PolkaDotMeggie
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I have never seen Marnie or Frenzy... anyone have a synopsis for me???
PolkaDotMeggie said:I have never seen Marnie or Frenzy... anyone have a synopsis for me???
Doran said:Rope is my favorite of his films. Aside from the wonderful long takes, the fine suits, the nice limitation on sets, and the spot-on acting, the preppie twits' version of Nietzsche was vivid and compelling. I have met many many people of criminal nature who have either cited Nietzsche or without quoting him used the argument the young men use in that film as justification for their crimes. The moment when their teacher realizes that his teachings can be used to justify this sort of thing was priceless.
I'm always interested in the what characters (and people in real life) use as a program/justification/philosophy for their actions.
RetroMom said:This is one of my favorite Hitchcock movies, maybe because it's so rarely on TV. Everyone is so sophisticated ! I understand that it was based loosely on the Leopold and Loeb case of the '20s(30's?) and I remember hearing somewhere that there was something special about the way it was filmed, all on one reel or one camera or something, I don't remember...It is a great film! Even my teenage son likes it, and thats a rousing endorsement
Edward said:The Hitchcock film, I saw some years ago. If memory serves, the sexual side of the relationship is left out, but otherwise it was quite true to the basic story, albeit updated and set in a contemporary New York. does memory serve me in the recollection that it opens midway through the murder? I recall it that way, and that this really drew me in. Good film, and all the more shocking for its basis in reality.
Doran said:I believe the gayness was supposed to be hinted at in the dominance and submissiveness of the leads. Then again, many people act dominant and submissive and they are not gay at all. So it could be read either way. (And many people are gay and are not dominant and submissive at all, so, again, the characters' topness and bottomness don't necessarily point to that.)
****Another film, MUCH more recent, which was loosely based on the Leopold and Loeb murders stars Sandra Bullock (!), Ryan Gosling, and the young, very handsome Pitt boy (not Brad. Michael?) who was also in The Dreamers. I cannot recall his first name, nor the name of the film. Perhaps it is called Murder By Numbers. It is not a great film, but it plays up the Nietzsche angle too.****
As far as Jimmy Stewart not being onscreen enough -- I don't know. I thought that movie was perfect and unimprovable. I like the sparingness. It's too easy to let Jimmy eat up the camera. Wasn't the dominant lead also in the film noir Gun Crazy?
Starius said:That was Murder By Numbers, yeah. Actually, I thought that was a pretty decent movie to watch. Well, a good sunday afternoon kind of movie.
Lincsong said:How did I miss this thread? A very odd film and disturbing film, but does showcase how some people think committing murder is nothing more than a common house event.
Lincsong said:I wikipedia'd Leopold and Loeb. Seems Clarence Darrow used the case so he could advocate against the death penalty since the case was so widely covered and it would provide him with a place to argue against it. Leopold and Loeb were 19 and 20. Both had graduated from University of Chicago and were going to enter law school when they hatched up the plot.
In Rope the movie begins with them strangling the victim and putting his body in the trunk. They discuss how the victim had to die since he was obviously inferior to them. While in Leopold and Loeb then wanted to see if they could get away with crimes. The murder of the 14 year old was just the last of a crime spree that they had committed. I find it interesting how some people who are very educated/sophisticated seem to beleive that their brilliance allows them to do whatever they wish. There is an oversupply of that mentality here in Frisco Bay.
WH1 said:Rope is a fascinating movie for all the reasons previously mentioned. Another Hitchcock film I find interesting is Lifeboat. He was able to create a very interesting story working on an even more limited stage than the one in Rope. Interesting study of humanity under stress. Screenplay was from a story by John Steinbeck. Plus it has some good performances by Tallulah Bankhead, William Bendix and Hume Cronyn.