Interesting how they made up the guy to look like a ghoul until the end, once he’d been cleared of suspicion. Once he was cleared, the makeup was at a minimum.
@alokparnachatterjee80919 күн бұрын
I read this short story a while ago and immediately rushed to see if there's a movie on it. What a find this is!
@ajayfacts8117 күн бұрын
Sometimes bomb goes off sometimes it doesn't. Thats Hitchcock....
@pixie376018 күн бұрын
Such a classic. I truly love these old movies ❤
@jinetsisomaaria21 күн бұрын
Porqué sin sonido si ya había televisión???
@Everett-f2h26 күн бұрын
Why the hell did this amazing film get wrecked at the 24 minute mark when that sappy song started playing?! I was so invested but then that shit ruined it. Hitchcock would truly be ashamed.
@alandesouzacruz512429 күн бұрын
Alfred Hitchcock the master of Thriller
@SolitudeSometimesIsАй бұрын
Wow that was brilliant ~ what a gorgeous man Ivor was. Thank goodness for the upload, this is far better than any of the crap on TV
@quintinoutАй бұрын
Is she saying at 1:22 that she will make him a coffee with an egg in it ? Anyone know ?
@SetInStoneNowАй бұрын
Ingrid Bergman was stunning!
@rukiaali73533 ай бұрын
كنت اشاهد فيلم وثائقي عن جاك السفاح حتى وصلت إلى هذا الفيديو
@blushflush3 ай бұрын
I hope you start posting again.
@BrainyWoman3 ай бұрын
8:58
@simonontong75393 ай бұрын
Great film
@calamityjenn3 ай бұрын
23:32 The music choice is odd and jarring. Sticks out like a sore thumb.
@ph03n1xm93 ай бұрын
re-watching this for a class :D expected to have to *really* strap myself in and focus on the movie, but it's pretty entertaining on its own :o
@charitobenipayo97923 ай бұрын
I like Alfred Hitchcock 's various movies that I love to watch over and over again. They 're such intriguing and incessantly inspiring! I like especially: Psycho and The Birds" .
@kartik-porcupine3 ай бұрын
Thankyou for uploading this great movie
@retrospaceangel_4 ай бұрын
i have to watch this for class, im so boreddd
@denizatkovicova56224 ай бұрын
yes super movie....
@morfy25814 ай бұрын
Imagine being imvested in a silent era thriller and it being interrupted by a guy saying Babbel is the most comprehensible way to learn languages.
@davidmansfield58325 ай бұрын
A moving storyboard
@davidmansfield58325 ай бұрын
You know it's pure cinema when dialog is optional. actually it detracts from the imagination
@Kurosawa35 ай бұрын
After watching Murder, the film is really underrated in his body of works. Hitchcock's Murder! (1930) | Dolly-Tracking shot: kzbin.info/www/bejne/jKWqd4aFabOpb7s
@jamesanonymous23435 ай бұрын
I JUST GOT OVER-SPELLED AND HAVE TO GO........SEE-YA,,,,BYE !
@andrewmiller48856 ай бұрын
Love Hitchcock films, and boy oh boy, the cast, these were Hollywood's greatest stars. I miss them all so much.
@johnstuercke34386 ай бұрын
I hate to be critical, since this is such a great movie and one of Hitchcock's best films. The beginning premise is built on magical criminals, who the good guys escape from by bus but these special criminals know precisely where this complete stranger lives and on what floor. The wizards have his phone number even though they only know her false name and if they knew his name the phone would be listed under the contract with the owner's name, which is not on the lobby wall. But, but, never mind. The magical criminals know how to come upstairs and kill her, but leave him alone, so they can chase him all over Scotland. The movie begins when Annabelle dies. After that, I don't care. Like me, suspend disbelief for a few minutes, and accept it as part of a great film from a truly great director. There is no logic to the magical escape at the end of N x NW. So what? A great film.
@guest_informant6 ай бұрын
And decades after Hitchcock's key idea of being superficially attractive but deeply murderous there was Ted Bundy.
@guest_informant6 ай бұрын
In case anyone is interested this is the One Note Man cartoon mcns.wordpress.com/2011/04/22/the-one-note-man/
@omdraws73257 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@crypticbarbiegirl7 ай бұрын
Ivor Novello, 😻, so crazy about him...
@Impossiblyy7 ай бұрын
❤
@gurpreetbajwa44908 ай бұрын
Even though everyone in tbis interview has passed away. The interviewer and Translator need to chill. It takes a Hitchcock a while to articulate what he wants to say and all the talking over eachother is frustrating
@9teen9t48 ай бұрын
The score is incredible.
@ArchieAndy279 ай бұрын
Such a classic! Who did the score for this version, please? Thanks in advance 😊
@myname70567 ай бұрын
They had this film on ABC (that’s Australian Broadcasting Corporation) decades ago with a score I’ve yet to find on here but I only managed to start recording as soon as the intro titles were finished. ABC has NEVER puts silent films on since. I love the titles that refer to the lodger as a “queer fellow.” I know it meant odd then, but nowdays it adds something extra knowing Ivor Novello (actor who played the lodger) was gay. I wish he’d played more complex characters on the silver screen, but I’m glad he did some sound films, & I’ve now heard his voice.
@ArchieAndy277 ай бұрын
it's ok, have since found out it's Nitin Sawhney
@ArchieAndy277 ай бұрын
@@myname7056that's really interesting! Similarly, "silent" films almost never receive a broadcast here in the UK, unless it's part of a special season. Some cinemas may occasionally show them with a new or live score from a musician. Novello was such a talent, especially when it came to song writing. To be fair, I've only ever seen him in this and Hitchcock's other silent film with him, "Downhill" but will aim to check out more of his work :)
@cuatro4four49 ай бұрын
Merci beaucoup d'avoir mis ces interviews en ligne. Je me régale !!!
@b.n.production90369 ай бұрын
Excellent ❤❤❤❤❤
@lorenzobosi199 ай бұрын
10:30 best part
@SM-fe1dh9 ай бұрын
The movie starts at 4:18 minutes.
@rocketboii940010 ай бұрын
Ivor Novello is so beautiful in this... I love the tentativeness of his body and how he rarely follows where he leads with his eyes, almost like he doesn't trust its ability to move in the beginning of the movie, and how it sort of warms over the course of the story to where he follows where he leads his eyes. The worst things always happen to him when he seems not to spend an appropriate amount of time visually observing the situation in which he is acting, specifically because of his distraction with Daisy, such as in every instance in which he might appear guilty of murder (ie. picking up the hot poker to tend the fire, leaving the house and reentering, the mouse scene, buying Daisy the dress, etc). Is he an anxious man in love, slowly warming into movement from the kindness and lack of judgement passed by Daisy, or is he a killer? To me, he seems the first and perhaps somewhat, what we might call nowadays, autistic.
@-UBU-SARIPIRALLAREDDYBASIREDDY10 ай бұрын
is these channel official?
@youngsteph110 ай бұрын
Good early Hitchcock. Acting not much, except for the pretty female lead, who for some reason never did anything much either before or after.
@vova4711 ай бұрын
Not only education in film history but a French lesson as well. Formidable!
@chrisr7597 Жыл бұрын
@21:14 LOL Oh yes. They really do! 😂
@danielscott8180 Жыл бұрын
A real treat for any cinephile. I've just started rewatching his filmography as I go through the interviews. It's such a great experience.
@Ourladyrules Жыл бұрын
quality print with a really good soundtrack 🎥👍
@pocketmonster1969 Жыл бұрын
why is there a song playing at 23:10
@icurlykid6987 Жыл бұрын
👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
@HDTurnerJr Жыл бұрын
Obviously Hitchcock has a problem with Saul Bass. I take this as (almost) proof that Bass must have done the shower sequence. To paraphrase Shakespeare, Hitchcock "protests too much". This takes nothing away from him for he is still the director, meaning he decided what was in and what was out.
@chrislaw41893 ай бұрын
This is a rather silly and baseless claim. Everyone except Saul Bass who was involved in this film and has commented on the matter said that Hitchcock, not Saul Bass, directed the shower scene. For instance, Janet Leigh said that Bass was present at the shooting of the scene, but “he never directed” her: “absolutely not.” Assistant director Hilton Green didn’t place Bass on the set at all. He said, “I was there every moment, shot for shot for that thing, and [Bass] was never on the set. He did lay out the storyboard with Hitchcock, and all that. But I saw Saul years and years later-he’s dead now-and I said, ‘Saul, how can you possibly say you directed that?’ And he was very embarrassed.”
@5th_cellar Жыл бұрын
Can anyone tell me what the other two songs are with lyrics? I found Daisy's song, but not the last two.