Film Review
Deliciously quintessential Hitchcock,
Notorious
is not only one of the director's most popular films, it is
unquestionably among his finest. The star billing of Cary Grant
and Ingrid Bergman is the film's main attraction, but it is Hitchcock's
masterful (and slightly sadistic) telling of a complex intrigue of
romance and betrayal which makes it a classic. It ranks alongside
Strangers on a Train,
Psycho and
Vertigo as one of the handful of
Hitchcock films that
every
film enthusiast should see at least once, not just to appreciate the
genius of Hitchcock's technique, but simply for their sheer enjoyment
value.
The film features the most well-known (you might say:
notorious) example of Hitchcock's
famous MacGuffins - the covert shipment of uranium in vintage wine
bottles. A MacGuffin is the term that Hitchcock gave to a plot
device which had little relevance to the narrative and served merely to
allow other things to happen, rather like a catalyst in a chemical
reaction. The narrative core of
Notorious
is not the tangled spy intrigue but the somewhat twisted amorous
relationship portrayed by Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman. Whilst
the two main characters in the drama are obviously attracted to one
another, their emotional flaws and past experiences provide an obstacle
to any kind of deep romantic entanglement. The espionage thriller
part of the narrative may provide some of the tension, but the real
drama and suspense lies elsewhere - in the uncertainty over how the
relationship of Grant and Bergman will pan out.
This is the second time Ingrid Bergman worked with Hitchcock. She
had previously appeared in his 1945 film
Spellbound and would later star in
Under Capricorn (1949). Cary
Grant is perhaps the Hollywood star who is most associated with
Hitchcock, appearing in no fewer than four of his films, including the
immensely popular
North by Northwest
(1959). Both Bergman and Grant turn in exemplary
performances in
Notorious,
although their on-screen rapport is anything but conventional for a
Hollywood romance. Beneath a thin veil of tenderness there's a
hint of viciousness and raw carnality that suggests something
disturbing, a mutual sadomasochistic dependency. This
contrasts with the behaviour of the film's principal villain - superbly
played by Claude Rains - who has control of his baser qualities and who
carries himself with the most exquisite charm and
sincerity, bringing a nice touch of moral ambiguity into the drama. Rains's character is another of Hitchcock's
recurring motifs, a man who allows his domineering mother to drive him
towards a very dark path - the path that would one day lead to the
Bates Motel and Hitchcock's most notorious film...
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
The Paradine Case (1947)
Film Synopsis
Shortly after her father is arrested on a charge of treason, Alicia
Huberman is recruited by an American government agent, Devlin, to
infiltrate a Nazi spy ring in Rio de Janeiro. The chief
suspect is the successful businessman Alex Sebastian, a friend of
Alicia's father. Alicia soon discovers that Sebastian has always
loved her and has no option but to accept his proposal of
marriage. Playing the attentive wife, Alicia quickly uncovers the
racket Sebastian is involved in, but Sebastian's matriarchal mother
sees through her subterfuge and decides that she must die...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.