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F L I C K H E A D: Green for danger
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"This blog is an outgrowth of Flickhead . Text copyright © by Ray Young. E-mail .
Above: Patch, Bozo and Donna in Carny (1980).
Saturday, October 08, 2005
Green for danger
The first time I saw Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo (1958), it was probably on the night of its last televised viewing in the mid-1960s ( The ABC Sunday Night Movie ?), before the picture was exiled into contractual hibernation for two decades. Too young to comprehend the scenario, too callow to value its aesthetic, I’d also gone in with a preconceived opinion fostered by two unappreciative, myopic parents who recalled it as being nothing more than “a dog.” Vertigo was not popular in its day, and Hitchcock, ever mindful of his audience, immediately reverted back to crowd-pleasing with North by Northwest (1959) and the dark manipulation of Psycho (1960). Indeed, after Psycho , The Birds (1963) and his weekly television series, the director was becoming known for his knack with horror as much as suspense. And my mother, in a move to placate her little boy’s voracious appetite for horror movies, took me to see Marnie (1964) the weekend it opened. Thinking that it, to"
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