Film Review
What else is there to say about
Vertigo?
Alfred Hitchcock's masterpiece, a film that demands multiple viewings,
a work of cinematic art that gives us the most haunting and desperate
portrayal of romantic love...
Vertigo may not have enjoyed
commercial or critical success when it was first released in 1958, but
its reputation has since grown to the point that hardly any serious
film enthusiast would challenge its claim to fame as one of the most
important American films of the Twentieth Century.
Vertigo is a psychological
thriller
par excellence but
it is clearly far more than that. It is a film of great subtlety
and complexity that ventures into the darker avenues of human
experience, surprising with its emotional depth and seductively lyrical
in its dreamlike portrayal of an unattainable love. This is
unquestionably one of Hitchcock's most personal films and reveals more
about his own character and beliefs than much of his other work.
Hitchcock, like all great artists, was a perfectionist and
Vertigo is a film that is first and
foremost about man's unceasing search for perfection in an imperfect
world. This is about as close to being a self-portrait as
Hitchcock could ever have hoped to make.
In
Vertigo, we see a man who
has lived a humdrum bachelor life for fifty or so years suddenly come
across his perfect woman. Just as quickly as she entered his life,
she leaves it. It is a transitory experience, but one that has
changed him forever. The woman he saw, or imagined he saw,
must be brought back. This need quickly transforms itself into
obsession. But this mania for converting the cobwebs of a dream
into hard reality merely propels the hero into a spiralling
psychological vortex from which escape is impossible.
The artist is never satisfied, neither is the lover. Reality can
never match up to the pristine blueprint in our minds. And so on
we go, trying to hammer the ugly world around us into the way we want
it, always failing, always frustrated, but unable to admit
defeat. What is human existence but an endless striving for
perfection that can never be realised?
The plot of
Vertigo has some
real life parallels. Hitchcock had originally wanted Vera Miles -
the female lead of his earlier
The Wrong Man (1956) - to
play the role of Madeleine. Unfortunately, she announced she was
pregnant just as the film was about to go into production, and so the
role went to Kim Novak. Hitchcock's struggle to fashion Novak in
the image of Miles has some resonance with the main character's frantic
attempt to resurrect the woman he fell in love with through another
woman who resembles her.
Vertigo has some of the most
effective and imaginative camerawork of any Hitchcock film, and this,
perhaps more than anything, is what makes the film so compelling and
atmospheric. The most famous shot is the "vertigo effect" in the
church tower, which was achieved by the camera zooming in and tracking
backwards at the same time. This couldn't be realised on the
full-size set so it was shot using a model, adding to the
expressionistic unreality of the film's most memorable sequence.
Hitchcock's bold use of colour is also interesting, with red and green
predominating alternately, like subliminal traffic lights, accentuating
the film's hypnotic dreamlike character. Red for danger is the
reasoned conscience that warns the hero to back off, whilst green for
go is the unthinking impulse that impels him to carry on - a rather apt
metaphor for life.
Bernard Herrmann's score for
Vertigo
is one of the most famous ever composed for a film and evokes with
terrifying dissonance a mood of escalating mental derangement, as
experienced by a man who sees the walls of a shaky reality crumbling
around him. The screenplay, written by the gifted
playwright Samuel A. Taylor, was adapted from a French thriller
novel,
Sueurs froides: d'entre les
morts, by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac, whose earlier
novel
Celle qui n'était plus
had previously been adapted by H.G. Clouzot as
Les Diaboliques (1955).
Another area where
Vertigo
excels is the quality of the performances. In one of the
highpoints of his career, James Stewart gives a vivid portrayal of a
man's descent into Hell as obsession takes him over, transforming him
from nice Mr Average into someone possessed by demonic forces issuing
from dark pent up desires. Stewart's chilling Jekyll and Hyde act
is equally matched by Kim Novak's startling dual performance, with the
actress skilfully delineating between her two characters, the austere
Madeleine and the earthy Judy. The Stewart and Novak pairing
worked so well that not long afterwards they appeared together in a
subsequent film,
Bell, Book and Candle (1958),
another tale of romantic obsession, but one with a distinctly lighter
tone and a far happier outcome.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
North by Northwest (1959)
Film Synopsis
When a rooftop chase ends in the death of one of his colleagues, San
Francisco cop John Ferguson suddenly develops chronic acrophobia, an
irrational fear of heights which forces him into early
retirement. Out of the blue, a man he met at college,
Gavin Elster, contacts him and offers him work as a private
detective. Recently, Elster has become concerned about his wife
Madeleine's strange behaviour. The root of the mystery appears to
be Madeleine's great grandmother, who committed suicide after having
been cast aside by her husband. Fearing that his wife may be on
the point of killing herself, Elster hires Ferguson to trail her.
As he follows Madeleine, Ferguson's professional detachment soon turns
into a deep fascination for the attractive young woman. Elster's
fears are borne out when Madeleine tries to drown herself.
Ferguson saves her and realises that he is in love with her. But
then tragedy strikes. Ferguson's acrophobia prevents him from
following Madeleine as she races to the top of a church tower from
which she throws herself. Madeleine's death causes Ferguson
to have an immediate nervous breakdown. Some time later, not long
after leaving a psychiatric clinic, the retired cop comes across a
woman who bears a striking resemblance to Madeleine. Fate has
given him a second chance - or so it seems...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.