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  • ** [[:Category:Articles about Alfred Hitchcock|articles]] about... ** [[:Category:Articles by Alfred Hitchcock|articles written]] by...
    7 KB (861 words) - 08:04, 17 December 2014
  • Although Hitchcock's first two films received critical approval from the press, Gainsborough's distributor [[C.M. Woolf]] felt they lacked comme ...933]]. Whilst subsequently working on the independent production {{Waltzes from Vienna}}, Hitchcock reestablished his acquaintanceship with [[Michael Balco
    16 KB (2,273 words) - 20:47, 19 April 2015
  • The [[1000 Frames of Hitchcock]] project provides 1000 frames from each of Hitchcock's 52 major surviving movies. ...umber Seventeen]], [[Hitchcock Gallery: Waltzes from Vienna (1934)|Waltzes from Vienna]], [[Hitchcock Gallery: The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934)|The Man Who
    6 KB (752 words) - 15:33, 11 October 2014
  • ...o the [[Hitchcock Journal Articles Project]] and the [[Hitchcock Newspaper Articles Project]]. == Site Articles ==
    9 KB (1,104 words) - 20:22, 18 April 2015
  • ...create a library of images which can be used to illustrate blog posts, web articles and reviews, etc. * [[1000 Frames of Waltzes from Vienna (1934)|Waltzes from Vienna (1934)]]
    5 KB (588 words) - 08:24, 22 October 2014
  • * ''[[Strangers on a Train]]'' (1951) - writer (uncredited) == Articles ==
    1 KB (143 words) - 18:58, 23 April 2015
  • ...Cinémathèque Française where he was exposed to countless foreign films from around the world. It was here that he became familiar with American cinema ...aut and offered him a job as a writer for ''[[Cahiers du cinéma]]'' (est. 1951). Truffaut soon gained a reputation for unforgiving and brutal reviews, ear
    4 KB (589 words) - 19:08, 19 August 2014
  • ...é Bazin]], Jacques Doniol-Valcroze and Joseph-Marie Lo Duca. It developed from the earlier magazine ''Revue du Cinéma'' and involved members of two Paris * {{articles}}
    904 B (122 words) - 21:51, 29 April 2015
  • ...he film starred Stewart as Scottie, a former police investigator suffering from acrophobia, who develops an obsession with a woman he is shadowing. Scottie * [[:Category:Articles about James Stewart|Articles about James Stewart]]
    4 KB (541 words) - 19:45, 8 April 2015
  • ...purchased from [[Famous Players-Lasky]] when the American company withdrew from producing films in Britain{{-}}were demolished in 2002 and replaced by thre ...British Picture Corporation Limited|Gaumont-British Picture Corporation]] from 1927, with Balcon as Director of Production for both studios. Whilst [[Gaum
    2 KB (235 words) - 22:55, 12 August 2017
  • ...production on low-budget films for the British market. He then moved away from the day-to-day running of the studio, in order to build up a national chain * {{articles}}
    4 KB (594 words) - 22:34, 12 August 2017
  • ...s' Playhouse, 25/Jan/1951)|Spellbound (Screen Directors' Playhouse, 25/Jan/1951)]]{{-}}cast * {{articles}}
    2 KB (309 words) - 19:34, 9 April 2015
  • [[Category: Articles about Strangers on a Train (1951)]] [[Category: Articles from 1960 to 1969]]
    589 B (83 words) - 17:27, 19 October 2012
  • ...Olympic sculling champion. Her interest in acting, however, may have come from an uncle, George Kelly, who was a popular playwright. She studied at the Am ...rama, ''Mogambo'', as a reserved Englishwoman who entices Clark Gable away from the more animal attractions of Ava Gardner. Her performance brought an Osca
    5 KB (846 words) - 14:30, 17 January 2014
  • '''(c) The Times''' (06/Aug/1951) ...Hitchcock]], [[Marion Lorne]], [[Robert Walker]], [[Strangers on a Train (1951)]]''
    3 KB (468 words) - 09:42, 17 January 2014
  • ...Coward]], [[Rear Window (1954)]], [[Rope (1948)]], [[Strangers on a Train (1951)]], [[The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934)]], [[The Trouble with Harry (1955)]] Perhaps it was from a surfeit of ''hommages'', rather than capricious ill-will, that [[Alfred H
    7 KB (1,227 words) - 13:28, 17 January 2014
  • ...Shadow of a Doubt (1943)]], [[Spellbound (1945)]], [[Strangers on a Train (1951)]], [[The 39 Steps (1935)]], [[The Birds (1963)]], [[The Farmer's Wife (192 ...other film, ''[[Always Tell Your Wife]]'', when the director fell ill, and from then on he worked full-time in the cinema, first as designer, assistant, di
    12 KB (1,882 words) - 14:34, 17 January 2014
  • The next Romulus film, The African Queen (1951) was not only a tremendous success now accepted as a film classic, but is a ...with Freda Jackson repeating her West End stage performance as a landlady-from-hell, Cosh Boy (1953), which dealt with the topical juvenile delinquency pr
    12 KB (1,999 words) - 21:16, 12 April 2015
  • ...theatre during his spare time after they had moved to Vienna. He ran away from home and joined a theatrical company at the age of 17, and though after thi ...e Mask of Dimitrios'', and ''Three Strangers'', both directed by Negulesco from scripts by Huston.
    5 KB (843 words) - 12:52, 17 January 2014
  • ...sed for such films as his adaptation of Offenbach's The Tales of Hoffmann (1951), which was called "a spectacular failure." Like most of his films, its moo ...ife, Frances Reidy in 1983, Powell attended the premiere for Coppola's One From the Heart at Radio City Music Hall in New York. Asked by a reporter if he h
    7 KB (1,067 words) - 19:47, 7 February 2015

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