Film Review
Young and Innocent shows a
lighter, more human side to Hitchcock than many of his films, and
it can just as easily be classified as a romantic comedy as a suspense
thriller. Interestingly, this was the only one of the thrillers
that Hitchcock made in the 1930s which did not have a political back
story, and it has often been described as a remake of his earlier
The
39 Steps (1935) with all of the political intrigue removed.
In common with all of Hitchcock's British thrillers, the film is
exceptionally well cast. The female lead is played by 18-year old
Nova Pilbeam, who made her screen debut in a previous Hitchcock film,
The Man Who Knew Too Much
(1934). Despite her obvious youth and inexperience, Pilbeam has a
commanding screen presence and her character presages the charismatic
strong Hitchcockian heroines which would come to the fore during the
director's Hollywood years. Derrick De Marney is an equally
effective casting choice - his gentle screen persona puts his character
on an equal footing with Pilbeam's making their partnership a real team
effort, in contrast to what we see in many Hitchcock films, where the
male character is usually dominant.
Hitchcock's reputation as the master of suspense is amply demonstrated
in this film by some meticulously crafted suspense sequences.
Perhaps the best example is the comedic sequence where the two main
characters are drawn into attending a children's party from which there
appears to be no escape, whilst the police come ever
closer. Another example is the nail-biting action scene in
a disused mine, which feels like a spirited homage to the silent
classic
The Perils of Pauline.
Young and Innocent shows
Hitchcock at his most playful and inventive and gives us one of his
most memorable visual effects - which the director would later
reuse in his 1964 film,
Marnie. Just when
our heroes appear to be well and truly defeated, the villain is
suddenly revealed to us, in the most grandiose and imaginative way
possible. The camera starts with a wide high shot of a busy
ballroom and begins to track slowly across the room, like a missile
closing in on its preordained target. The question that forms in
the mind of every spectator is: where are we going? The answer is
soon revealed. The camera slowly descends and tracks forward
towards the band on the far side of the room. It moves inexorably
towards one member of the band until his face, grotesquely distorted by
make-up, fills the entire frame. It is unmistakably the face of the
killer. But there is no relief for the audience - this is merely
the prelude to the film's suspenseful conclusion...
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
The Lady Vanishes (1938)
Film Synopsis
When movie star Christine Clay is murdered, suspicion immediately falls
on a young man named Robert Tisdall with whom she had a brief
acquaintance. Tisdall was seen running away from the beach on
which the body of the dead woman was discovered, and the belt with
which she was strangled is believed to belong to his
raincoat. When it is later revealed that Clay left Tisdall
a large sum of money in her will, the case against him appears rock
solid. Yet Tisdall protests his innocence and, determined to
clear his name, escapes from police custody. He finds an unlikely
ally in Erica Burgoyne, the daughter of the local Chief
Constable. Persuaded of his innocence, Erica resolves to help
him, although the odds seem to be stacked overwhelmingly against them...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.