-12B eMichigan Daily - We~nd, etc. Magazine - Thurs~y, February 17, 2000 0 The Michigan Dail}- Weekend, etc. H ITCHCOCK Continued from Page 5B themselves, that is. After that, they're complicit in Jeff's shttle play-act, working as his legs, help- ing him with the "investigation." The mystery is the least fascinating part of the story, though; if "Vertigo" is Hitchcock's ode to identity and obses- sion, then "Rear Window" is his ode to the fine art not of moviemaking but of moviegoing. It starts with the opening credits, which play over Jeff's window as if it were a screen. And it continues with ,Hitchcock's shooting style, in which all shots -- save a necessary few at the end when Lisa and Stella go on the prowl - occur from a perspective clearly anchored in the apartment, just as the audience is rooted to their seats. Jeff is obsessed with watching, obsering, analyzing: He makes deduc- tions, sure, but his primary role is that of silent observer as he imagines scenarios for his neighbors. Even his role before his accident, his photographic career, pegs him as a watcher. He can't help himself any more than we can help our- selves from shelling out $7.50 to watch him watch. But let's ignore these heady, self- reflexive themes for a moment. Let's instead concentrate on what the consum- mate director gives, us without requiring any thought or participation. It is just a moment, a blink-and-you'll-miss-it shot. In the waning daylight that filters into his apartment, Lisa Carol Fremont, so refined, so calm and cool, so impossibly beautiful it's enough to make you weep at just the thought of her, leans forward over the wheelchair-captive Jeff. And she kisses him, grazes his lips so lightly that Jeff wonders if it isn't a dream he's hav- ing, if this woman isn't a fantasy from which he'll wake up. "Who are you?" he asks, caught somewhere between sleep and awake. In a movie caught in the real- ity of our interactions and silent observa- tions of others, this is an enchanted moment. When it's gone, you wonder if you too didn't imagine it. You didn't, although you will later after all other memory of the film fades. You'll think about it and your heart will skip a beat. You'll think about it and you'll forget about every crappy schlock- fest that captured the box office last year, last decade, last century. You'll think about it and understand "timeless" and "classic" and every other superlative heaped on this film over the years. In that one moment, Hitchcock, the true master of suspense, transcends even himself. There is an entire relationship - and an entire lifetime - in that magical moment. "Rear Window" is a movie that people can spend an entire lifetime trying to make, or an entire lifetime trying to find. Make it a part of your life, too. etc From the Vault - Alfred Hitchcock Master of suspense's restored 'Window' By Erin Podolsky Daily Arts Writer I can't remember the first time I saw "Rear Window." I can't remember the last time I saw it, either. The viewings all run into one another to the point where all I can remember is the movie itself, timeless and classic in all the ways we've grown to assign the phrase "a timeless classic." That's why "Rear Window" is one of the very best in a whole slew of bests in Alfred Hitchcock's distin- guished directorial career - that's why "Rear Window" is one of the very best, period, over the lifetime of an art form. It doesn't depend on certain viewing conditions or a confluence of events in our real lives to achieve its greatness. It simply has it. End of story. Just as they restored Hitchcock's "Vertigo" in 1996, veteran restoration team Robert Harris and James Katz have lavished the same attention on his other most universally recognized opus. "Rear Window" may even be a more important film work, given its central themes of watching and creat- ing fictions and their significance for images seen on a screen. The story of "Rear Window" is sim- ple and contained, while its thematic content is anything but. Photographer L. B. Jefferies (James Stewart, Hitchcock's noble surrogate in four of his films) 'ias a broken leg, cast and all. He is trapped in his sweltering apartment in the dog days York City summer. A borr he watches all those around his neighbors as a silent soy keep his mind occupied. His girlfriend, fashion songbird Lisa Fremont (Gi divinity bottled and made tises him for his voyeurisrr she gets a look through his she too is spellbound. His s earth nurse, Stella (Theln takes a more working clas Cour esy o' Paramount Pctures This magic moment: Grace Kelly and James Stewart in "Rear Window." 1 . ,_". 3uchTrieYo (othrTimesYogo) hby MnrvAnn A Pharac Universities Activities Center C -i i C < E N Th E CoM Edi, A NIGHT OF SKETCH AND IMPRDVl ONE NIGHT0 Mi cm iiri L eag ue Urdaiici gro Thursday, Fe bruary 17.. 20 C) ( 8:3tJm Free Acdm issioni Sorry . -rno sop for youz" _ ,i e Medication free women, suffering from depression between the ages of 18 and 48 are needed for a 6-10 week treatment study for depression. Free medication and clinic visits during the study. For more information call (734)936-8726. geXz~sed student Enviro, So sat + Casah o~ ,,jo *Stop i to fl °i I- GMIIAN TfLERJN O ,wwtefwWd.umkth.edu . Convenient Campus3b ..... .... ... .... - ;,4. r 1i ..n Buy 3 Get 1 FREE C A L L N 4lf d B e e R 800/328- wwwclasstrav N al