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  1. In suspense, the director tells or shows the audience things that the characters in the film do not know and then artfully builds tension around what will happen when the characters finally learn the truth. Hitchcock often used public places as scenes to heighten terror and suspense.

    • Introduction
    • The Three Investigators
    • Finding The Castle
    • Solving The Mystery
    • The Solution
    • Back at Alfred Hitchcock's

    The introduction was written by Alfred Hitchcock, who claims to have been blackmailed into writing it. He introduces the main characters and location and gives little hints as to how to solve the main story. Lastly, he recommends the novel.

    Jupiter Jones, Peter Crenshaw, and Bob Andrews have recently decided to found their own detective firm. They all gather at the Jones Salvage Yard, where Jupiter prints business cards for them. There, Peter tells his friends that his father has told him that famous filmmaker Alfred Hitchcockis currently looking for a haunted castle for his newest pr...

    Later, Bob, who has recently broken his right leg and is therefore exempt from all physical activities, is in the library to find a suitable castle. There, he learns about Stephen Terril's castle, which he deems fit. Terrill, who once a famous actor in silent movies, lost his career when sound was introduced to film, exposing his embarrassing speec...

    The Three Investigators decide to visit Terrill's manager, Jonathan Rex. Since the castle is in the same direction, Jupiter asks Worthington to stop by there. At the castle, Worthington points out the fresh tire tracks of another car. Shortly after, Jupiter and Peter see Skinny Norris escape the castle with a friend. When the two decide to take a c...

    Jupiter explains to Peter that he now understands everything and that he has solved the case. He suspects that Stephan Terrill had only faked his death and that he himself is responsible for the haunting of the castle. When he tries to talk to the blue phantom to confirm his suspicions, Peter and he are subdued by Terrill and Charles Grant, who are...

    Upon hearing their story, Hitchcock is impressed by the detectives' work. Since they solved the case, he keeps his promise and writes the introduction to their novel. Jupiter also reveals that Stephan Terrill is planning on marketing the castle as a tourist attraction from now on and that he will screen his old movies there. The entrance and screen...

  2. These teen "Investigators", then, come up with the most mind-bending solutions to puzzles without too many apparent clues, drawing post-007 conclusions from thin air. "Terror Castle" was no castle and there was no terror in it, other than the creepy environs and Gothic atmosphere.

  3. Apr 21, 2015 · The pretext of going to examine it at Alfred Hitchcock’s behest as a location for one of films has been replaced by a backstory about clues left by Jupiter’s late parents. The Three Investigators approach Terror Castle

    • Gaslight (1944) The first entrant in this list was released during the same year as Hitchcock’s drama Lifeboat. Directed by George Cukor, Gaslight stars Ingrid Bergman as a newly married woman who begins to question her sanity and the intentions of her husband (played by Charles Boyer) after a series of bizarre events occur in the house where her aunt was murdered and the couple now reside.
    • Les Diaboliques (1955) The unique thing about this film was that it almost was Hitchcock’s. French director Henri-Georges Clouzot obtained the rights to the story Celle Qui N’était Plus by Pierre Boileau & Thomas Narcejac shortly before Hitchcock was able to.
    • Peeping Tom (1960) When Psycho was released in 1960, it was quite controversial. An equally controversial thriller that year was Michael Powell’s Peeping Tom.
    • Charade (1963) This is the quintessential Hitchcockian thriller. Released the same year as Hitchcock’s horror film The Birds, Charade features many of Hitchcock’s finest techniques.
  4. Sep 17, 2024 · Hitchcocks rapid-fire editing, Bernard Herrmann’s screeching strings, and the implied violence of the scene (the knife never actually makes contact) combine to create a moment of pure, visceral terror.

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  6. Jun 1, 2023 · From his start in silent movies to smash hits Psycho and Vertigo, Alfred Hitchcock crafted some of cinema's most thrilling features. Here's EW’s ranking of every Alfred Hitchcock...