For Hardened Hitchcock Fans: The Master, Sliced and Diced
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Book Review
So you think you know your Hitchcock? O.K., let's play a game. I
want you to link up the following Hitchcock movies, but without using date,genre or actor. All you're allowed is theme or, at a push, subtext-or
sub-theme, or inter-text, or whatever lingo is the flavor of the month on the
nation's campuses.
Let's start with an easy one: Strangers
on a Train and Psycho ? "Murderers
with oppressive mothers," of course, dating back to Hitchcock's own. Alright,
now what about Psycho and Torn Curtain ? Come on, the answer's
staring you in the face: "torn curtain" … torn shower curtain, and thus all the
other rent veils in Hitchcock's work, including the veil torn from the face of
the Arab woman in The Man Who Knew Too
Much .
Getting the hang of things? Right, let's raise the bar a notch. Vertigo and North by Northwest ? Try Jimmy Stewart's Pygmalion complex, and thus
Cary Grant's disparagement of Eva Marie Saint as "this little piece of
sculpture" and all the other icy blondes Hitchcock attempted to defrost. Easy.
Now for a difficult one: North by
Northwest , Notorious and To Catch a Thief in one move, and don't
even think of saying "Cary Grant" or you're out on your lapels. "Cary
Grant'sroad-safety record," on the other hand …. He is thrown around some
pretty lethal curves in North by
Northwest , is taken for a spin by a drunken Ingrid Bergman in Notorious and around the French Riviera
by a speeding Grace Kelly in To Catch a
Thief . In Hitchcock's films, people don't drive cars: As Peter Conrad
writes in his new book, "cars drive people."
The Hitchcock Murders
takes its own share of interpretative hairpin turns at high speed, all the
better to negotiate the highest reaches of the masterpieces, as well as the
lonelier roads of his lesser-known works, from both ends of the career. How
long is it since you got Topaz out on video? And had you even
heard of Aventure Malgache , a
propaganda film for the French Resistance that Hitchcock directed in 1944, in
which the master of the McGuffin took appropriate delight in booby-trapped
codes which turn out to mean nothing: "Get stuffed, where's the butter?" and
"The chestnuts will be ripe on 35th April." As the film's police chief wearily
points out, Madagascar doesn't have chestnuts. Nor, for that matter, does April
have 35 days.
This is, in short, a quite terrifying book, designed to give even
hardened Hitchcock fans the jitters, but then Peter Conrad is a scary guy: an
Oxford don who has published criticism so sharp you can cut your fingers on it,
two installments of autobiography and, more recently, a novel. One pities his
students. He is the Professor Who Knew Too Much, and to anyone whose nerves
simply aren't up to taking on-board yet another Oxford polymath whose work
demands their closest attention, I can only apologize-I'm sorry, but the man does exist. (At least he was foolish
enough to call his novel Underworld .)
The Hitchcock Murders
isn't a biography, or even a proper work of criticism, if by "proper" you mean
a stately chronological procession through the oeuvre . Mr. Conrad kicks off halfway through, with Psycho , which first got its claws into
the 13-year-old Mr. Conrad and hasn't relinquished its grip since. For what we
have here is Hitchcock's work sliced, diced and served up in a series of
essays-"Playing God," "The Crimes Of The Camera," "The Philosophy Of Motion"-in
which the
only organizing principle is the author's eye for detail, his taste for a theme
and the nervy, shuttling instincts of the Conrad brain. This is Synapse
Criticism, firing off in about 10 different directions at once and demanding
you keep up, if only so you can be in a good enough position to disagree.
A discussion of the bomb
detonation in Saboteur , for instance,
leads us to the setting of Joseph Conrad's The
Secret Agent -Greenwich, the "home of time." From there, it's but a short
step to relativity theory and the shattering of space-time conducted by Breton
and Dalí. Mr. Conrad clearly has Hitch pegged as a proto-surrealist-modernism
in a fat suit-lobbing bombs
into the laps of his audience, which is O.K. up to a point and certainly
enormous fun to argue. One can't miss the looming modernist angles of his early
movies; nor can one miss the casual blasphemies and streak of mischief that marble all his work.
But he was no Buñuel, and far too popular an artist to relish the
lofty audience-alienation techniques of the modernists-look at the number of
potshots he takes at modern art in the course of his career. Mr. Conrad's
response is a swift tactical retreat into Hitchcock's source material, where he
finds as much subversion as he can take his fill of: David Dodge's 1952 book To Catch a Thief , for instance, in which
Robie the cat burglar-later to be played by Cary Grant-"shins up drain-pipes
just as Nietzsche's Zarathrustra vaulted over canyons" and "hangs 'suspended'
from a sagging gutter … the dangling man addressed by the existentialists.
Perhaps, in that heavenly villa, Robie possesses a copy of Camus' L'homme révolté , published in 1951, and
translated into English as The Rebel
in 1953, the year Dodge's novel first appeared." As Doris Day might say:
perhaps.
Then again: perhaps not. What all this has to do with Grace Kelly
looking criminally good in 50's summer gear is anybody's guess. Any discussion
of To Catch a Thief which claims to
detect existential angst in so sunlit and light-fingered a movie-its mysteries
opening and snapping shut with the satisfying click of a Louis Vuitton
handbag-is quite clearly barking up the wrong drainpipe. Hitchcock may have
thought actors were cattle, but his authors were mincemeat. "It's going to be a
long night," says Eva Marie Saint on board the overnight train in North by Northwest , "and I don't
particularly like the book I've started"-a pointed barb which rightly prompts
Mr. Conrad to throw his source books out the window and write his best chapter.
Phew. Just as you were about to have Mr. Conrad pulled up on
charges of reckless close reading and illegal levels of literature in his
bloodstream, he goes and redeems himself with a dizzying analysis of North by Northwest , Hitchcock's "most
breathless exercise in motiveless motion": "Miss Kendall, you've got to get
moving," urges Leo Carroll (as the Professor) in a movie that never stops from
there. Inertia-let alone the pause for thought it allows-was a horror to Hitchcock,
a man mired in his corpulent form, who therefore produced films in love with
motion for its own sake, with all the dangers it entailed.
Admittedly he also gave us, in Vertigo , the slowest car chase in the history of cinema-with James
Stewart trailing Kim Novak at speeds of anything up to 10 m.p.h.-although not
without its own creepy ennui. But look at that out-of-control Ferris wheel in Strangers on a Train , or all those
white-knuckle rides on which Cary Grant is taken. Hitchcock, as Mr. Conrad
reminds us, hated driving, or being driven, which is why he delighted in
producing films which drove audiences round the bend. "Alone among filmmakers,
Hitchcock found the mobility of the medium scary … [his] movies made a proud
contribution to the store of our ailments by afflicting us with new varieties
of motion sickness."
This is great stuff: firmly rooted in cinema, not books, leafed
with choice biographical detail, and branching off in all sorts of fruitful
directions, not least the future history of cinema. For lose the sickness and
keep the motion, and very soon you have Steven Spielberg and his truck in Duel , George Lucas and his X-wings in Star Wars , Bob Zemeckis and his DeLorean
in Back to The Future , Keanu Reeves
and his runaway bus, James Cameron and his trucks and cruise liners …. It all
goes back to Hitchcock.
And much of it gets gathered up here. Mr. Conrad is the genuine
article: a true Hitchcock obsessive and detail nut (the only thing to be,
really, what with Hitchcock's own obsessions being so lovingly fetishized in
his films: keys, telephones, telephone directories, handcuffs, the color red,
purses, handbags, matchbooks …. ) I particularly liked Mr. Conrad's
disquisition on glasses of milk in Hitchcock's work-frequently poisonous, like
the mothers they come from, presumably. In fact, I would go so far as to say
that he's pretty sound on dairy products in general, for there's some good
stuff on eggs here, too. Dairy products, surrealist leanings, chestnuts used
for propaganda purposes ….
Peter Conrad has produced, if not the best book about
Hitchcock-that prize still goes to Truffaut-certainly the one which puts the
most Ph.D. theses out of business.
Tom
Shone is the New York film critic for the Daily Telegraph of London .
Copyright © 2001 The New York Observer. All rights reserved.










