who she is. She is a psychotic,          a compulsive thief, and afraid of sex, and in the end she finds out why.          In terms of style, it will be a bit like Notorious.        Marnie is a thief, but evidently we are in sympathy with her. How is          this achieved?          This comes under the heading of rooting for the evildoer to succeed--because          in all of us we have that eleventh commandment nagging us: "Thou          shalt not be found out." The average person looking at someone doing          evil or wrong wants the person to get away with it. There&amp;#39;s something          that makes them say, "Look out! Look out! They&amp;#39;re coming!" I          think it&amp;#39;s the most amazing instinct-doesn&amp;#39;t matter how evil it is, you          know. Can&amp;#39;t go as far as murder, but anything up to that point. The audience          can&amp;#39;t bear the suspense of the person being discovered. "Hurry up!          Quick! You&amp;#39;re going to be caught!"        [Bogdanovich concludes by listing several "unrealized projects,"          Frances Iles&amp;#39; 1931 novel Malice Afterthought, David Duncan&amp;#39;s story The          Bramble Bush, which Hitchcock worked on during 1953-54, Life of a City,          and Ernest Raymond&amp;#39;s We, the Accused, based on the Crippen case. Hitchcock          commented on the last two projects.]        Life of a City        This is something I&amp;#39;ve wanted to do since 1928. I want to do it in terms          of what lies behind the face of a city--what makes it tick--in other words,          backstage of a city. But it&amp;#39;s so enormous that it is practically impossible          to get the story right. Two or three people had a go at it for me but          all failed. It must be done in terms of personalities and people, and          with my techniques, everything would have to be used dramatically.        We, the Accused        This was the story of a man who murdered his wife, ran off with his secretary,          and was arrested on board ship, in about 1910. It is almost the definitive          case of murder, trial and execution. It would be a very long picture,          with detailed characterization, but I&amp;#39;m afraid it&amp;#39;s terribly downbeat--and          the man is middle-aged--so it wouldn&amp;#39;t be very commercial. And you would          have to spend some money on it.</spout:body></item>
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      <title>Spout Post: Re: Top 5 Movies About Making Movies</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/Re_Top_5_Movies_About_Making_Movies/190/18512/1/ShowPost.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/u36347eh5qb.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/88747/default.aspx'>Ovation</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/groups/Top_5/190/discussions.aspx'>Top 5</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 8/21/2007 10:52:29 PM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> A few not mentioned here:   8 1/2 (edit: already discussed)  The Stunt Man  Swimming with Sharks  Boogie Nights  The Blair Witch Project  Cecil B. Demented  This Is Spinal Tap  RKO 281   While not a "masterpiece" I thought "A Nightmare on Elm Street Part 7: Wes Craven&#39;s New Nightmare" was interesting in the way Freddy went after Wes Craven and the creators and actors from the previous films. PSHello  PSS (edit)I forgot to list the one film that made me respond to this post.  The film Roger Ebert called "one of the best movies I&#39;ve seen about the making of a movie": Baadasssss!<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 02:52:29 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>Ovation</spout:postby><spout:postto>Top 5</spout:postto><spout:postdate>8/21/2007 10:52:29 PM</spout:postdate><spout:body>A few not mentioned here:   8 1/2 (edit: already discussed)  The Stunt Man  Swimming with Sharks  Boogie Nights  The Blair Witch Project  Cecil B. Demented  This Is Spinal Tap  RKO 281   While not a "masterpiece" I thought "A Nightmare on Elm Street Part 7: Wes Craven&amp;#39;s New Nightmare" was interesting in the way Freddy went after Wes Craven and the creators and actors from the previous films. PSHello  PSS (edit)I forgot to list the one film that made me respond to this post.  The film Roger Ebert called "one of the best movies I&amp;#39;ve seen about the making of a movie": Baadasssss!</spout:body></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:The_MOW - Mickey Micklon</title>
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      <title>Spout Member:butterknife</title>
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<strong>Member since:</strong> 4/2/2008<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 4/2/2008<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>butterknife</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>1</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Wed, 02 Apr 2008 03:18:37 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:rnt2630</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/95208/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/95208.gif?TimeStamp='6/27/2008 8:28:28 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> rnt2630<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/13/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/13/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>rnt2630</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Thu, 13 Sep 2007 18:16:00 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:dsalaski</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/94482/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/94482.gif?TimeStamp='6/27/2008 8:28:28 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> dsalaski<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/10/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/10/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>dsalaski</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Mon, 10 Sep 2007 16:47:53 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:jennkp</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/94443/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/94443.gif?TimeStamp='6/27/2008 8:28:28 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> jennkp<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/10/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/10/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>jennkp</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Mon, 10 Sep 2007 13:45:31 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:Don0262</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/94195/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/94195.gif?TimeStamp='8/6/2007 8:30:22 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> Don0262<br/>
<strong>Films listed:</strong> 2<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/9/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/9/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>Don0262</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>2</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Sun, 09 Sep 2007 15:33:14 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:martinluthar</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/93901/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/93901.gif?TimeStamp='2/19/2008 10:18:16 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> martinluthar<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/8/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/8/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>martinluthar</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Sat, 08 Sep 2007 15:58:58 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:clwoolfe</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/93885/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/93885.gif?TimeStamp='6/27/2008 8:28:28 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> clwoolfe<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/8/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/8/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>clwoolfe</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Sat, 08 Sep 2007 15:09:50 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:XtreamDenny</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/93661/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/93661.gif?TimeStamp='2/19/2008 10:18:16 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> XtreamDenny<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/7/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/7/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>XtreamDenny</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Fri, 07 Sep 2007 18:49:41 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:bofo</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/93627/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/93627.gif?TimeStamp='2/19/2008 10:18:16 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> bofo<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/7/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/7/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>bofo</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Fri, 07 Sep 2007 16:57:17 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:seanjoneswrexham</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/93570/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/93570.gif?TimeStamp='6/27/2008 8:28:28 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> seanjoneswrexham<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/7/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/7/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>seanjoneswrexham</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Fri, 07 Sep 2007 14:31:57 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:nny921</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/92277/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/92277.jpg?TimeStamp='2/6/2008 1:09:23 PM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> nny921<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Number of groups:</strong> 2<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/3/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 11/20/2008<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>nny921</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 14:27:22 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:mr_lol</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/92275/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/92275.gif?TimeStamp='8/6/2007 8:30:22 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> mr_lol<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/3/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/3/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>mr_lol</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 14:25:57 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:fire1311</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/91742/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/91742.gif?TimeStamp='6/27/2008 8:28:28 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> fire1311<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 9/1/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 9/1/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>fire1311</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Sat, 01 Sep 2007 21:48:24 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Member:Argueta</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/members/91469/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div style='display:block;height:120px;width:400px;font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/Avatars/Members/91469.gif?TimeStamp='6/27/2008 8:28:28 AM'' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Identity:</strong> Argueta<br/>
<strong>Number of lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>Member since:</strong> 8/31/2007<br/>
<strong>Last login:</strong> 8/31/2007<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:alias>Argueta</spout:alias><spout:filmslisted>0</spout:filmslisted><spout:listinglevel>Beginner (&lt;10)</spout:listinglevel><spout:membersince>Fri, 31 Aug 2007 20:52:15 GMT</spout:membersince><spout:type>Member</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:Funny Games</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/Funny_Games/288707/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s288707.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> Funny Games<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 2007<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> Michael Haneke<br/>
<strong>Times Tagged:</strong> 27<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 24<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 14<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion threads:</strong> 8<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 3<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 31 Aug 2009 12:47:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>Funny Games</spout:Title><spout:Year>2007</spout:Year><spout:Director>Michael Haneke</spout:Director><spout:TimesTagged>27</spout:TimesTagged><spout:taglevel>Tag Target (&gt;10)</spout:taglevel><spout:Numberoflists>24</spout:Numberoflists><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>14</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:NumberOfDiscussionThreads>8</spout:NumberOfDiscussionThreads><spout:SpoutRating>3</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s288707.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/Funny_Games/288707/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:The Dark Knight</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Dark_Knight/288704/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s288704.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> The Dark Knight<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 2008<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> Christopher Nolan<br/>
<strong>Times Tagged:</strong> 149<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 98<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 156<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion threads:</strong> 55<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 4<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 23:13:34 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>The Dark Knight</spout:Title><spout:Year>2008</spout:Year><spout:Director>Christopher Nolan</spout:Director><spout:TimesTagged>149</spout:TimesTagged><spout:taglevel>Tag Target (&gt;10)</spout:taglevel><spout:Numberoflists>98</spout:Numberoflists><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>156</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:NumberOfDiscussionThreads>55</spout:NumberOfDiscussionThreads><spout:SpoutRating>4</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s288704.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Dark_Knight/288704/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:H2</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/H2/397884/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s397884.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> H2<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 2009<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> Rob Zombie<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 1<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 08:45:58 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>H2</spout:Title><spout:Year>2009</spout:Year><spout:Director>Rob Zombie</spout:Director><spout:Numberoflists>1</spout:Numberoflists><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>1</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:SpoutRating>1</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s397884.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/H2/397884/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:Eleanor: First Lady of the World</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/Eleanor_First_Lady_of_the_World/10331/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/images/no_image.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> Eleanor: First Lady of the World<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 1982<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> John Erman<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 1<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Aug 2009 02:47:51 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>Eleanor: First Lady of the World</spout:Title><spout:Year>1982</spout:Year><spout:Director>John Erman</spout:Director><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>1</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/images/no_image.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/Eleanor_First_Lady_of_the_World/10331/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:Black Test Car</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/Black_Test_Car/328181/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/u37747stl5z.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> Black Test Car<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 1962<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 2<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 4<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 29 Aug 2009 23:01:54 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>Black Test Car</spout:Title><spout:Year>1962</spout:Year><spout:Numberoflists>2</spout:Numberoflists><spout:SpoutRating>4</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/u37747stl5z.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/Black_Test_Car/328181/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:Dumpster Baby</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/Dumpster_Baby/273527/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t76920jjhow.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> Dumpster Baby<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> James Bickert<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 1<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 29 Aug 2009 15:53:10 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>Dumpster Baby</spout:Title><spout:Director>James Bickert</spout:Director><spout:Numberoflists>1</spout:Numberoflists><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t76920jjhow.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/Dumpster_Baby/273527/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:Rick</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/Rick/235722/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t51978e8qnf.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> Rick<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 2002<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> Curtiss Clayton<br/>
<strong>Times Tagged:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 2<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 29 Aug 2009 14:32:48 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>Rick</spout:Title><spout:Year>2002</spout:Year><spout:Director>Curtiss Clayton</spout:Director><spout:TimesTagged>1</spout:TimesTagged><spout:taglevel>Slightly Tagged (1-5)</spout:taglevel><spout:Numberoflists>1</spout:Numberoflists><spout:SpoutRating>2</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t51978e8qnf.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/Rick/235722/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:Speed Racer</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/Speed_Racer/297765/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s297765.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> Speed Racer<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 2008<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> Andy Wachowski, Larry Wachowski<br/>
<strong>Times Tagged:</strong> 90<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 16<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 41<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion threads:</strong> 16<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 3<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 29 Aug 2009 14:21:45 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>Speed Racer</spout:Title><spout:Year>2008</spout:Year><spout:Director>Andy Wachowski, Larry Wachowski</spout:Director><spout:TimesTagged>90</spout:TimesTagged><spout:taglevel>Tag Target (&gt;10)</spout:taglevel><spout:Numberoflists>16</spout:Numberoflists><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>41</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:NumberOfDiscussionThreads>16</spout:NumberOfDiscussionThreads><spout:SpoutRating>3</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s297765.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/Speed_Racer/297765/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:Speed Racer [Anime Series]</title>
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<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> Speed Racer [Anime Series]<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 1967<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion threads:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 3<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 29 Aug 2009 14:20:43 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>Speed Racer [Anime Series]</spout:Title><spout:Year>1967</spout:Year><spout:Numberoflists>1</spout:Numberoflists><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>1</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:NumberOfDiscussionThreads>1</spout:NumberOfDiscussionThreads><spout:SpoutRating>3</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/images/no_image.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/Speed_Racer_Anime_Series/32330/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:The Raven</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Raven/317289/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/u08974fjkcg.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> The Raven<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 2007<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> Ulli Lommel<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 2<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 1<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 29 Aug 2009 04:13:53 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>The Raven</spout:Title><spout:Year>2007</spout:Year><spout:Director>Ulli Lommel</spout:Director><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>2</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:SpoutRating>1</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/u08974fjkcg.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Raven/317289/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:The Ballad of the Sad Cafe</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Ballad_of_the_Sad_Cafe/2239/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t54643em1b1.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> The Ballad of the Sad Cafe<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 1991<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> Simon Callow<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 2<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 2<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 28 Aug 2009 19:25:24 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>The Ballad of the Sad Cafe</spout:Title><spout:Year>1991</spout:Year><spout:Director>Simon Callow</spout:Director><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>2</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:SpoutRating>2</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t54643em1b1.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Ballad_of_the_Sad_Cafe/2239/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:New York, New York</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/New_York_New_York/24524/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/u47828gvtpe.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> New York, New York<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 1977<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> Martin Scorsese<br/>
<strong>Times Tagged:</strong> 23<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 12<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 57<br/>
<strong>Number of discussion threads:</strong> 2<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 2<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 28 Aug 2009 19:22:40 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>New York, New York</spout:Title><spout:Year>1977</spout:Year><spout:Director>Martin Scorsese</spout:Director><spout:TimesTagged>23</spout:TimesTagged><spout:taglevel>Tag Target (&gt;10)</spout:taglevel><spout:Numberoflists>12</spout:Numberoflists><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>57</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:NumberOfDiscussionThreads>2</spout:NumberOfDiscussionThreads><spout:SpoutRating>2</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/u47828gvtpe.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/New_York_New_York/24524/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:St. Nick</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/St_Nick/402616/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s402616.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> St. Nick<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 2009<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> David Lowery<br/>
<strong>Times Tagged:</strong> 3<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 2<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 5<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 5<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 28 Aug 2009 15:01:06 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>St. Nick</spout:Title><spout:Year>2009</spout:Year><spout:Director>David Lowery</spout:Director><spout:TimesTagged>3</spout:TimesTagged><spout:taglevel>Slightly Tagged (1-5)</spout:taglevel><spout:Numberoflists>2</spout:Numberoflists><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>5</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:SpoutRating>5</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s402616.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/St_Nick/402616/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:We Are the Strange</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/We_Are_the_Strange/314016/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s314016.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> We Are the Strange<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 2007<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> M dot Strange<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 3<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 3<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 4<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 28 Aug 2009 14:25:52 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>We Are the Strange</spout:Title><spout:Year>2007</spout:Year><spout:Director>M dot Strange</spout:Director><spout:Numberoflists>3</spout:Numberoflists><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>3</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:SpoutRating>4</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s314016.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/We_Are_the_Strange/314016/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:The Sadist</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Sadist/29811/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t27402rl1sl.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> The Sadist<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 1963<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> James Landis<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 3<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 28 Aug 2009 14:08:29 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>The Sadist</spout:Title><spout:Year>1963</spout:Year><spout:Director>James Landis</spout:Director><spout:Numberoflists>4</spout:Numberoflists><spout:SpoutRating>3</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t27402rl1sl.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Sadist/29811/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Film:The Alligator People</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Alligator_People/50507/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t46806zj8ua.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
<td>
<strong>Title:</strong> The Alligator People<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 1959<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> Roy Del Ruth<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 2<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 1<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 2<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 28 Aug 2009 14:04:19 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>The Alligator People</spout:Title><spout:Year>1959</spout:Year><spout:Director>Roy Del Ruth</spout:Director><spout:Numberoflists>2</spout:Numberoflists><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>1</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:SpoutRating>2</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/t46806zj8ua.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Alligator_People/50507/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
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