Forty-three years after Hitch dazzled the audience with pioneering tricks with sound in Blackmail, he's at it again here - in the scene where Massey walks out of the pub, all the sound fades, then just Barry Foster's voice comes in (before all sound returns) - chilling and brilliant (and foreshadowing the action). (He does it again after her murder.)
Is there also a dash of the French (Truffaut, Chabrol), who Hitch influenced in the first place? It's a bit like he's bouncing them back on themselves, delivering, for example, perhaps his nastiest murder in a scene completely without music.
Barbara Leigh-Hunt. Stills courtesey of http://www.hitchcockwiki.com/ |
And for some reason, the hilarious scenes with detective Alec McCowen sampling wife Vivien Merchant's horrible cordon bleu cooking made me think Hitch put it in there for Buñuel, of whom he was a big fan.
Michael Bates funny envying Alec McCowen's full English breakfast. |
I remember my Mum telling me about the scene with the body holding the giveaway pin, which occurs in a beautifully funny black comedy moment (again, with a flavour of Buñuel?) The ending also is really funny.
Rest of cast: Barry Foster, Anna Massey, Barbara Leigh-Hunt, Bernard Cribbins, Billie Whitelaw, Jean Marsh, Clive Swift. Shot by Gilbert Taylor and edited by John Jympson.
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