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Is Vertigo the greatest movie of all time?
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Is 'Vertigo' still considered a classic?
Did Hitchcock save Vertigo?
Vertigo is a very clever movie about a long con reverse engineered from the protagonist's inability to look down from heights without getting dizzy and nauseous. It basically gives him a panic attack to look down from even a step ladder.
Oct 13, 1996 · “Vertigo” (1958), which is one of the two or three best films Hitchcock ever made, is the most confessional, dealing directly with the themes that controlled his art. It is *about* how Hitchcock used, feared and tried to control women.
Below are the eight reasons that Vertigo is Alfred Hitchcock’s unequivocal greatest film. 1. Jimmy Stewart. The star of such films as The Philadelphia Story, Harvey, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, and It’s a Wonderful Life is famous for being a humble, generous Everyman in the majority of his films.
Hitchcock's romantic story of obsession, manipulation and fear. A detective is forced to retire after his fear of heights causes the death of a fellow officer and the girl he was hired to follow.
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- Alfred Hitchcock
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- James Stewart
May 5, 2016 · What makes Vertigo so good (and maybe great) is the plot, which defies description in many ways. (Don’t worry, no spoilers, either here or in the trailer for the 1996 restored version shown...
Vertigo is a good movie by a great director. Viewing Vertigo several times recently, and reading Dan Aulier's brilliant in-depth look at the making of this movie, I am at a loss to explain what I see as a vastly hyperbolic reaction to this movie by many people both in the realm of professional critics and posters on IMDb.
Vertigo is the greatest motion picture of all time. Or so say the results of the latest round of respected film magazine Sight & Sound ’s long-running critics poll, in which Alfred Hitchcock’s James Stewart- and Kim Novak- (and San Francisco-) starring psychological thriller unseated Citizen ...