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  • ...fred Hitchcock]] site on the web, with [[Hitchcock News|news]], [[Articles|articles]], [[Hitchcock books|books]], [[Hitchcock Gallery|image galleries]], [[Mult * [[Articles]] - thousands of articles about Hitchcock, his films, and his collaborators
    3 KB (438 words) - 18:16, 24 April 2015
  • <galleryimage float="right" caption="Truffaut and Hitchcock (1962)">7429</galleryimage> ...films. [[François Truffaut]]'s subsequent [[Hitchcock (1967) by François Truffaut|book]] on the director, based on a series of interviews conducted in 1962,
    16 KB (2,273 words) - 20:47, 19 April 2015
  • ...unable to warm to either of the actors and privately griped to [[François Truffaut]] that their combined salary "of $1,500,000 is more than we have to pay for For further relevant information about this film, see also...
    11 KB (1,644 words) - 12:09, 29 March 2015
  • ...- The Daffodil|''Gloucestershire Echo'' (09/Aug/1927)]]<ref>Curiously, the articles goes on to mention a second film screening at the cinema, ''The Poacher'', The primary source of information about the film's production comes from an article Hitchcock wrote in 1937 which d
    30 KB (4,790 words) - 13:35, 2 January 2017
  • ...most of his Cahiers colleagues (among them Jean-Luc Godard and [[François Truffaut]]) were making their name in international cinema. == Hitchcock Articles ==
    1 KB (197 words) - 13:34, 2 January 2017
  • François Roland Truffaut was a French film director, screenwriter, producer, actor, and film critic, As a teenage, Truffaut regularly visited the Cinémathèque Française where he was exposed to cou
    4 KB (589 words) - 19:08, 19 August 2014
  • ...iters Jacques Rivette, Jean-Luc Godard, [[Claude Chabrol]] and [[François Truffaut]]. * {{articles}}
    904 B (122 words) - 21:51, 29 April 2015
  • ...tent eventually edited down into Truffaut's ''[["Hitchcock" - by François Truffaut|Hitchcock]]'' book. Although Truffaut could speak a little English, he hired [[Helen Scott]] (of the French Film
    8 KB (1,102 words) - 13:14, 2 January 2017
  • * keywords: ''[[Alfred Hitchcock]], [[Dial M for Murder (1954)]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Frederick Knott]], [[Grace Kelly]], [[John Williams]], [[Ray Milland]] ...to complete his studio contract; "I just did my job", he told [[François Truffaut]]. His interest in the material indeed seems to fluctuate. One senses his d
    4 KB (612 words) - 21:38, 18 January 2014
  • * keywords: ''[[Alfred Hitchcock]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Grace Kelly]], [[James Stewart]], [[John Michael Hayes]], [[Raymond Bu ...ery creative at the time, the batteries were charged," he told [[François Truffaut]] during their book-length interview. They were charged, particularly, by t
    4 KB (552 words) - 18:44, 12 April 2014
  • ...], [[Claude Chabrol]], [[Cornell Woolrich]], [[Donald Spoto]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Herman Citron]], [[James Stewart]], [[Kim Novak]], [[Lew Wasserman]], The others have become rarities, much written about by the growing body of Hitchcock admirers, but little seen. Except for ''Ve
    11 KB (1,772 words) - 07:21, 11 July 2014
  • ...9)]], [[British International Pictures]], [[Charles Bennett]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Gainsborough Pictures]], [[Gerald du Maurier]], [[Gertrude Lawrence]], ...Hitchcock and Francois Tuffaut (Aug/1962)|an interview]] with [[François Truffaut]]: "I did what I could... probably the lowest ebb in my output... a very ba
    4 KB (622 words) - 21:41, 18 January 2014
  • ..., [[Benita Hume]], [[Easy Virtue (1928)]], [[Eliot Stannard]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Gainsborough Pictures]], [[Isabel Jeans]], [[Michael Balcon]], [[New Y Hitchcock in later years told Truffaut that this was "The worst title I ever wrote". True, it has the ring of Joan
    7 KB (1,227 words) - 13:28, 17 January 2014
  • Talking to Truffaut about the dream sequences in the film, Hitchcock recalled: ...he reality, in solid, unblurred images.''<ref>[["Hitchcock" - by François Truffaut]], page 51</ref></p></blockquote>
    10 KB (1,464 words) - 20:26, 20 February 2017
  • ...the film's scenario began and the director's discussions with [[François Truffaut]] in 1962 might not be a true reflection of the events.</ref> ...nia'']] whilst a [[The Daily News (Perth) (30/May/1928) - untitled article about Champagne|contemporary newspaper account]] says filming took place aboard t
    10 KB (1,488 words) - 09:45, 15 July 2015
  • When Hitchcock discussed the film with [[François Truffaut]], he talked about two scenes in particular. Firstly, he expressed pride in the scene where t For further relevant information about this film, see also...
    10 KB (1,504 words) - 12:01, 29 March 2015
  • ...l. Two unknown detectives, in the very last shot, were to be shown talking about the girls they were going to take out to Lyons. Coda.", however this was se ...at he filmed these process shots in secret{{-}}"The producers knew nothing about the Schüfftan process and they might have raised objections"{{-}}this clai
    16 KB (2,477 words) - 13:27, 2 January 2017
  • ...ing it "a very banal picture" and stating that the "only point of interest about that movie is that it was my last silent one."<ref>{{HT}}, page 61</ref> For further relevant information about this film, see also...
    6 KB (835 words) - 07:16, 6 July 2016
  • ...u Maurier]], [[Ethel Lina White]], [[Francis M. Nevins, Jr.]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Grace Kelly]], [[James Stewart]], [[New York City, New York]], [[North A European poster for Truffaut's The Bride Wore Black, based on a Cornell Woolrich story.
    15 KB (2,391 words) - 11:17, 8 February 2014
  • ...[Dial M for Murder (1954)]], [[Foreign Correspondent (1940)]], [[François Truffaut]], [[James Bond]], [[London, England]], [[Marnie (1964)]], [[Norman Bates]] The filmmaker was about to shoot a sequence that would find his schoolgirl heroine assailed by thug
    9 KB (1,350 words) - 18:11, 15 April 2015

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