Тёмный

Alfred Hitchcock - Masters of Cinema (Complete Interview in 1972) 

Dejan Jankovic
Подписаться 1,5 тыс.
Просмотров 681 тыс.
50% 1

Dear friends, thank you for looking at my chanell's material. During these pandemic days, any support to our arts organization is essential. We created a profile on Patrenon where you can support our work with a small donation.
Thank you and subscribe to our channel! Cheers, Dejan
/ artepunkt
Alfred Hitchcock (UK, 1899-1980) is undeniably the world's most famous film director. His name has become synonymous with the cinema, and each new generation takes the same pleasure in rediscovering his films, which are now treasures of our artistic heritage. Hitchcock started out in the British silent cinema of the 1920s, which reached its peak with successful thrillers such as "The Man Who Knew Too Much" (1934), "Sabotage" (1936) and "The Lady Vanishes" (1938). Recognized as a 'young genius', Hitchcock moved to Hollywood and set about reinventing cinematic tradition,combining the modern with the classic in films such as "Vertigo" (1957), "North by Northwest" (1959)and "The Birds" (1963). Hitchcock gave talented actors such as James Stewart and Cary Grant the chance to play enduring antiheroes and imprinted the public imagination with the myth of the 'blonde', as embodied by Grace Kelly, Kim Novak and Tippi Hedren.

Опубликовано:

 

2 окт 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 526   
@arbiter569
@arbiter569 10 лет назад
His methods aren't unorthodox... His methods are innovation. He is one of the strongest cinema pioneers in the history of movies
@Jantv81
@Jantv81 12 лет назад
Peter Bogdonovich once said "There is no such thing as an 'old' movie. Just wonderful pictures you haven't seen yet."
@lancethompson6839
@lancethompson6839 2 года назад
I love that quote. I'll pass it along.
@AndrozaniCritic1999
@AndrozaniCritic1999 10 лет назад
He wasn't just the Master of Suspense. He was a Master of Movies.
@liamcarr6858
@liamcarr6858 9 лет назад
silly rabbit my skills enormous, orchastry brilliant performance!
@liamcarr6858
@liamcarr6858 9 лет назад
Michael Allan im not chris?
@AndrozaniCritic1999
@AndrozaniCritic1999 9 лет назад
Liam Carr He wasn't talking to you…
@theobyrne2457
@theobyrne2457 9 лет назад
Androzani Critic I like your photo #enemyoftheworld
@83joonior
@83joonior 8 лет назад
+silly rabbit A life of rent could afford it when his was spent . Popular with the ladies he never knew how quickly they'd turn blue in color I'm not talking about another they hold their breath like there ain't one other
@JoshWoodYouTube
@JoshWoodYouTube 8 лет назад
honestly he's making jokes one after the other with the most dry humour i love it :')
@pix046
@pix046 8 лет назад
Yes, he was an excellent raconteur.
@maneatingseas
@maneatingseas 3 года назад
English lad, innit?
@si4632
@si4632 3 года назад
@@maneatingseas what a dude London geezer innit
@dodmoful
@dodmoful 10 лет назад
"If you remember a film I made years ago called Rear Window" Yes Mr. Hitchcock, I remember Rear Window LOL. My favorite film of all time.
@daiveedino
@daiveedino 9 лет назад
dodmoful Stephen King does the same thing lol I suppose they're trying to be humble.
@babbisp1
@babbisp1 9 лет назад
dodmoful 2:18
@65g4
@65g4 9 лет назад
+dodmoful its my favourite film of his for sure and one of my all time favourites Grace Kelly was so beautiful in this and jimmy stewart was so great
@Kayem967
@Kayem967 6 лет назад
dodmoful me too... Beautiful film
@harrycluff4425
@harrycluff4425 6 лет назад
yeah lol
@stylishboy004
@stylishboy004 2 года назад
His sense of humour is out of this world! Geez! And he is the 'Master of Suspense'. Tells a lot to us about the genius of this man and his range.
@BattleToads
@BattleToads 9 лет назад
I could tell from his first sentence that this man is a genius.
@Jantonov1
@Jantonov1 Год назад
I could tell before his first sentence. I could tell when he was quiet the moment before he spoke!
@elss4735
@elss4735 11 лет назад
wish he was still alive, such an amazing director.
@josecandal9412
@josecandal9412 4 года назад
The greatest director ever by far. No one can beat him. A genius, an absolute genius, creator of so many masterpieces. Eternal thanks to Sir Alfred Hitchcock.
@elonif4125
@elonif4125 Год назад
His rant about method actors is hilarious. The whole interview is, for that matter. Brilliant man with a great sense of humour.
@ClashGamerGTA
@ClashGamerGTA Год назад
Yes, he didnt like actors who act. The work with Laurence Olivier was surely difficult for him xD Not to imagine what he would have done with a Vivien Leigh
@Jantonov1
@Jantonov1 Год назад
Well, Hitch apparently never went to other people's movies all that much and you can tell.
@AmericasChoice
@AmericasChoice 5 месяцев назад
@@Jantonov1 In fact, he told Tom Snyder he never visited other director's sets, ever.
@seanwjones07
@seanwjones07 9 лет назад
You can tell Hitchcock is a genius just by his stature.
@Daxkalak
@Daxkalak 9 лет назад
Jones206 True.
@Daxkalak
@Daxkalak 9 лет назад
Daxkalak I've got four of his movies on blue ray disk so far - The Birds, Psycho, Vertigo, and Rear Window. It's amazing what they've done to these old movies now, by updating them into DTS surround sound and cleaning up the picture and putting it into HD. It gives you a whole new and strange experience when watching them. I'm thinking I should stop collecting his movies now, so I don't get too Alfred Hitchcock on Tippi Hedren-type obsessed with them, lol. Those are his movies I mainly like anyway, including Marnie; I think I'll get that on Blue ray too when I find it at the shops. And I wouldn't mind owning some of his earlier black and white movies too. Oh no, Tippi Hedren, RUN!! haha
@Daxkalak
@Daxkalak 9 лет назад
GovindaRajan S I found this collection of old black and white Hitchcock movies from when he lived in Britain. There's about 8 movies all made in the 1930s. It seems like some of his later American movies are actually remakes of some of these older British movies. For instance there is a movie called "Sabotage", which looks a lot similar to his later American movie, which I've heard of but have yet to see, called "Saboteur". And there's a movie called "The Man Who Knew Too Much" which obviously is the original to the American movie with the same name starring Jimmy Stewart. But my favourite movie in this set is "The Lady Vanishes". Gee, I loved this movie. It's the first time I've seen it.
@maldini883
@maldini883 7 лет назад
Yeah that's one of my favourites 'the lady vanishes' also 'shadow of a doubt' is a favourite of mine.
@osheenjohn6335
@osheenjohn6335 7 лет назад
Yea Hitchcock did remake ' The man who knew too much' with the same title with James Stewart in it. Same with Saboteur which he remade in 1942 with Robert Cummings (the boyfriend of Margo Wendice in Dial M for Murder)
@MonroeSmile
@MonroeSmile 12 лет назад
28:26 Hitchcock's smile is just priceless. It must have been great to have an interviewer that knew his films inside/out, and who really appreciated/enjoyed/engaged with them. An absolutely fascinating man, and arguably, the greatest director.
@kevinfillingham5255
@kevinfillingham5255 4 месяца назад
Such a clever gent. Way out of my time but such a pleasure to hear his opinions. Genius.
@potenvandebizon
@potenvandebizon 8 лет назад
I like how he says the thing about the cool blondes while he's being interviewed by a cool blonde.
@FallingPicturesProductions
@FallingPicturesProductions 8 лет назад
Same.
4 года назад
What do you mean "same" ?
@_UpVector_
@_UpVector_ 3 года назад
Interestingly, the cool blonde is Pia Lindström, the first daughter of Ingrid Bergman’s, who made 3 movies with Hitchcock.
@RapperSkatR
@RapperSkatR 12 лет назад
He uses suspense when he talks... fucking genius!
@3lubenica
@3lubenica 8 лет назад
He has a kind of soothing and calming voice, I could listen to him all day :D
@cyboman9171
@cyboman9171 4 года назад
Yes! You're right - I've listened to Hitchcock's voice for years and never noticed that. Only a woman, I think, could have picked up on that nuance in Hitchcock's public presentation of himself.
@jeremypearson6852
@jeremypearson6852 2 года назад
He doesn’t waste his words, he’s very slow and deliberate in his responses. It shows he’s listening to the questions and thinking about his reply. Most accomplished directors pay him the greatest compliments which he deserves.
@Fredmullegun
@Fredmullegun 10 лет назад
Free 30 minute lecture by Hitchcock. Excellent.
@9LivesGamer
@9LivesGamer 10 лет назад
He makes things sound so simple because, being honest they are. Some directors love to make it sound so difficult and arty farty.
@venaretro5444
@venaretro5444 8 лет назад
+9LivesGamer It is difficult.Good directos make it sound easy because its easy for them.
@clocko2700
@clocko2700 4 года назад
Vena Retro I don’t think that is what op means I see as Hitchcock being so sure and honest about his job that he doesn’t try to sound “difficult “ or superior as many directors do nowadays He is just a man engaged to his art, and he does it well
@donnarobinson6941
@donnarobinson6941 10 лет назад
Thanks for allowing us to share this. Hitchcock was definitely ahead of his time and a genius of his craft.His films stand the test of time, something many director's aspire to.
@giorgigudiashvili4876
@giorgigudiashvili4876 9 лет назад
I love this man's face. Cutest smile I've eve seen.
@lisica8458
@lisica8458 2 года назад
The interviewer's mother was one of Hitchcock's favorite actresses.
@AmericasChoice
@AmericasChoice 5 месяцев назад
Did he have favorite actors? My impression was he did not think much of actors, and saw them as only vehicles for the storyline. By the way, Ingrid Bergman was, in my opinion, a phenomenal actress.
@lisica8458
@lisica8458 5 месяцев назад
@@AmericasChoice Ingrid Bergman (and to some extent her husband Petter Lindstrom) was a personal friend of Alfred and Alma Hitchcock. Ingrid speaks about it in her memoir.
@AmericasChoice
@AmericasChoice 5 месяцев назад
@@lisica8458 I just finished an article about that, and saw a few pictures of the Hitchcock's and Lindstroms together. So I stand corrected!
@lisica8458
@lisica8458 5 месяцев назад
@@AmericasChoice It may be that Hitchcock treated Ingrid and her co-stars as means to an end on the movie set, while at the same time treating her warmly off the set. From what I've read about Ingrid, she was always very professional on the set, so perhaps Hitch's behavior towards "mere" actors was something she wasn't offended by.
@82ashman
@82ashman 3 года назад
Lady interviewing is fabulous. Shocking to think how fast time goes by, generation by generation
@benjamintzs
@benjamintzs 2 года назад
Lady interviewing is Pia Lindstrom, the daughter of Ingrid Bergman. Show was a great journalist and knew very well the movie industry. In this interview she is pretty good and Hitch seems to be enjoying the talk.
@danieleastwood755
@danieleastwood755 10 лет назад
needs repeating !!! Hitchcock was a lonely, imaginative, obese child, raised Catholic and trained to give his mother the day's confession every night. As an adult, driving in Switzerland one day, Hitchcock pointed out the window and told a friend, "That is the most frightening sight I have ever seen." The friend looked out with alarm and saw only a priest with his arm around a young boy. But Hitchcock leaned out of the car: "Run, little boy! Run for your life!"
@georgelupas3499
@georgelupas3499 5 лет назад
Actually he war horn protestant but converted to Catholicism later in life.
@evilmario6061
@evilmario6061 4 года назад
@@georgelupas3499 People are not born into any type of religion.
@georgelupas3499
@georgelupas3499 4 года назад
@@evilmario6061 the OP said raised Catholic while he was born into an protestant family. People are not born into a religion but their family influences and raises them in a certain manner sometimes having a religious uprbinging too.
@michaelsteighner7868
@michaelsteighner7868 4 года назад
Y Neither of you understand the point...
@seife41
@seife41 4 года назад
@@michaelsteighner7868 maybe they do, but like to argue about whatever.
@jchow5966
@jchow5966 Год назад
What a powerful mind. I love his work. 💟💟💟
@KevinShaughnessy-mt9jt
@KevinShaughnessy-mt9jt Год назад
NORTH BY NORTHWEST Hitchcock was forbidden to film the Untied Nations scenes . In typical Hitchcock style he filmed the exteriors from the inside of a carpet cleaning van across the street !
@MDW815
@MDW815 12 лет назад
The lady conducting the first part of the interview, Pia Lindstrom, is the daughter of Ingrid Bergman.
@AntoniosPapantoniou
@AntoniosPapantoniou 3 года назад
a slight touch of nepotism
@dsrtflwr6093
@dsrtflwr6093 3 года назад
she doesn't seem to have a European accent. Maybe there's a light one and I just can't hear it. Wonder if she spent some of her childhood in America. Her mother and sister Isabella certain had/have heavy accents.
@muffincat99
@muffincat99 3 года назад
@@dsrtflwr6093 pi’s had a different father and was raised in America
@roaringviking5693
@roaringviking5693 3 года назад
@@dsrtflwr6093 I can hear a noticeable Swedish accent, very slight but it's there, which actually surprises me. One wouldn't think she would have one at all since she grew up mostly in America. She sounds a lot like Ann-Margret, who also has that slight Swedish accent.
@yourwaveyness7i899
@yourwaveyness7i899 4 года назад
Such a brilliant person
@gary1961
@gary1961 11 лет назад
Pia Lindstrom, daughter of Ingrid Bergman. She was 34 back in 1972 when she interviewed Alfred Hitchcock. This is a great interview with an amazing man.
@jaykambli9307
@jaykambli9307 4 года назад
*Ingmar
@NevadaEntropia
@NevadaEntropia 3 года назад
@@jaykambli9307 *Ingrid
@robertwilson214
@robertwilson214 2 года назад
And a beauty.
@Jantonov1
@Jantonov1 Год назад
@@robertwilson214 Hitch sure had no problem opening up to her.
@AmericasChoice
@AmericasChoice 5 месяцев назад
@@Jantonov1 Yes.
@carolking6355
@carolking6355 4 года назад
That was wonderful listening to such a great man act so relaxed and without any pretentiousness. He has such a twinkle in his eye. To hear our happy fame can make him. Certain Royals could take a leaf out of his book.
@MazSix45
@MazSix45 9 лет назад
God, we will give you Michael Bay in exchange for Hitchcock!
@SamXbit
@SamXbit 8 лет назад
+Patrick Karamasow savage 😂
@twomindz79
@twomindz79 6 лет назад
Or zac Snyder . Rian Johnston .
@danieln1
@danieln1 9 лет назад
The interviewer is beautiful!
@fkd1963
@fkd1963 7 лет назад
Ingrid Bergman's daughter
@patricias5122
@patricias5122 5 лет назад
She's extremely professional, researched, and intelligent.
@PianoGesang
@PianoGesang 4 года назад
@Margaret Gust Agree! And all are beautiful like she was.
@EmmaClips-vv9dg
@EmmaClips-vv9dg 4 года назад
It's possible lindstrom
@stephenpitkin5492
@stephenpitkin5492 4 года назад
FYI: if you play it back at 2x the speed you get an interview with Martin Scorsese.
@theunholygamer6474
@theunholygamer6474 4 года назад
Up there as one of the greats , he is the master of suspense no one can beat him
@johnnygunz9295
@johnnygunz9295 5 лет назад
Such a wonderful,kind and genuinely charming man,any interview ive seen with him i have to watch it to the end
@stevers62
@stevers62 11 лет назад
I didn't know about this interview!!! This is AWESOME!!! Thank you so much for posting!! Love Hitchcock!!
@andreasegde
@andreasegde 11 лет назад
I was thinking how good she was and then I read your comment, which is very true!
@Jantonov1
@Jantonov1 Год назад
Has anybody in this comment section taken the time to mention how much of a genius Hitchcock was??
@paddy9i99
@paddy9i99 10 лет назад
Even in his later years, this guy knew his stuff, in exact detail
@ollie241189
@ollie241189 4 года назад
I love the fact he remembers the psychology of the movies she throws at him. A true master and absolute genius!
@jimmyl324
@jimmyl324 12 лет назад
Always can enjoy multiple views of his films..always something to see...
@solezeta1314
@solezeta1314 Год назад
The man was a brilliant director. R.I.P. Mr. Hitchcock, you have taught and inspired me.
@PlayIt4MeAgainSam
@PlayIt4MeAgainSam 12 лет назад
A "Master of Cinema" for sure! It's great to see Pia Lindström, too! ♥
@mind_bahn
@mind_bahn 11 лет назад
Fantastic!
@michaelsmyth9892
@michaelsmyth9892 11 лет назад
The true master craftsman amongst movie makers. I often wonder what new movie releases would be like now if Alfred was in his prime in 21st Century. God bless you Sir
@LucHale
@LucHale 10 лет назад
What a great man.
@abdulahad0736
@abdulahad0736 3 года назад
They say thriller I say hitchcock❤🔥
@bobo-kj6od
@bobo-kj6od 4 года назад
Love him.
@abbafanatico
@abbafanatico 3 года назад
We don't have classy people like that anymore. Speech, body language, posture, everything....Gone.
@julieodarchenko9290
@julieodarchenko9290 6 лет назад
thanks for sharing.shared the valor on my facebook page.
@recardosands9948
@recardosands9948 9 лет назад
I'm a film director, and I must say…this man is a very good and insprational director. He certainly is an icon with a 3rd eye veiw into the world of filmmaking.
@SerlingPictures
@SerlingPictures 11 лет назад
That's her daughter? Wow. I should have known. Ingrid was so beautiful.
@ellenripley71
@ellenripley71 12 лет назад
genious!! My favorite director of all time!!
@billthestinker
@billthestinker 10 лет назад
Hitch would often fart so loud on movie sets that retakes became necessary
@TheGava4
@TheGava4 7 лет назад
billthestinker where did you get that from...?
@peggyc6532
@peggyc6532 3 года назад
The woman is Ingrid Bergman’s daughter
@guevara.4813
@guevara.4813 2 года назад
Damn.. this man with his figure and style, existed to be a Master not of Suspense but of Cinema.
@mojojojojowhitequeen1614
@mojojojojowhitequeen1614 5 лет назад
1972 year i was born thanks Mr H... he sounds like my dad .im English Edit.... my dad brought me up on dry humour ..ps. edit.... my sons called Cary
@johnmcgeachie5533
@johnmcgeachie5533 12 лет назад
Man wasa genius...an absolute genius. I have loved his movies for years.
@kevinmole9982
@kevinmole9982 4 года назад
Inventor of modern day directing just brilliant
@merrickart
@merrickart 11 лет назад
what a brilliant man...and that voice :)
@ingridib8701
@ingridib8701 11 лет назад
Pia Lindström was born today. Happy birthday, Pia!
@kavvayistories
@kavvayistories 4 года назад
Genius 💚💕
@TheFesta01
@TheFesta01 12 лет назад
Fantastic, obviously a very intelligent and talented man : )
@jtgmedia74
@jtgmedia74 12 лет назад
He is so awesome.
@MrDoneboy
@MrDoneboy 2 года назад
Good Evening!
@fayeweatherspoon1873
@fayeweatherspoon1873 10 лет назад
clearly the best...clearly...Spielberg does not become Spielberg without Hitchcock..
@factsmatter8667
@factsmatter8667 2 года назад
Please don't insult Hitchcock by mentioning Spielberg!
@nealedelstein
@nealedelstein 8 лет назад
His story about Charles Laughton is priceless. Great post!
@Clarensee
@Clarensee 9 лет назад
He must've been a VERY HARD man to work with...
@pranavdhokre8980
@pranavdhokre8980 9 лет назад
+ClarenseE see they were great actors too.
@onecircle1
@onecircle1 8 лет назад
+ClarenseE Yea but at least you know you are working on something that is going to be worthwhile.
@cinepilepodcast5881
@cinepilepodcast5881 8 лет назад
+ClarenseE Worth it.
@WalterLiddy
@WalterLiddy 8 лет назад
Only for people who think they know better than he does how to make his film work. Janet Leigh talked about this in an interview that's on the Psycho dvd - she says she had no problems at all. The way she saw it, her job was to deliver what he wanted, to find the motivation in her character to do the things he said she had to do. Actors who think they're the most important thing going on in a movie are only any good if they're right. If you have a real director like Hitchcock, there's no way the actor is the most important thing going on.
@Slayyyer84
@Slayyyer84 7 лет назад
ClarenseE my thoughts too
@fede018
@fede018 4 года назад
The interviewer is gorgeous.
@jonneye
@jonneye 12 лет назад
Legendary
@juanitolopez9731
@juanitolopez9731 Год назад
My favourite director of all time. I never get bored of watching his films, and I have seen some of them dozens of times: THE 39 STEPS, ROPE, DIAL M FOR MURDER, REAR WINDOW, THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH, VERTIGO, NORTH BY NORTHWEST, PSYCHO, TORN COURTAIN, FRENZY...
@KevinShaughnessy-mt9jt
@KevinShaughnessy-mt9jt Год назад
Tell me again, what you thought you saw .& tell me what you think it means !
@juanitolopez9731
@juanitolopez9731 Год назад
@KevinShaughnessy-mt9jt He explains very well how he makes his movies: the carefully planned framing of the shots, the editing, the long silences to create suspense, the camera movements... All of those work together to give meaning to the sequence; nothing is gratuitous. He was a visual director who made his sound films as if they were silent, telling the story through images without dialogue.
@Dominick_Calvitto.
@Dominick_Calvitto. 3 года назад
Alfred Hitchcock was a Cinematic Creation Genius.
@ricarleite
@ricarleite 9 лет назад
She doesnt look like someone from 1972. Looks like someone from late 70s early 80s.
@1LovelySista
@1LovelySista 9 лет назад
Radha Vasam
@heatherferreira4225
@heatherferreira4225 7 лет назад
No, those women still were trying to look like women from 1972. This woman meets the exact template for the sophisticated urban 70's blonde. Go see Taxi Driver and look at Betsy again.
@PianoGesang
@PianoGesang 4 года назад
What a beautiful woman
@stillclouds
@stillclouds 10 лет назад
She's a blonde :3
@thehustler2563
@thehustler2563 9 лет назад
thats what hitchcock loved
@rocksmeller99
@rocksmeller99 9 лет назад
blondes seem to be able to get what they want, especially if they act dumb (they are n't so dumb when they act dumb)
@brookehanley3659
@brookehanley3659 9 лет назад
The Hustler He really did. And he also felt they made the best victims.
@thehustler2563
@thehustler2563 9 лет назад
Brooke Hanley that's right
@Bonkatsu12
@Bonkatsu12 7 лет назад
Ironically she is the daughter of Hitchcock's most famous brunette. Ingrid Bergman.
@1AngrySloth
@1AngrySloth 10 лет назад
watch and learn horror movie makers! we pay tobe scared not to see the same shit or poor attempts on a Sequel that is movies/horror movies nowadays
@StuartLoria
@StuartLoria 10 лет назад
People pay to get scared, they watch a thriller and those movies can win prizes, but if they pay to laugh and watch a comedy those movies don't ever get prizes, either comedies are all nonsense or the morbid nature of humans are in control of prize awarding.
@stephenkane2464
@stephenkane2464 8 лет назад
After he says sexy blondes her nameAppears on the screen lmao
@marioiacolucci
@marioiacolucci 9 лет назад
Awesome guy!
@22CaptainAmerica
@22CaptainAmerica 3 года назад
he reminds me of sir topham hatt
@TheRealMonkeyrogue
@TheRealMonkeyrogue 3 года назад
Thank you for posting this. It's an underutilized resource. The master indeed.
@ElnaCopper
@ElnaCopper 9 лет назад
Hitchcock shares wonderfully.
@jeffreyyoung4364
@jeffreyyoung4364 11 лет назад
what are peoples favorite hitchcock movies? mine are: Vertigo, Psycho, Rear window, Strangers on a train, and Rebecca. I should point out that hitchcock's personal favorite of his was "Shadow of a doubt".
@Cola64
@Cola64 4 года назад
@ 9:10 so true Ted Bundy was at the height of his killing spree about the time of this interview
@JamesHalHardy
@JamesHalHardy 11 лет назад
Fame 16:13 Early Days 17:50 "The Man Who Knew too Much" 21:23 Directing to the Audience 23:48 The Chase 25:20 Chase in "Number 17" 28:10 Move to Hollywood 29:00 Size 29:33 Elaborate Shot 30:36 Improvement on Films 31:00 Handing Over to another Director 31:35 Hitchcock Courses 32:15
@phsantos
@phsantos 8 лет назад
Dei valor sim :)
@thebrotherhoodisdumb
@thebrotherhoodisdumb 12 лет назад
Any modern filmmaker (Spielberg, Lucas, Scorcesse, & yes, Burton) are all influenced by Hitchcock. His movies are memorable because they were groundbreaking, re-defining genres & doing many firsts in his pictures that until then had never been done. I'm young, and yet nobody makes a movie like Hitchcock. He truly understands what it means to speak to the audience; he works his films like a painter on canvas. Definition of the word Mastermind.
@giles422
@giles422 11 лет назад
I'd forgotten how pretty Pia Lindstrom is, and how likable.
@MissingLStudios
@MissingLStudios 3 года назад
Pro tip: always listen to Alfred on 1.25x speed 😋
@furdiebant
@furdiebant 7 лет назад
That Charles Loughton story hahahah
@MARlA___
@MARlA___ 4 года назад
I love, love, love Hitchcock so much, What a genial man!
@maneatingseas
@maneatingseas 3 года назад
maneatingseas I like the concluding thought. First year students emulate Bergman but Hitchcock’s sophistication only comes when they mature in the art of cinematography that considers and communicates to the audience.
@jastv
@jastv 5 лет назад
What an excellent interview. This is the best conversation I have seen with Hitchcock.
@lepetitchat123
@lepetitchat123 2 года назад
The interviewer's face reminds me of Ingrid Bergman
@filmnobelpreis
@filmnobelpreis 4 года назад
As always, 1.25x speed = normal talking voice
@captainkavern
@captainkavern 12 лет назад
and she looks like a Hitchcockian actress!
@irfanimp
@irfanimp 3 года назад
drooping lower lip was due to eating too much roast duck and pork.
@michaelcohen7343
@michaelcohen7343 2 месяца назад
Her mother is Ingrid Bergman. You can see the resemblance
@Δεμένοιγιαπάντα
@Δεμένοιγιαπάντα 3 года назад
Only... 🙏🙏🙏RESPECT .......Master🙏🙏🙏❣️❣️❣️ always ❤️ love you from 🇬🇷 Greece
@searchers
@searchers 8 лет назад
What a treat to have an interviewer with the knowledge of Bill Everson. How we miss him.
@ChristianSchonbergerMusic
@ChristianSchonbergerMusic 10 лет назад
What a man Hitch was! Definitely one of the greatest film directors ever. I like his calm way, demanding attention. It's like: "I tell you what when and where and even why. If you agree and go along: we are good, if not you will be in some big trouble". He is known to disrespect actors, but he was correct. He knew how to deal with huge egos. His body of work will remain fantastic forever. I am glad everything of his work as been beautifully restored and - as far as I know - kept in various formats (film and digital data of very high resolition) to survive for centuries. What a great man.
@Onmysheet
@Onmysheet 9 лет назад
He was a great director, but he was a complete cu*t. Ask any actor or crew member who are still alive today who worked under him.
@ChristianSchonbergerMusic
@ChristianSchonbergerMusic 9 лет назад
Onmysheet That is correct. You just confirmed what I said, you just used a different word. I have books about him and I can read between the lines to fill-in at least part of the rest. But from what I know Hitch wasn't more of a cu*t than many other well known directors. Kubrick anyone? And with his annoyingly condescending, preaching tone in "making off promos" and "interviews" James Cameron also seems to fall into that category. Ridley Scott (puffing a cigar) anyone? Highly intelligent and competent, yep, but you can smell from a mile away that he is a pain in the a** to work with. So what's new?
@Onmysheet
@Onmysheet 9 лет назад
Christian Schonberger There's also Quentin Tarintino, (Feud with Mickey Rourke) Micheal Bay.
@casrifay
@casrifay 11 лет назад
By looking at him we cannot abide the feel that he was indeed a surrealist artist. He was an exotic man who maed exotic, 'puzzling' pictures.
Далее
Alfred Hitchcock Tom Snyder Tomorrow Interview 1973
46:32
WTF with Marc Maron -  WIlliam Friedkin Interview
2:32:21
Groucho Marx Dick Cavett 1969
54:09
Просмотров 3,4 млн
Martin Scorsese interview on Stanley Kubrick (2001)
47:25
Film Techniques of Alfred Hitchcock (2nd Edition)
24:48