Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 14, 1972 Page Two THE MiCHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 14, 1972 FOREST cinema FIRES BURN hitchcock bounces back... MORE r~ THAN TREES Frenzy makes it By RICHARD GLATZER When a, director is as prolific as Alfred Hitchcock, it's almost inevitable that his batting aver- age be somewhat uneven over the years. And I guess it's just as inevitable that some critics, will always be there, ready to predict an artist's decline after one or two failures and just as ready to proclaim the artist's miraculous return to greatness when he bounces back with a worthwhile film. Hitchcock is no stranger to fickle critics; George Perry writes in The Films of Alfred Hitchcock that as early as 1934 once-pessimistic critics call- ed The Man Who Knew Too Much the director's comeback. Well, I'll confess my sin right off ; after Marnie, Torn Curtain, and most especially Topaz, I too was ready to count the Master of Suspense among the ranks of the once-great, now cinematical- ly senile directors (De Sica, Ford, Capra). Not that every critic shares my opinion of those films. Robin Wood, in his book, Hitchcock's Films, calls The Bird and Marnie the culmination and highest points of Hitch- cock's career (as of 1964), and even goes so far as to label those two and the preceding three films masterpieces. All of which he attempts to justify by painstakingly dissect- ing each film in turn. The Birds he sees as a profound and hu- man tale about several isolated and confused people who change when attacked by the "concrete embodiment of the arbitrary and the unpredictable" - the birds. Marnie he views with no less respect; "This is of all his films the one that most clearly formu- lates his (Hitchcock's) moral po- sition and most decisively, in a positive form, embodies his pre- occupation with sexual relation- ships." I wouldn't care to argue with Wood's analysis of these films; I once actually took the time to watch The Birds with Wood's in- terpretation in mind, and much of what he says seems to me to hold water. What bothers me about Hitch- cock's films of the 60's, though, is not their lack of profoundity. Their failure is a much more basic and primary one; they just do not succeed on the simple level of entertainment. Marnie to my mind is cheesy and unconvincing. The amateur- ish painted backgrounds and cheap camerawork that Wood describes as stylized is more likely Hitchcock's means of deal- ing with the worst major studio around, Universal. Marnie her- self might possibly be meant to represent, "The quintessence of neuroticism," as Wood says she does (I rather doubt it); for me, she's simply a bore. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class passage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by earrier, $11 by mall. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $.50 local mail tin Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign>. Give me Hitchcock's less am- bitious, infinitely more exciting and successful films, films like North by Northwest, The Thirty- Nine Steps, and The Lady Van- ishes, anyday. Granted they are not particularly profound. What they do have is all sorts of tech- nical excellence, a consistently interesting world view, and all sorts of interesting bits of shtick. Mark van Doren, writing in 1937, accurately described Hitchcock's British films as "nothing but de- tail, and all of it good." But most importantly, those films were fascinating and refreshing, a hell of a lot of fun to watch- something his films of the sixties were not. And something Frenzy defi- nitely is. In fact, several critics have compared Hitchcock's latest to those earlier British films. They do seem to have some things in common. All the tech- nical excellencies H i t c h c o c k seemed incapable of during the 60's, for example - a witty, script, fine camerawork, a uni- formly convincing cast, careful production. FOR A GROOVY ... weekend with your T.V., look on Page 8 for The Daily's in- stant review of all the weekend movies. Then too, both The Thirty-Nine Steps and Frenzy incorporate a somewhat similar Hitchcock for- mula; circumstantial evidence incriminates a perfectly inocent man, who must then fight time, the police, and the real criminal as he tries to bring the villain to justice. This formula has in- herent in it certain important elements of the director's unique world view, elements that be- come more distinct as Hitch- cock's career progresses. Whet- ther in The Thirty-Nine Steps, North by Northwest, Psycho, or The Birds, Hitchcock's universe is a precarious, unordered, amoral, almost perverse one. In The Thirty-Nine Steps, a man harbors a frightened woman only to become incriminated when she is murdered. In Psycho, Marion Crane fin- ally decides to return the money she -has stolen . . . and then decides to take a shower. As Wood points out, Hitchcock has the birds tin the movie of the same name) attack school chil- dren to show just how senseless this violent force is. And now, in Frenzy, Richard Blaney (Jon Finch), on the basis of purely circumstantial evidence, is jailed as an insane sex murderer. Not only in this once respect does Frenzy reflect Hitchcock's vision of an amoral universe. Blaney in the past has suffered for no seeming reason. Having fought valiantly for his country, he returns to England, marries, and opens a roadhouse-only to be divorced and broke, working as a bartender a decade later. And Blaney is not the sole re- ceiver of the rough blows Fate deals. Brenda Blaney, a seem- ingly generous, considerate wo- man, is raped and murdered. And perhaps most ironically of all, Blaney's barmaid-girlfriend, Babs, winningly played by Anna Massey, swears to her boyfriend not to tell anyone his where- abouts, "Cross me 'eart and 'ope to die." Hitchcock has Ro- bert Rusk (Barry Foster, fruit merchandiser, friend to Blaney, and sex murderer, ask Babs as to Blaney's whereabouts. Babs refuses to tell . . . then walks away with Rusk to her death. All very much in keeping with the world view expressed in Hitchcock's earlier work. Yet there is something very distinct- ly 1972 about Frenzy. For one thing, it is an important part of Hitchcock's technique that he be always one step ahead of his audience, and, as we become familiar with Hitch's old tricks, it is obviously necessary that he move on to new ones. The first half hour of Frenzy, for in- stance, is pretty much one big red herring, much more like Suspicion and The Lodger than Thirty-Nine Steps. We are constantly made to suspect that it is Blaney who is the real murderer, yet, while we are being led on, we constantly think it is we who are outwit- ting Hitchcock, and not vice versa. Take the scene in which Blaney nurses a drink in the background while two gentlemen discuss the sex murders current- ly occurring at the bar, in the foreground. Very ironic, I thought, while watching this; two men discuss a crime while, unknown to them, the criminal is directly behind them. Yet Hitchcock, of course, is playing games with us; sev- eral minutes later, Blaney is revealed to be the innocent hero, wrongly accused of his wife's murder. Part of Hitchcock's strategy in keeping one step ahead of us is his expectation that his audi- ence will, after having seen his recent bombs, distrust his taste and his movie-making ability. The very funny scene in the po- tato truck, for example, Rusk fights with a corpse for his tie clip, clutched in a rigor mortis frozen fist. Black comedy for sure, but exceptionally tastefully done. Then, after vainly trying to unclench that fist, Rusk pulls out his pocket knife. See WHO, Page 9 U. of M. DEPARTMENT HEADS HELP YOUR NEW FACULTY %vSCOVei& D D rbO ' We have compiled over 20 items helpful to the homebuying newcomer to Ann Arbor. Call or write Peter Allen, 769-2606 for this housing portfolio -- yours without cost or obligation. THE ARBOR OAKS CORPORATION 2310 W. 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