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(Sir) Hitchcock, Alfred 1899–1980: Critical Essay by Thomas Burton

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Alfred Hitchcock
About 1 pages (252 words)
Rebecca (film) Summary

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"Rebecca," the novel by Daphne du Maurier, for all its great popularity, limped badly and never really came completely to life…. But in the motion picture version all this is brushed aside by the understanding and literary style of a greater craftsman than Miss du Maurier.

Alfred Hitchcock has made of "Rebecca" one of those perfect things—one of those masterpieces that we remember, like his other perfect cinema entertainments "The Thirty-nine Steps" and "The Lady Vanishes." The novel is all there…. Hitchcock touches [the young girl] with a spark of genius and she moves in terror—flits before you a live, living person whom you pity and with whom you share some obscure dread. You become extremely susceptible to her fears. And Lord! but this Hitchcock has a sense of humor. There is no one making motion pictures today who can touch him for sly wit, fancy touch, or good rib-loosening laughter…. There is a delicate, instinctively alert intelligence in every scene….

This is a free excerpt of 160 words. There are 252 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 Thomas Burton from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.



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