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High Anxiety Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Lawrence Weschler

This literature criticism consists of approximately 4 pages of analysis & critique of High Anxiety.
This section contains 1,046 words
(approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Brooks, Mel 1926– - Critical Essay by Lawrence Weschler

Critical Essay by Lawrence Weschler

You need only be informed that in [High Anxiety] …, Brooks is sending up Alfred Hitchcock, and you will instantly surmise that here, on the last day of the 54-day shoot, he is trying to bury The Birds once and for all. Hitchcock's protagonists suddenly found themselves prey to a swarm of man-pecking birds. In Brooks's version, the psychiatrist-protagonist—"a reincarnation of the classic Hitchcockian hero, the tall, handsome innocent who gradually becomes ensnared in a nefarious plot breaking out all about him," played by Himself—is relaxing on a park bench one afternoon as gradually, one by one, a flock of pigeons convenes on a nearby jungle gym. Gradually, one by one, the birds take off, swoop in low, and strafe. Slowly, calmly, Brooks assesses the situation, rises, begins to walk away, nonchalantly quickens his pace—the birds, in droves now, continue the pursuit—and, finally, breaks into headlong flight, seeking refuge at...
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This section contains 1,046 words
(approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Brooks, Mel 1926– - Critical Essay by Lawrence Weschler
Copyrights
Brooks, Mel 1926– - Critical Essay by Lawrence Weschler from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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