Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Last Night I Dreamed I Went To Manderlay Again

.
Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca turned 75 this past Sunday - it was released on April 12th 1940 to smashing success; it made Hitch's career in the US and went on to become the only Best Picture Oscar-wise that he would ever direct. (And yeah, that's a factoid that stings.) So we're celebrating the movie's anniversary Team-Experience-style this week at The Film Experience - Head over to TFE for the first part of a five-part walk-through the film! There's lots of Joan Fontaine fiddle fiddle fiddling around at the start, isn't there? I used to hate her performance in this movie, but it's grown on me over the years.


4 comments:

Unknown said...

Just read pt1. Loved it! Great idea. Am looking forward to rest of week and am now going to have to rewatch Rebecca sometime soon!

Film Excess Movie Review Blog said...

Pssst!
Unrelated to Hitch and Rebecca, here's some fresh news from Denmark, where Lars Von Trier gave a very rare interview at Copenhagen University this afternoon, (it last happened 9 years ago...):
His possibly 8-episoded TV-series The House That Jack Built is still on, and it's a serial killer story from the serial killer's point-of-view.
Trier said many other things, here's a few:
That he can get pretty much anything financed and cast at this point in his career. That he isn't feeling good at the moment and cries a lot. That he is back to drinking, but still attends AA meetings because he loves the people there. - He drinks 'moderately' now, because it helps him to work. He also finally revealed what has been his drug of choice for years, which he says he stopped using around Antichrist, when he was suffering from depression: It was coke. Specifically 2 grams a day! (Plus a bottle of vodka.)
Trier was as fierce, fragile and funny as ever, but refused to say anything controversial about Muslims, Muhammed cartoons or Hitler, although he was teased in the directions by interviewer, film studies professor Peter Schepelern.
Trier was also asked about the long-reported Five Obstructions project with Martin Scorsese, which, he says unfortunately will probably never happen. He says that Scorsese is the nicest guy, (and teases that he is around 120 centimeters tall), but also manic-depressive with financial obligations which stunt his involvement with this long talked about project.
Finally Trier stated again that he tries not to see any films made after he began making films himself, but that he has seen Matrix, which he thought was awesome, and he also granted that Danish Dogme masterpiece The Celebration is "a good film." He also still watches the films of Michael Haneke, whom he admires. And continues to find inspiration in the works of his greatest director heroes, Carl Th. Dreyer and Andrej Tarkovsky.
-- Free news (that might never appear elsewhere in English), simply because I like your blog.
- You're welcome.
- J
http://filmexcess.blogspot.dk/

Jason Adams said...

JD that stuff is fantastic! Thank you so much for sharing that. I am going to give it its own post, it's so good :)

Ian said...

75yrs! unbelievable. I read the novel for thie 1st time just in the past year and loved it. Hitchcoks film does it justice, a great movie of a wonderful novel.