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Not What You Meant?  There are 40 definitions for High anxiety.  Also try: Hitchcock or The Man Who Knew Too Much.

(Sir) Hitchcock, Alfred 1899–1980: Critical Essay by Richard Winnington

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About 1 pages (267 words)
Alfred Hitchcock Summary

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When, nearly ten years ago, Alfred Hitchcock broke away from his Daphne du Maurier phase with Shadow of a Doubt, there were premature congratulations. He was first in with the real location melodrama, and it looked as if he might have returned to his older and more entertaining style. The succeeding Hitchcock films, popular, adept and replete with useless trick effects, have been, however, peculiarly depressing in that their hollowness has derived from Hitchcock himself, and not—as in the cases of some other expatriate directors—from Hollywood….

Strangers on a Train … to some extent restores the situation and recalls the old virtuoso of the art of suspense. Here again fear and paranoia are let loose in the open against normal backgrounds, and the tension mounts and writhes through humdrum human activity to its bizarre, sensational climax. (p. 21)

This is a free excerpt of 137 words. There are 267 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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(Sir) Hitchcock, Alfred 1899–1980: Critical Essay by Richard Winnington from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.



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