Film Review
Director Robert Wise is best known for his lavish film musicals, such
as
West Side Story (1961) and
The Sound of Music (1965), but
even the most fleeting of glances at his filmography will reveal a
filmmaker of extraordinary range and versatility. He directed the
memorable horror film
The Curse of the Cat People
(1944), the sci-fi classic
The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951),
the first
Star Trek film, and much more
besides.
The House On Telegraph
Hill is one of his less
well-known films, a noir-style suspense thriller which feels like a
canny conflation of two Hitchcock's films,
Rebecca
(1940) and
Suspicion (1941).
Initially, Wise was reluctant to direct the film,
an adaptation of a popular novel by Dana Lyon,
and did so only at the insistence of his boss, Darryl F. Zanuck.
The House On Telegraph has
plenty of Hitchcockian touches but it is far more than a slavish
imitation of Hitchcock. Although the film begins slowly, with a
sombre prologue that reminds us of the horrors of the Nazi
concentration camps, the pace soon picks up and builds gradually to an
excruciatingly tense and chilling climax. A well-honed
screenplay, Wise's subtle direction and the strong central performances
from Richard Basehart and Valentina Cortese (who married in the year this
film was made) make this a compelling
thriller. The film's real strength lies in its imaginative
camerawork and atmospheric art direction. These contribute a mood
of tightening oppression and escalating paranoia as experienced by the main
character, who sees her world gradually transform itself into a living
nightmare, from which death may well be the only escape.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Robert Wise film:
West Side Story (1961)
Film Synopsis
When the Nazis invade her native Poland during WWII, Victoria Kowelska
is arrested and sent to a concentration camp. There, she makes a
friend in Karin de Nakova, a woman who is too weak to survive the
ordeal of the camp. After the war, Victoria decides to take
Karin's place, knowing that she has wealthy relatives in America.
On her arrival in San Francisco, she is informed that, after the death
of Karin's only remaining close relative, the entire family wealth has
passed to Karin's infant son Chris. In Karin's absence, Chris has
been reared by a distant relative, Alan Spender, and an overly
protective housekeeper, Margaret. Karin is surprised when Alan
proposes to her but the couple marry and are soon installed in the
grand family house on Telegraph Hill. Karin remains fearful that
her identity will be discovered, but she soon realises that those
around her also have their secrets. She becomes convinced
that someone intends to kill her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.