Thursday, April 25, 2013

Rear Window




Rear Window
1954
Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Starring: James Stewart, Grace Kelly, Thelma Ritter, Raymond Burr

Before I had ever laid my eyes upon a single Hitchcock film (and I shamefully admit I hadn’t seen any of his work prior to working my way deliberately through 1001 Movies), I really had no idea what he was about as a director.  I vaguely thought he made scary movies, predecessors of movies like Friday the 13th.  Now, having seen all of Hitchcock’s films from 1001 Movies and a handful of others to boot, I honestly don’t know if I’d describe any of them as “scary.”  And Rear Window certainly isn’t frightening.  It’s got moments where it’s tense and moments where it’s thrilling, to be certain, but not scary.  But, despite my expectations being completely wrong, I think I fell in love with Hitchcock’s Rear Window the most because it’s so many things.  It’s funny, it’s compelling, it’s sexy, it’s tense, it’s thrilling… it’s all of these things, none of which I initially expected, and all of which work and blend together perfectly.

“Jeff” Jeffries (Stewart) is an action photographer who travels the world.  Unfortunately, he’s currently recuperating in his Greenwich Village apartment waiting for his broken leg to heal before he can get out on assignment again.  He’s driven crazy with cabin fever, but his fashion model-slash-socialite girlfriend Lisa (Kelly) is thrilled that Jeff is homebound for awhile.  She’s desperately in love with him, but he isn’t sure their lifestyles are a match.  Soon, though, Jeff gets distracted from his relationship woes by watching the lives of his neighbors across the courtyard of his apartment building.  His interest turns into an obsession when he thinks he sees his neighbor across the way (Burr) murder his wife, but did Jeff really see what he think he saw?

  
My heart bursts with adoration for this film.  It’s so good.  All of it, it’s so good.  So, gosh, what can I say about it?  I guess I simply have to enumerate the bits about it I love.


1.      Jeff and Lisa’s relationship.  Smack dab in the middle of the stultifying 1950s, Hitchcock manages to present to us a complicated relationship between two strong-willed people.  I sense that Jeff’s instincts are correct, that he and Lisa are fundamentally different people, and that if they were to marry, those differences would ultimately prove very difficult to overcome.  At the same time, however, there is a great love and attraction between them.  Lisa is hopelessly in love with Jeff, and cannot break herself from him, despite the fact that at one point in the film, she vocalizes the knowledge that it probably would be for the best for them to split up.  

Add on top of a complicated relationship the even more complicated arousals caused by Jeff’s, and then Lisa’s, voyeurism, and Jeff and Lisa grow even more complex.  As both are sucked into the soap opera of Jeff’s neighbors’ lives, he finds himself falling more and more in love with her.  The simple answer is that this has happened because he is happy to find she has a flaw, but I think it’s more than that.  If Jeff was looking for a flaw in Lisa’s life, he could have easily found one elsewhere (for one, she’s stubborn – we see that before she starts peeping at others).  No, Jeff has some sort of erotic response to Lisa’s enjoyment of watching others.  I love the way Stewart smiles, like a giddy little school boy, when he glows at a gushing Lisa just back from doing a bit of illegal sleuthing.  It’s more than a little dirty; it’s messy, as a matter of fact.  Theirs is not a simple relationship.  And the finale of the film hardly states clearly what will happen to Jeff and Lisa.  Will they stay together?  Will they split up?  Can they find a way to be happy?  Their happy ending is hardly guaranteed.  I love it.  I love them.


2.      Voyeurism.  Oh lordy, but Hitchcock knew that deep down, so many of us like to watch, and he just splashes it up on the screen in broad daylight in Rear Window.  Just like Stella, Jeff’s nurse (played immaculately by Ritter), we judge Jeff at first for his peeping tom habit.  But then, it doesn’t take us long at all to get completely caught up in the world of others, and we get annoyed at the “real life people” who try to knock down Jeff’s theories of what happened to the neighbor’s wife.  I can remember being five or six years old and raising my bedroom window curtain at night to look out at the neighbor’s house.  I don’t know what I was hoping to see, but I knew I was hoping to see something.  Anything.  As Jane Austen says, “Who are we, but to make sport for our neighbors, and laugh at them in our turn.”  This vein runs deep throughout the human experience, and it’s both universal and shameful.  Voyeurism – Rear Window exploits this in spades.  It’s a fascinating movie because of it, and it also makes me feel a little naughty.  Hitchcock knew this. 

The sense of spying is palpable throughout, but Hitchcock does it smartly by playing Jeff’s subjective observations against the facts of what we see.  Jeff is quick to link simple observations together with wild conjecture and we are inclined to believe him, until we remember one vital scene where we see something Jeff doesn’t see.  It’s a clever inclusion in the film; we are thinking we’re getting Jeff’s first person account, but this one small sequence is enough to upset that.  Can we trust Jeff?  Can we trust the crazy stories he’s coming up with?  The only way to answer these 
 questions, though, is to look more.  To keep spying.


3.      The performances.  It would be hard for me to come up with a Jimmy Stewart performance I enjoy more than that of Jeff Jeffries, and I cannot come up with a Grace Kelly performance I like more than that of Lisa Fremont.  Stewart’s Jeff is likeable but hardly heroic.  He is a bit of a troubling hero in that the entire film is about his growing obsession, and that obsession puts him in great danger.  Unlike Vertigo, however, where Stewart’s character crosses a line and becomes odious to me, Jeff is sympathetic if not a little off his rocker.  Stewart is great at playing a bit crazy and a bit frustrated.  Jeff’s injuries also represent his lack of power and Jeff slowly realizes how vulnerable he really is.  Stewart does a great job.  As for Kelly, her introduction is downright breathtaking, as she leans in, glowing and dewy, and plants a slow motion kiss on Jimmy Stewart.  She then gracefully walks around the apartment lighting lamps as she speaks her name.  It’s just a gorgeous film introduction; you can see how Hitchcock was infatuated with her.  But it’s not just her presentation I love; I love Lisa’s character.  I love how strong she is, how daring she is, but most of all, how horny she is.  I have never seen Grace Kelly so downright into a guy as Lisa is into Jeff.  No other director had the guts to give Kelly material like this one, and I really respond to her performance here because of it.



4.      The many, many changes in tone that never seem forced or incongruent.  Rear Window is like one gigantic smorgasbord of a film, picking and choosing and shifting constantly.  Because it’s all about spying on neighbors, there are many different stories taking place at the same time, and yet it works.  Jeff makes an offhand crack and it’s funny and I laugh.  The neighbor across the way, the one we think murdered his wife, is behaving oddly and I am nervous.  The other neighbors from the fifth floor wheel their dog down to the garden in basket and I am warmed by their eccentricity.  Lisa pulls out her slinky overnight bag and I chuckle at the sexy arousal.  But most of all, I see Miss Lonely Hearts across the way and I am sad.  I feel all of these things in Rear Window – happy, thrilled, nervous, uncertain, scintillated, and melancholic.  Hitchcock does none of these feelings halfway; when he wants you to laugh, you really laugh.  The scene is really funny.  When he wants you to feel sad, it’s really sad.  The stuff with Miss Lonely Hearts could have been a movie unto itself.  I feel that storyline with an acute pain; it’s so sad and painful yet beautiful in its melancholia as well.  That Hitchcock is able to pull all of these feelings together so well, with such grace, in one film, is astounding.  



5.      The soundtrack.  As a fan of classical music, I always pay attention to music in film.  It’s something I notice and like to think about.  Rear Window is so damn smart in its soundtrack, in that it doesn’t exactly have one.  That is to say, there is definitely a soundtrack, but not a traditional one.  A composer was hired (NOT Herrmann, interestingly enough) but the score he wrote is one of background noises, because that’s what the soundtrack to Rear Window is.  Given that the entire story is that of Jeff Jeffries looking out his apartment window in the Manhattan summer, Hitchcock made a tremendous decision to avoid traditional scoring and instead rely completely on ambient noise.  That’s all we hear.  If the other apartments are silent, there is no background music.  If another apartment is playing music, then there is music.  But there is always the distant sound of the cabs and cars and street sounds.  I like this decision quite a bit; it reminds me of the times I’ve spent in Manhattan when it’s impossible to escape the noises and hubbub of the world around you.




In closing, I need to add that Rear Window is a film that everyone should try to see on the big screen.  There are certain classics that you obviously realize you should take the chance to see in a theater if it comes up – films like Gone With the Wind, Lawrence of Arabia, or 2001: A Space Odyssey are no-brainers.  Of course you’ll see it on the big screen if you can.  But Rear Window isn’t as obvious a choice.  Several years ago, the Dryden had a double feature, North by Northwest and Rear Window (oh boy, that was a great night), and of course I went.  I was beyond surprised, however, to discover how much Rear Window changed by seeing it in a theater.  The major theme of the film, voyeurism, is amplified to a truly remarkable level with the magnification that comes with the big screen.  You can see an amazing level of detail in the neighbors’ apartments when watching it nice and big and blown up.  It really reinforces the idea of peering into someone else’s life, and as such, magnifies the effect of the whole movie.  Honestly, if this is a movie you at all enjoy, GO SEE IT IN A THEATER if you EVER get the chance.  It’s just not the same as seeing it on your little TV (even if your TV, like our TV, is quite a large TV). 

Arbitrary Rating: 10/10.  I never get tired of this one.  Favorite Hitchcock, right here.

8 comments:

  1. This is in my Top 5 Hitchcock films for sure. I think it's just so darned ingenious. Sometimes I am amazed at how you zero in on the exact things I love (or hate) about a film! I'm so jealous of your big-screen experience with Rear Window and North By North West.

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    1. I will never take the Dryden theater for granted because it's allowed me to have some spectacular cinematic experiences. I've actually now seen "Rear Window" there twice, and both times it was fabulous.

      I think it's easy to like "Rear Window." It's just a thoroughly likeable film. And thanks for the comment!

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  2. It's not my favorite Hitchcock, but that's because North by Northwest is my favorite movie ever. Hard to compete in that regard.

    It is a damn fine film, though. Every now and then I'll have someone recommend Disturbia to me, to which I respond, "I liked it a lot better when it starred Jimmy Stewart and was directed by Hitchcock."

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    1. Yes, I knew you sided with North by Northwest. Seriously, you would've loved that double feature.

      I'm actually intrigued to see Disturbia knowing that it IS such a blatant redoing of Rear Window.

      Personally, I always enjoy The Simpsons episode where Bart breaks his leg and has his Rear Window moment.

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  3. This is probably my favorite Hitchcock movie. And I don't think Grace Kelly has ever looked better in any other film I've seen of hers.

    You mentioned the Simpsons doing a Rear Window episode. It might interest you to know that Castle just did a Rear Window-like story for their 100th episode, and yes, Richard Castle is the one with the injured leg looking out his window.

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    1. Yes, I heard that - my parents are Castle fans, and my dad told me about it! I can't wait to get to that episode!

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  4. Agreed all along. While I am not sure it is my favorite Hitchcock it is certainly up there and you are absolutely right that it is a film where all that is Hitchcock fall into place.

    When I lived in China the only way to get films was to go down to the local movie pusher to buy pirate DVD's. Television was only in Chinese and streaming was not an option. The DVD's you would pay buy the number of discs included with a standard price of 10 RMB (1,3$) a piece. We bought a lot of DVD's (and left them in China) and one of them was Rear Window. It was the first time I saw it and I marvelled at it. It was the best of the films we got there and if it had not been a pirate DVD I would have brought it home with me. We saw it several times there and now I cannot wait to get to 1954, which will happen in, uhhmmm... 2-3 years..

    Dunno if I can wait...

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    1. Rear Window is such a special movie. I can absolutely understand you watching it many times.

      "The local movie pusher"

      That's a funny phrase, and certainly not one that comes up in the States!

      Seriously, I don't know how you have the patience to go by year. I totally understand why you're going by year, because the patterns and trends and evolution of cinema is so apparent that way, but I just plain lack the patience for it. Good on you.

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