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Post by lowtacks86 on Jul 6, 2021 22:42:50 GMT
For a while I assumed Cape Fear (1962) was directed by him
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Post by kolchak92 on Jul 6, 2021 22:43:34 GMT
Charade, easily. And not to nitpick, but the proper term is "Hitchcockian".
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Post by Popeye Doyle on Jul 6, 2021 22:49:29 GMT
Dressed to Kill (1980)
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Post by moviemouth on Jul 6, 2021 22:55:21 GMT
Dressed to Kill and Body Double and Sisters and..., considering Brian DePalma made his career borrowing from Hitchcock.
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Post by politicidal on Jul 6, 2021 22:56:45 GMT
Charade, easily. And not to nitpick, but the proper term is "Hitchcockian". Definitely Charade.
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Post by moviemouth on Jul 6, 2021 23:01:49 GMT
Charade, easily. And not to nitpick, but the proper term is "Hitchcockian". Definitely Charade. Coming soon. Charade vs. The Truth About Charlie. Charade is nothing special to me, but The Truth About Charlie...ugh. Then Demme directed the remake of The Manchurian Candidate, which is actually decent.
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Post by politicidal on Jul 6, 2021 23:04:11 GMT
Coming soon. Charade vs. The Truth About Charlie. Charade is nothing special to me, but The Truth About Charlie...ugh. Then Demme directed the remake of The Manchurian Candidate, which is actually decent. Saw The Truth About Charlie last year. As far as remakes go, it's mediocre but the editing is god-awful. I couldn't believe Demme directed it.
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Post by moviemouth on Jul 6, 2021 23:06:19 GMT
Coming soon. Charade vs. The Truth About Charlie. Charade is nothing special to me, but The Truth About Charlie...ugh. Then Demme directed the remake of The Manchurian Candidate, which is actually decent. Saw The Truth About Charlie last year. As far as remakes go, it's mediocre but the editing is god-awful. I couldn't believe Demme directed it. I even saw the remake first. The main problem is Mark Wahlberg is very miscast and not very good in the movie and has no chemistry with Thandie Newton (great casting there though) and yes, the editing. It is also an ugly looking movie.
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Post by Popeye Doyle on Jul 6, 2021 23:06:43 GMT
Psycho (1998)?
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Post by moviemouth on Jul 6, 2021 23:07:29 GMT
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Post by Prime etc. on Jul 6, 2021 23:10:53 GMT
OBSESSION 1976
HYSTERIA 1965- Hitchcock-like story but not the style.
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Post by darksidebeadle on Jul 6, 2021 23:12:35 GMT
De Palma aside, basic Instinct
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Post by Archelaus on Jul 6, 2021 23:32:19 GMT
Night Train to Munich Gaslight From Russia with Love Les Diaboliques Peeping Tom
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Post by phantomparticle on Jul 6, 2021 23:38:31 GMT
There is a lot of Hitchcock in the work of the Coen Bros.
The Man Who Wasn't There. Burn After Reading
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Post by drystyx on Jul 7, 2021 0:56:20 GMT
CHARADE was my first pick, too.
There were a few others to add on made in the sixties and seventies mostly. Arabesque, Blindfold, Frogs, Mirage, a host of others.
CHARADE was fantastic, of course. Of the others, BLINDFOLD was next best. Certainly the most inspiring of the others. I like MIRAGE, too, but it was quite ridiculous in plot, even for this sort of movie.
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Post by OldAussie on Jul 7, 2021 1:11:31 GMT
Charade....but Still of the Night deserves a mention.
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Post by Captain Spencer on Jul 7, 2021 2:22:41 GMT
The Bedroom Window. That one's about as Hitchcock-esque as you can get.
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Post by lostinlimbo on Jul 7, 2021 2:43:21 GMT
Definitely Charade.
Another few; Midnight Lace and Road Games.
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Post by theravenking on Jul 7, 2021 15:19:02 GMT
Mirage
Woman Of Straw Games (1967)
I tend to forget that Witness for the Prosecution wasn't directed by Hitchcock but Billy Wilder. Some Chabrol films are very Hitchcockian. Innocents with Dirty Hands for example. Mario Bava's The Evil Eye (1963), its original title "The girl who knew too much" even sounds very Hitchcockian. Some more modern examples would be: Still Of Night (1982)
Malice (1993)Transsiberian - a modern update of The Lady Vanishes
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