Showing posts with label Crime Films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crime Films. Show all posts

Thursday, May 4, 2017

Hitchcock by the Numbers.

I recently finished reading Patricia Highsmith's Strangers on a Train and I linked it in my mind to Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca. Both were written by women and both were darker in tone and plotting than their corresponding Hitchcock films. With The Birds as another example immediately springing to mind, I asked myself, how many Hitchcock films came from source material written by women?

Suggestions for my blog are always welcome.


So: Hitchcock by the Numbers.

In a career spanning 1925 to 1976, Hitchcock directed 54 feature films. You will find slight variations in this number being cited. The film Mary (1931) was filmed simultaneously and on the same sets as Murder! (1930) but with German actors and a German version of the script. I count this as two films. Some, when discussing the content of Hitchcock films leave out The Mountain Eagle (1927). The film is lost to history so we don't know, for example, whether Hitchcock made a cameo.

With that in mind, here goes.

  • Directed 54 feature films.
  • 40 were mysteries or thrillers.
  • -  11 of these were spy thrillers.
  • 10 were dramas or melodramas.
  • -  1 was a sports melodrama.
  • 3 were comedies and 2 more were mystery/comedies.
  • 1 musical.

  • 26 were adapted from novels.
  • 12 were from original screenplays or stories original to the screen.
  • -  1 of these won an Oscar for John Steinbeck (Lifeboat).
  • 11 were adapted from plays.
  • 2 were adapted from short stories.
  • 2 were adapted from non-fiction sources.


  • 39 had Hitchcock cameos.
  • 6 films included Leo G. Carroll
  • 4 films included Cary Grant or Jimmy Stewart
  • 3 films included Grace Kelly or Ingrid Bergman

From: http://news.muckety.com/2012/10/26/hitchcocks-favorite-actors/38751

As to crediting the writers, I looked at the source material, i.e., Rebecca was du Maurier and not those who worked on the screenplay. If the story was written directly to screen, then the screenplay writers or original story writers were counted. I limited my count to the credited writers. Hitchcock and his wife, Alma Reville, often had a hand in shaping scripts. When three collaborated, a one-third value was given. When two, a one-half value. (Hence 5/6ths, 1/2 plus 1/3).

  • From male writers: 42 and 5/6ths.
  • From female writers: 11 and 1/6th. 
(Many of the best films were from female writers, beginning with Hitchcock's breakthrough film, The Lodger.)

IMDB ranking.

IMDB allows those registered to rate films from one to ten. With 42 million visitors per month it is the 48th most visited site on the internet. The films of Alfred Hitchcock have received a total of 2.5 million votes for an averaging rating of 7.0. Presented below are the films as ranked. While I disagree with some of the ordering, for example, Dial M for Murder is too high, overall, the list has merit. Psycho probably received first place because it is the most modern and highest impact Hitchcock film (it certainly has the most memorable soundtrack). Some were probably upvoted because they appeal to film enthusiasts for their experimentation (Rope). My personal favorite is Notorious.

Film title original (year released) IMDB rating, IMDB votes.

  1. Psycho (1960) 8.5, 453037
  2. Rear Window (1954) 8.5, 338201
  3. Vertigo (1958) 8.4, 268112
  4. North by Northwest (1959) 8.4, 233195
  5. Dial M for Murder (1954) 8.2, 115226
  6. Rebecca (1940) 8.2, 93236  
  7. Strangers on a Train (1951) 8.0, 103272   
  8. Rope (1948) 8.0, 101123  
  9. Notorious (1946) 8.0, 76970    
  10. Shadow of a Doubt (1943) 8.0, 47715
  11. The Lady Vanishes (1938) 7.9, 37720
  12. The 39 Steps (1935) 7.8, 41802   
  13. Lifeboat (1944) 7.8, 21427   
  14. The Birds (1963) 7.7, 136624
  15. Spellbound (1945) 7.6, 34644
  16. Foreign Correspondent (1940) 7.6, 14342   
  17. To Catch a Thief (1955) 7.5, 49068  
  18. The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956) 7.5, 44830   
  19. Frenzy (1972) 7.5, 32557   
  20. The Wrong Man (1956) 7.5, 20022   
  21. Suspicion (1941) 7.4, 25006   
  22. I Confess (1953) 7.3, 15267   
  23. The Lodger (1927) 7.3, 7286   
  24. Marnie (1964) 7.2, 35784   
  25. The Trouble with Harry (1955) 7.2, 26347   
  26. Saboteur (1942) 7.2, 18534   
  27. Sabotage (1936) 7.1, 11,670   
  28. Stage Fright (1950) 7.1, 9879
  29. Blackmail (1929) 7.0, 7461   
  30. Young and Innocent (1937) 7.0, 6838   
  31. The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934) 6.9, 13296   
  32. Family Plot (1976) 6.8, 16276   
  33. Torn Curtain (1966) 6.7, 19688   
  34. Secret Agent (1936) 6.6, 6381      
  35. The Paradine Case (1947) 6.5, 7871
  36. Mr. & Mrs. Smith (1941) 6.5, 7563
  37. Murder! (1930) 6.4, 4359   
  38. Topaz (1969) 6.3, 13325      
  39. Jamaica Inn (1939) 6.3, 6873   
  40. The Manxman (1929) 6.3, 1913
  41. Under Capricorn (1949) 6.2, 4921
  42. The Ring (1927) 6.2, 2381
  43. Downhill (1927) 6.2 1321
  44. The Farmer's Wife (1928) 6.0, 1838  
  45. The Pleasure Garden (1925) 6.0, 1499
  46. Waltzes from Vienna (1934) 6.0, 877
  47. Mary (1931) 6.0, 414           
  48. Rich and Strange (1931) 5.9, 3139   
  49. Number Seventeen (1932) 5.8, 3583   
  50. The Skin Game  (1931) 5.8, 2164
  51. Easy Virtue  (1928) 5.7, 1935
  52. Champagne (1928) 5.6, 1459   
  53. Juno and the Paycock (1930) 4.8, 1627
  54. The Mountain Eagle (1927) lost film, zero votes.

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 Martin Hill Ortiz is the author of Never Kill A Friend, Ransom Note Press.





Never Kill A Friend, Ransom Note Press

Never Kill A Friend is available for purchase in hard cover format and as an ebook.
The story follows Shelley Krieg, an African-American detective for the Washington DC Metro PD as she tries to undo a wrong which sent an innocent teenager to prison.

Hard cover: Amazon US
Kindle: Amazon US
Hard cover: Amazon UK
Kindle: Amazon UK
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Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Nixon, The Silver Screen and October 1973

The movies viewed by Nixon, Carter and Reagan during their presidencies have been made available online.

Of these, I find Nixon to be endlessly fascinating. I attempted to make sense of the films he watched and how they correlated to historical events. I was hoping he viewed The Andromeda Strain (or at least The Satan Bug) during the week he signed a treaty outlawing germ warfare. Instead, the association of film to historical event was more cryptic, although on occasion it did achieve an odd form of correspondence and at other times, contrast. Some examples:

January 22, 1969.
Two days after his inauguration, Nixon screened The Shoes of the Fisherman, a 1968 film in which a former political prisoner played by Anthony Quinn becomes pope at a time when a crisis in China brings the world to the brink of war.

June 28, 1969.
On the day the Stonewall riots sparked the modern gay rights movement, Nixon was watching True Grit with John Wayne.

May 2, 1970.
Two days before the Kent State shootings Nixon watched The Blue Max, a pot-boiler in which a World War I German pilot strove to shoot down enough enemy planes to become a decorated hero.

September 9 to September 13, 1971. During the Attica Prison riots, Nixon returns to John Wayne, watching Big Jake. Wayne rescues his kidnapped grandson from a band of cut-throats.

June 17, 1972.
When five White House operatives were arrested for burglary at the Watergate Hotel, Nixon was watching The Notorious Landlady a comedy/mystery with Kim Novak and Jack Lemmon. Lemmon falls for a woman accused of murder. Written by Larry Gelbart of M*A*S*H fame and Blake Edwards.


January 27, 1973. 
The United States ends its war with Vietnam by signing of the Paris Peace Accords. Nixon "celebrated?" by watching the sex-romp Tom Jones which he followed up the next day with the film noir, This Gun for Hire.

October 1973.


This brings me to one of the most troubled months in recent history: October 1973. In this month, among other events, Israel and its Arab neighbors went to war, the first oil embargo rattled the economy, and the Watergate Scandal kicked out the Vice President and two attorney generals.

Nixon's choice of films during this time period either reflected world events or provided an ominous counterpoint. Genre: Crime/Mystery, 4; Historical/ Historical Adventure, 5; Apocalyptic Tales, 2.

To usher in the month, on the night of Sunday, September 30th, Nixon watched Lonely Are the Brave. Kirk Douglas played a cowboy who got himself locked up to help a friend escape from prison. The film was penned by Dalton Trumbo who was perhaps the most famous and talented of the Hollywood 10, a group of screenwriters whose careers Nixon played a role in destroying.



On September 30th, Pinochet's government in Chile began its Caravan of Death, a death squad which flew in by helicopter and killed scores of political opponents.

October 3rd, the press reported that Nixon paid just $793 in income taxes in 1970 and $878 in 1971 and received tax refunds totaling over $131,000.

October 4th, Nixon watched the mystery/thriller Play Misty for Me. Clint Eastwood in his directorial debut starred as a DJ stalked by an obsessive fan.

October 6th, Egypt, Syria and Saudi Arabia launched a war against Israel. That same day Nixon watched the historical epic, Khartoum. Charlton Heston played 19th century British General Gordon in his doomed last stand defending the besieged city of Khartoum. Laurence Olivier played Muhammad Ahmed.

October 10th, Spiro T. Agnew resigned as Vice President.
On October 11th, as the Arab/Israeli war threatened to ignite World War III, Secretary of State Kissinger warned the Soviet Ambassador that if the Soviet Union sent troops to the Middle East so would the United States.
October 12th, a month after Pinochet seized control of Chile, Juan Peron returned to power in Argentina.

On October 13th, Nixon watched Zulu, another historical epic set in 19th century Africa. In this case 150 British and colonial troops fought back a massive native attack. Michael Caine starred.

October 14th, US begins resupply missions to aid embargoed Israel.
October 15th. Israeli tanks under General Ariel Sharon crossed the Suez Canal.

On October 16th, Nixon watched his third consecutive film about the British in 19th century Africa. Suez, starring Tyrone Power, was a mythic recounting of how the British came to build the Suez canal.

October 16th to 17th. Arab nations meet and announce an oil embargo against countries supporting Israel. Although lasting five months, this economic earthquake will shape the world for decades to come.
October 17th. Secretary of State Kissinger and Le Duc Tho were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
October 19th. President Richard Nixon rejected an Appeals Court demand to turn over the Watergate tapes.

On October 19th Nixon watches The Sting with Redford and Newman as two hustling con-men.

October 20th. The Saturday Night Massacre. Nixon demands that his Attorney General Elliot Richardson fire Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox. Richardson refuses and is fired. Ruckleshaus, second in command, refuses and is fired. Bork, third in line, takes over and fires Cox.

On October 20th, in one of his most ironic choices, Nixon watches The Searching Wind. This was made from a Lillian Hellman morality play (and screenplay) about how a 1930s diplomat refused to denounce fascism. Robert Young. Hellman also suffered from being  blacklisted.

October 23rd. In spite of the firing and dismissals, President Nixon agrees to turn White House tape recordings.

On October 23rd, Nixon watches The World in His Arms. Gregory Peck plays as a ship captain in the 1850s, battling Russians in a quest for his true love.

October 26th. Yom Kippur war ends.

On October 27th Nixon watches Fail-Safe, Dr. Strangelove played as a drama. Henry Fonda as president decides to drop a nuclear bomb on New York.

On October 29th With his own last ten days being tumultuous, Nixon watches Hitler: The Last Ten Days, starring Alec Guinness.

On October 31st, to finish off the month, Nixon watches Live and Let Die. James Bond tackles a heroin dealer in New Orleans.


Martin Hill Ortiz, also writing under the name, Martin Hill, is the author of A Predatory Mind. His latest mystery, Never Kill A Friend, is available from Ransom Note Press. His epic poem, Two Mistakes, recently won second place in the Margaret Reid/Tom Howard Poetry Competition. He can be contacted at mdhillortiz@gmail.com.