READ TODAY'S STORIES AND E-EDITION SUBSCRIBE |  CONTACT US |  SIGN IN

Print story only Print story with comments Email Twitter Facebook Pinterest
There's just one Hitch to this "Girl"
Published: 10/19/2012 2:34 PM
Last Modified: 10/19/2012 3:18 PM


Toby Jones as Alfred Hitchcock and Sienna Miller as Tippi Hedren in "The Girl."

As the final credits to the HBO movie “The Girl” started to roll, my wife turned to me and said, “Was he really that … awful?”

You can’t spend too much time in the world that Alfred Hitchcock created through the 53 movies he made without getting some idea that the “Master of Suspense” was not what you might call a happy individual.

It’s easy to see a not-so-subtle streak of sadism in many of his films, from the handcuffed hero and heroine in “The 39 Steps” (which comes to the Tulsa PAC in a theatrical version, with four actors playing all four roles, Nov. 2-3) to the brutality of crimes in “Frenzy.”

Since Hitchcock’s death in 1980, a number of books have dug into the dark side of Hitchcock’s art and life, including two by Donald Spoto, who also wrote one of the best and most comprehensive books on Hitchcock’s films.

“The Girl” – adapted from Spoto’s “Spellbound by Beauty” by Gwyneth Hughes and directed by Julian Jarrold – focuses on Hitchcock’s obsession with Tippi Hedren, the fashion model who he chose to star in “The Birds,” and whom Hitchcock attempted to groom into the archetypal “Hitchcock blonde.”

As “The Girl” makes clear, Hitchcock’s interest in Hedren was never simply cinematic. And when Hedren continued to spurn Hitchcock’s sexual advances – which ranged from the clumsy to creepily calculated – he began to wreak his vengeance on her, physically as well as professionally.

The physical is typified by the well-known story of the filming of one of the final scenes in “The Birds,” when Hedren’s character goes upstairs and is attacked by hordes of birds. Hedren had been told the sequence would take one day, and that mechanical birds would be used. When the time came, Hedern would spend five days having live birds tossed at her.

Hitchcock also refused to allow her out of the seven-year contract she initially signed – the implication being that Hitchcock thought Hedren would ultimately succumb to his demand that she be “sexually available” to him in order to get other jobs.

Hedren, however, was made of sterner stuff. She made one other film for Hitchcock – “Marnie,” one of Hitchcock’s darker tales that some consider his last great film. And then she moved on – as Hedren said in a recent interview with the New York Times, Hitchcock may have “ruined my career, but he didn’t ruin my life….I still admire the man for who he was.”

But unfortunately, there isn’t much to admire in “The Girl,” beyond marveling at how well actor Toby Jones has embodied Alfred Hitchcock; how heartbreakingly real is the performance of Imelda Staunton as his wife, Alma, who conveys all manner of intelligence and pain with a few words and a careful glance; how Sienna Miller shows the sturdy resolve under the porcelain-like fragile façade of Hedren.

That’s because “The Girl” plays out as a series of isolated moments that never quite link together into a narrative. Secondary characters flit in and out without really adding anything to action.

And the process by which two Hitchcock’s greatest films were created – and all the other well-known people involved in their creation – is barely acknowledged. You might come away from “The Girl” believing that “The Birds” and “Marnie” were completely one-woman shows (although mention is made of Sean Connery, the male lead in “Marnie”).

“The Girl” is a curiosity at best – a one-sided glimpse into one of the more sordid episodes in the lives of two famous people.

And as commendable as Toby Jones’ portrayal of Hitchcock is, you can’t help be feel a little sorry for him. Just as his fine work as Truman Capote in “Infamous” was eclipsed by Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Academy Award-winning performance in “Capote” in 2006, Jones’ Hitchcock is likely to be overshadowed once “Hitchcock” opens later this year, with Anthony Hopkins playing Hitchcock during the filming of his 1960 film “Psycho.”

"The Girl" premieres at 8 p.m. Saturday on HBO.

Here's the trailer for "The Girl":



And here's the trailer for "Hitchcock":




Reader Comments 2 Total

ClanJoyWalkSig (4 months ago)
These look intriguing to say the least, James... I had a Hitchcock period in my teens which led to a Stephen King period which led to a Dean Koontz period which led to I don't like scary stuff very much anymore....

But Hopkins as Hitchcock? Who wouldn't want to see that!
PrayingHam (4 months ago)
Anthony and Helen, you do get what you pay for.

Though "Hitchcock" may be late out of the gate, it is a crushing closer.

"Hitchcock" by 15 lengths.
2 comments displayed


To post comments on tulsaworld.com, you must be an active Tulsa World print or digital subscriber and signed into your account.

ARTS

James D. Watts Jr. has lived in Oklahoma for most his life, even though he still has people saying to him, "Don't sound like you're from around these parts." A University of Oklahoma Phi Beta Kappa graduate, Watts has received the Governor Arts Award, Harwelden Award and the National Conference of Christians and Jews Beth Macklin Award for his writing. Before coming to the Tulsa World, Watts worked for the Tulsa Tribune.

Contact him at (918) 581-8478.


Subscribe to this blog


Archive

 
James D. Watts Jr's Blog Archive:

2/2013  1/2013  12/2012  11/2012  10/2012  9/2012  
8/2012  7/2012  6/2012  5/2012  4/2012  3/2012  
2/2012  1/2012  12/2011  11/2011  10/2011  9/2011  
8/2011  7/2011  6/2011  5/2011  4/2011  3/2011  
2/2011  1/2011  12/2010  11/2010  10/2010  9/2010  
8/2010  7/2010  6/2010  5/2010  4/2010  3/2010  
2/2010  1/2010  12/2009  11/2009  10/2009  9/2009  
8/2009  7/2009  6/2009  5/2009  4/2009  3/2009  
2/2009  1/2009  12/2008  11/2008  10/2008  9/2008  
8/2008  7/2008  6/2008  5/2008  4/2008  








Home | Contact Us | Search | Subscribe | Customer Service | About | Advertise | Privacy
Copyright © 2013, World Publishing Co. All rights reserved.