Hitchcock's Romantic Irony

Hitchcock's Romantic Irony

by Richard Allen
ISBN-10:
0231135742
ISBN-13:
9780231135740
Pub. Date:
10/16/2007
Publisher:
Columbia University Press
ISBN-10:
0231135742
ISBN-13:
9780231135740
Pub. Date:
10/16/2007
Publisher:
Columbia University Press
Hitchcock's Romantic Irony

Hitchcock's Romantic Irony

by Richard Allen

Hardcover

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Overview

Is Hitchcock a superficial, though brilliant, entertainer or a moralist? Do his films celebrate the ideal of romantic love or subvert it? In a new interpretation of the director's work, Richard Allen argues that Hitchcock orchestrates the narrative and stylistic idioms of popular cinema to at once celebrate and subvert the ideal of romance and to forge a distinctive worldview-the amoral outlook of the romantic ironist or aesthete. He describes in detail how Hitchcock's characteristic tone is achieved through a titillating combination of suspense and black humor that subverts the moral framework of the romantic thriller, and a meticulous approach to visual style that articulates the lure of human perversity even as the ideal of romance is being deliriously affirmed. Discussing more than thirty films from the director's English and American periods, Allen explores the filmmaker's adoption of the idioms of late romanticism, his orchestration of narrative point of view and suspense, and his distinctive visual strategies of aestheticism and expressionism and surrealism.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231135740
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 10/16/2007
Series: Film and Culture Series
Pages: 328
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Richard Allen is professor and chair of cinema studies at New York University. He is the author of numerous essays on Hitchcock, coeditor of two anthologies, Alfred Hitchcock: Centenary Essays and Hitchcock: Past and Future, and with Sidney Gottlieb he edits the Hitchcock Annual for Wallflower Press.
Richard Allen is Associate Professor of Cinema Studies at New York University. He is the author of Projecting Illusion (Cambridge, 1995) and co-editor of four anthologies Film Theory and Philosophy (Oxford, 1997), Hitchcock: Centenary Essays (BFI 1999), Wittgenstein, Theory and The Arts (Routledge, 2001), Camera Obscura/Camera Lucida: Essays in Honor of Annette Michelson (Amsterdam, 2003). He is also editor (with Sid Gottlieb) of the Hitchcock Annual, a journal of Hitchcock Studies.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I: Narrative Form
1 Romantic Irony
2 Suspense
3 Knowledge and Sexual Difference
Part II: Visual Style
4 Sexuality and Style
5 Expressionism
6 Color Design
Conclusion
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

Charles Barr

Richard Allen's book is a remarkable work of synthesis, drawing on a wide range of Hitchcock scholarship that now spans half a century. But it is more than synthesis: Allen has his own original take on the elements that combine to create what he calls Hitchcock's 'unique cinematic intelligence.' Arguing that the full richness of a classic like Rear Window can only be fully grasped if the film is 'understood in the context of the entire pattern of Hitchcock's work,' Allen sets himself to tease out that entire pattern, making illuminating links between films of different periods, genres, and styles. Above all, his analysis of the films' elaborate visual aesthetic serves as a means to get to the heart of what they convey about the intricacies of human sexuality. An exhilarating read.

Charles Barr, Washington University in St. Louis

Raymond Bellour

In his first major article devoted, more than fifty years ago, to Alfred Hitchcock, François Truffaut wrote, 'The most natural homage that one can render an author or filmmaker is to know his book or film as well as the creator himself.' Richard Allen is without doubt the only theoretician of the cinema today about whom one can say unequivocally that he knows Hitchcock's films as well as the creator himself. He has also found, with 'romantic irony,' one of the best possible terms for making Hitchcock's singular genius shine.

Raymond Bellour, film critic and theoretician

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