Alfred Hitchcock's 10 Essential Movies
1. Rebecca
(1940)
2. Shadow of a Doubt (1943)
3. Notorious (1946)
4. Rope (1948)
5. Strangers on a Train (1951)
6. Dial M for Murder (1954)
7. Rear Window (1954)
8. Vertigo (1958)
9. North by Northwest (1959)
10. Psycho (1960)
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"The extreme peculiarity of
Hitchcock’s art (if his films do not seem very odd it is only because they are
so familiar) can be partly accounted for by the way in which these aesthetic
influences from high art and revolutionary socialism were pressed into the
service of British middle-class popular entertainment. Combined with
Hitchcock’s all-pervasive scepticism (‘‘Everything’s perverted in a different
way, isn’t it?’’), this process resulted in an art that at once endorsed
(superficially) and undermined (profoundly) the value system of the culture
within which it was produced, be that culture British or American."
― Robin Wood (International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers, 1991)
― Robin Wood (International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers, 1991)
"Alfred Hitchcock is the supreme technician of the American cinema. Even his many enemies cannot begrudge him that distinction. Like Ford, Hitchcock cuts in his mind, and not in the cutting room with five different setups for every scene. His is the only contemporary style that unites the divergent classical traditions of Murnau (camera movement) and Eisenstein (montage)."
― Andrew Sarris (The American Cinema, 1968)
"Although he chose to limit his thematic range to the genre of suspenseful melodrama and has disappointed some high-minded critics with his lack of seriousness or interest in important social issues. Hitchcock is without question among the few most gifted directors who ever worked in the film medium. A supreme technician and stylist with an unmistakable personal imprint and a great visual artists, he is impossible to dismiss as just the "Master of Suspense", as he has been frequently described."
― The MacMillan International Film Encyclopedia, 1994
"The master of suspense, Hitchcock is a genius at filming the unexpected, from whole scripts to characters and little, insignificant plot elements."
― William R. Meyer (The Film Buff's Catalog, 1978)
"Though he seemingly cared little if backdrop scenery was obviously artificial, he was a superb technician, expert at orchestrating the irruption of menacing, life-changing chaos into a complacent, deceptively safe and ordered world."
― Geoff Andrew (The Director's Vision, 1999)
"It is impossible for anyone who has seen even one of his films to deny Hitchcock his place inside the cinema's pantheon of greats, for his was the most 'cinematic' mind of all, and at the same time the most isolated from 'real life' of all the great directors. Cinema made Hitchcock just as surely as the stage made Laurence Olivier, and he was equally in thrall to it, subsuming his unconscious mind, and ours, to its magic."― Mario Reading (The Movie Companion, 2006)
"He directed Britain's first talking picture, Blackmail (1929), and went on to build a reputation as the Master of Suspense. His impressive body of work is noted for its dark wit, ice-cool blonde heroines and increasing psychological complexity."
― Chambers Film Factfinder, 2006
"One of the most truly famous names among Hollywood directors, Alfred Hitchcock remained essentially British in his attitudes, sense of humour and low-keyed style of directing throughout his career... The universal, timeless quality of his best work, his themes and preoccupations, is reflected in the work of many followers who imitated him throughout the 60s and 70s, including Polanski, De Palma and François Truffaut."
― Joel W. Finler (The Movie Directors Story, 1985)
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Alfred Hitchcock's 10 Favourite Movies
1. The Enchanted Cottage (1924) by John S. Robertson
2. Forbidden Fruit (1921) by Cecil B. DeMille
3. The Gold Rush (1925) by Charles Chaplin
4. I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932) by Mervyn LeRoy
5. The Isle of Lost Ships (1923) by Maurice Tourneur
6. The Last Command (1928) by Josef von Sternberg
7. Saturday Night (1922) by Cecil B. DeMille
8. Scaramouche (1923) by Rex Ingram
9. Sentimental Tommy (1921) by John S. Robertson
10 Variety (1925) by E.A. Dupont
*Source: A Life in Darkness and Light by Patrick McGilligan (list is from 1939)