The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 13, 1980-Page 9 ======rts f..,... .e ;:fr"n+r:s"i; : t',ya; y," , ~ : : v:< kt r-: u+ ::. ;:; " x x::,:::,::;~iy; -," .;. " :} : .;",4:ia~ '. . i< f 'f ;"tvir5" i+'Ti': >s':4:"nt" .?r .' :+ , +.}t.'; t:.;i ' Hitchcock's pop-art for the ages By OWEN GLEIBERMAN For me, seeing Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious was like getting stoned for the first time. Words and images whiz- zed by so quickly that, as if in a nar- cotic-induced stupor, it was hard to register my reactions before encoun- tering some new sensori stimulus. The movie sucked me in likea whirlpooland wouldn't let go. Afterwards, it was only with amazement that I could recall sit- ting in the theater. I'd had a true roller- coaster experience-once it ended, the film didn't seem quite real. And that's when I knew I had to have more. I was a junkie, hooked on Hitchcock, the man who singlehandedly kurned the art of filmmaking into a practical joke. He told the same joke over and over, but his audiences never tired of hearing it. That was because their own response was the punchline. Hitchcock is special to me in a way. that no other director can touch. Not because he transcended trash with his pulp thrillers and banality-of-evil themes; he just pushed trash to its most crazed limits. Less than two decades after Psycho, Talking Heads came out with a song called "Psycho Killer," which turned Hitchcock's Norman Bates into a hilarious pop icon. I doubt whether the group could have brought it off with, say, Dostoyevsky's Raskalnikov: But they could make a hard-driving boogie burlesque out of the scariest movie ever made because Hitchcock had already taken them half way there. He'd made Psycho the ultimate movie joke-an Oedipal one- liner-by showing everyone in the audience how deliriously im- pressionable they were. IN INTERVIEWS, Hitchcock took pains to explain that he cared only for "form," not content, and that his real interest in directing was not actors or stories, but "putting all _the little pieces of film together." With an at- titude like that, how could he possibly have taken his job very seriously? His cameo appearances were outrageously snide; they threw the audience out of the movie just long enough for the director to, thumb his nose at them. He made fools of us all, or, rather, he let us make fools of our- selves, by demonstrating that grand silliness such as a thriller with hero and heroine chained together by handcuffs or a chase scene on Mount Rushmore' were enough to leave us breathless. Other directors during Hitchcock's heyday trafficked in silliness, too. Most of them were probably only too aware of it. But Alfred Hitchcock was the only American director who brought his awareness of the trashiness of Hollywood corn to the movies them- selves. And that makes all the differen- ce to someone like me, who can't really look at an old Hollywood movie without feeling like I'm wandering through an antique shop. Somewhere along the line, the "old" Hollywood shifted into the "new" Hollywood, and the soul of an artform was altered. What I'm talking about isn't a question of "style," of studio systems or acting techniques, but a basic change in sensibility: As the six- ties approached, American films began to reflect the fact that we no longer thought of ourselves as an ordered society. QUITE SIMPLY, the old Hollywood did not deal in dangerous goods. A movie wouldn't plunge you into the. abyss without guaranteeing a safe return above ground; the loose ends were tied up, or at least laid in a nice, neat bundle. Even the greatest of the pre-new Hollywood movies had what Pauline Kael termed "rhymed plots." The classic Hollywood cinema, be it Citizen Kane, Stagecoach, the Screwball comedies, the Capra epics, or the horror classics, all shared an essential symmetrical design and smooth-as-silk pacing. These movies (and European ones as well) were, exhilerating because of their lickety- Maltese Falcon, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, White Heat, Casablanca, The African Queen, or even a hunk of patriotic mush like Young Mr. Lincoln any day of the week. But as children of the sixties and seventies, most of us campus kids have rejected a lot of what the old movies are telling us, so it's the musty aesthetic experience of art minus real interaction with the value systems behind it. 'he vision of Indian- white man relations in something like John Ford's The Searchers is no longer a harmless anachronism; it's an ob- scenely racist lie. And how much meaning can machismo, John Wayne or together on television's graveyard movie slots. ME, I was weaned on the new Hollywood, and it flows through my veins as surely as old movies and WW II-era nostalgia flow through my paren- ts'. I'd rather watch Mean Streets or The Conversation or almost any of Robert Altman's movies than the best things that Howard Hawks, John Ford, John Huston, or Frank Capra ever made. The basic formula polish of those old films hasn't exactly been rubbed out; it's there in Rocky, Norma Rae, and Breaking Away, and on television it's legion. But haven't the best American directors-men like Altman, Coppola, Brian De Palma, Arthur Penn, and Martin Scorsese-shown us that movies can be so much more? Discarding rhythmed plots, covering over the old formulas with richness and details and more naturalistic rhythms, these directors exploded the limits of the movie medium. They made connections with what people were saying and feeling, but that few had probably ex- pected from the movies. As such, they'll always remain greater, more audacious to me than people like Ford, Huston, Capra and the rest, who made the best of what was given them rather than charging out on their own (either that, or they tried to do the latter and got crushed by the then-monolithic studio system). Which brings us back to Hitchcock, who was probably the most purely for- mulaic movie-maker of them all. In classic Hitchcock movies like Notorious, The Thirty-Nine Steps, Lifeboat, Strangers on a Train, North By Northwest, or (his masterpiece) Psycho, there isn't a moment-not a line of dialogue, a shift in camera angle, a musical motif-that doesn't seem preordained. Hitchcock in- tegrated every cinematic element at his disposal with an ease that made it all seem magical; he was the Rimsky- Korsakov of directors, a supreme dramatic orchestrator. He didn't just rhyme the plots: He rhymed the scenes, the dialogue, the camera movemen- ts-he made seamless mechanical poetry out of the most basic Hollywood methodology. AND YET Hitchcock will always be one of my very favorites, because all that formula stuff was, for him a SeeHIITUIICOCK, page 10 Stranger on a train split timing and simple, Swiss-watch precision. The pieces always fit together, and that was a huge part of the fun. We always know whose.side we're on in a western of crime melodrama, and watching the movie is a gloriously simplified experience-there's a kind of purity about it. When a friend of mine tells me he adores a creakily predic- table old thing like High Noon, I know it's not emotional turbulence he's after; rather, it's measured involvement, emotional response with the same un- thinking assurance we get when we're watching the ballteam we've rooted for for twenty years. Ambiguity would destroy the symmetry, would wreck the basic old Hollywood-formula charm that puts the messiness of experience under the light of shiny pop clarity. It's easy to enjoy that clarity years after what it says about society has been discarded. I'd take in The Humphrey Bogart-style, have to a generation who idolizes Woody Allen because he can tell jokes? We didn't grow up watching Bogart. We grew up watching Woody Allen watching Bogart (and, ultimately, rejecting him). A lot of those old movies are just third- generation pop images now, especially when they're randomly mashed The AnnmArbor Fixn Copert*e Presents at Add A: $1.50 Tuesday, May 13 THE DESPERATE HOURS (William Wyler, 1955) 7:00-AUD A HUMPHREY BOGART gives a sorching performance as one of three escaped convicts hiding from the hent in the home of a well respected family. This was Bogie's last gangster role and he played it with the wild intensity that char- acterized his stellar performance as Duke Mantee in "THE PETRIFIED FOREST." Also stars FREDERIC MARCH, RAY COLLINS. HIGH SIERRA (Raoul Walsh, 1941) 9:04-AUD A An action-packed gangster film by the director of "WHITE HEAT." HUMPHREY BOGART plays Mad Dog Earle, a killer on the run from the police, who is befriended too late by IDA LUPINO. The superb cast also features ANNE LESLIE & ARTHUR KENNEDY. Tomorrow: Roman Polanski's CUL-DE-SAC and ROSEMARY'S BABY at Aud A