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  • * {{Hitchcock's Films Revisited (1989) by Robin Wood}} ...- by Robin Wood|Strangers on a Train]]<br />{{-}}in {{A Hitchcock Reader (1989) edited by Marshall Deutelbaum & Leland Poague}}<br />{{-}}and {{A Hitchcoc
    3 KB (373 words) - 13:18, 2 January 2017
  • ...o the [[Hitchcock Journal Articles Project]] and the [[Hitchcock Newspaper Articles Project]]. == Site Articles ==
    9 KB (1,104 words) - 20:22, 18 April 2015
  • Aside from the black wit in the monologue and in the episode itself, it will show how It certainly distinguishes him from Rod Serling, whose "Twilight Zone" was the other major anthology series of
    11 KB (1,681 words) - 19:47, 7 February 2015
  • Bernstein married twice and had three children from his second marriage to Sandra Malone. * {{articles}}
    5 KB (662 words) - 17:36, 8 April 2015
  • ...to everything from the 1913 ''East Lynne'' to the 1983 ''Educating Rita'', from [[Anna Neagle]]'s snowdrop charms to the fangs and garlic of Hammer horrors ...reature like Sancho Panza or Lewis Carroll's White Knight had stepped down from the land of legend.
    7 KB (1,106 words) - 14:30, 17 January 2014
  • ...t]] had snapped up ''The Ministry of Fear'' - a quotation, Mr Greene said, from Wordsworth - before the book had even been published. [[Category: Articles about Alfred Hitchcock]]
    2 KB (391 words) - 14:27, 17 January 2014
  • ...dral, the royal palace announced last night. The 52-year-old Princess died from a brain haemorrhage on Tuesday night in the Princess Grace Hospital in Mona ...as still in hospital last night under observation but apparently suffering from minor injuries. Contrary to some press reports, she knew of her mother's de
    4 KB (722 words) - 09:38, 18 January 2014
  • ''The Seventh Veil'' proved to be the most successful of all and from 1944 to 1947 Mason was voted Britain's top box-office star. Among those who ...lor-made part, there were more Germans in ''Cross of Iron'' and ''The Boys From Brazil'' and a well judged Mr Jordan in the fantasy, ''Heaven Can Wait''. H
    6 KB (1,000 words) - 08:08, 1 February 2014
  • ...s attracted to films both as an art form and as offering him a career, and from the late 1920s he played an active part in film-making, working at various ...he novel ''L'Or'' by Blaise Cendrars, and ''An American Tragedy'', derived from Theodore Dreiser's work.
    5 KB (750 words) - 14:27, 17 January 2014
  • [[Category: Obituary articles]] [[Category: Articles from 1980 to 1989]]
    3 KB (428 words) - 14:32, 17 January 2014
  • ...at the age of 15 she began, humbly, as a rewind girl in the cutting rooms. From this she progressed very rapidly to the status of editor-cum-continuity gir From then on she edited most of the films he worked on, and when he became a ful
    2 KB (389 words) - 14:30, 17 January 2014
  • ...Nazi concentration camps, the film was commissioned by the Crown Film Unit from Sidney, now Lord, Bernstein and intended to be shown in German cinemas. "No ...be intercut with shots of German countryside and villages. Barbarism grew from, and existed alongside, civilization.
    2 KB (252 words) - 14:43, 24 September 2014
  • ...levision's ''Brideshead Revisited'', Charles Sturridge - takes its subject from every week's news story: the runaway child, the anxious searching parent, t ..., the darning in a pair of stockings, latchkeys, staircarpets, a telephone from the days of lettered dials ("Dial 6 for Murder" would be the paltry modern
    4 KB (612 words) - 21:38, 18 January 2014
  • ...egal tussles over literary rights and Hitchcock's own withdrawal of prints from circulation. (The latter circumstances also hit ''[[Vertigo]]'', ''[[Rope]] ...cing, barking dogs and tinkling pianos. Hitchcock's camera gleefully moves from apartment to apartment, creating an audio-visual panorama that almost rival
    4 KB (552 words) - 18:44, 12 April 2014
  • These were pictures he had removed from circulation several years before, ordering that all the prints should be de ...re recently, Stanley Kubrick has secured outright control of his pictures, from ''A Clockwork Orange'' onwards.
    11 KB (1,772 words) - 07:21, 11 July 2014
  • ...port, which would demonstrate the terror methods used by the Germans" came from [[Sidney Bernstein]] (now Lord), owner of the Granada chain of cinemas and ...re at SHAEF, had already written to him saying that a mood of dissociation from the atrocities was fast spreading through the German people.
    4 KB (711 words) - 14:42, 24 September 2014
  • ...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
  • ...sequent British films, all reasonably well preserved, fly around the world from one film museum to another, but rarely reach the general public. ...mer Glasgow solicitor with a keen appreciation of money. Hitch was poached from the rival [[Gainsborough]] studio after the success of ''[[The Lodger]]'' i
    4 KB (622 words) - 21:41, 18 January 2014
  • ...and an improved version of ''[[The Lodger]]'' (1926); production material from the unfinished ''I, Claudius'' (1937) with [[Charles Laughton]] and Merle O Last year, with the aid of a £62,000 grant from the fund, several notable films were saved, including, [[Alfred Hitchcock]]
    2 KB (300 words) - 14:31, 17 January 2014
  • This Thursday's attraction is the rarely seen ''[[Secret Agent]]'' from 1956, starring an unbelievably young [[John Gielgud]], with [[Madeleine Car {{newspaper articles}}
    2 KB (340 words) - 19:49, 7 February 2015

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