Mission San Juan Bautista, Hollister |
Alfred Hitchcock, a comment on acting
This year Sight and Sound magazine named Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo the best film of all time. The film got mixed reviews when it was released in 1958, but ever since has been attracting scholarly attention and is now considered the classic Hitchcock film and the defining work of his career.
I enjoy the movie reviews in the New Yorker magazine, and they're entertaining even when they leave you with no desire to see the actual movie, which is often the case. But along with the current releases, there's usually a restored classic showing somewhere in the Big Apple, and a clever critic writes a review that makes you want to see it again. Or maybe for the first time. It helps me keep the Netflix queue filled with things we can look forward to watching-- that is, when the exasperating Neflix finally gets around to sending them out.
Mission Dolores, San Francisco |
The old mission locations in San Francisco and Hollister are central to the plot. Now they are all polished up, but seeing them looking so rustic in the 1950's was my favorite part of the movie. Once upon a time, John and I traversed the state of California on a mission to visit all twenty-one historic missions. One of our happiest travel memories.
Kin Novak and Jimmy Stewart, Vertigo trailer |
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