Hitchcock
Hitchcock
Hitchcock
March 2k11
Opinion
470 wrd cnt
RB- Hitchcock’s Hand in Modern Day Cinema
SPOILERS: The ‘Master of Suspense’ title is not received by any director who can get a
mild jump scare out of an audience. It’s more of a Highlander kind of scenario, in that “there
can only be one!” To apply to recent context, Martin Scorsese’s Shutter Island did cause
widespread anxiety in movie theaters, and Black Swan may have caused some unanticipated
bowel movements from movie patrons, but the title remains to the original horror filmmaker,
Alfred Hitchcock.
The only correct way to summarize a forty year movie career is this: Hitchcock is subtle.
His curious nuances attract little attention and one would only spot them if they were a film geek.
The musical cues in scenes of zero drama to add an undeserved tension, the ground shots looking
up to the sky to see some horrible airborne fate for the characters on screen, or simply a
conversation where the angles are creepier than an abandoned doll factory. To think there are
thousands of movies that apply all of the techniques stated (Manhattan, The Warriors,
Labyrinth, Star Wars, The Dark Knight, Inglourious Basterds, etc.) that would lose so much
cinematic value if it were not for Hitchcock and his influence. Respect is due to Hitchcock in
every film released after his career, he needs no star on a sidewalk or photo in the Chinese
In Christopher Nolan’s Inception the opening scene of the endless cliffs and long
shoreline mirrors Hitchcock’s North by Northwest(1959) where the train races along the lake as
the camera moves with the locomotives path. In Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan the repetitive
use of shadow-hidden profiles recollects the climax to Vertigo(1958) when the camera pans to
the left to reveal a horribly timed nun. And in David Fincher’s The Social Network the intense
use of camera angles to grant reverse perspective, is identical to the same effect in Rear Window
(1954). Almost every filmmaker after 1971 has employed a filmmaking quirk that was either
created or popularized by Alfred Hitchcock. This can range to almost anything out of the
mainstream that can be identified in one of his films (director cameos, victim perspective,
The thousands of Hitchcock-esque film making techniques directors employ every year
aren’t shameless rip-offs or conscious acknowledgements, it’s just they came after Hitchcock’s
time. And that doesn’t justify every modern film as conformist or uninspired. It’s the mainstream
exposure to Hollywood cinema, where film studios will boast their influence from Hitchcock,
that flaws every American director. Instead of moping at this realization that most of what oyu
pay $11 to see is un-original film making, we should celebrate that Hollywood was influence by
an awesome director, for the fate of American cinema could’ve been in worse hands (Michael