Peeping Tom Movie Review
Peeping Tom Review
"Peeping Tom" Overview

Rating: NR
1960
Cast and Crew
Director : Michael PowellProducer : Michael Powell
Screenwiter :
Starring : Carl Boehm,Moira Shearer,Anna Massey,Maxine Audley,Bartlett Mullins
Movie critics in England didn’t just pan Peeping Tom when it was released in
1960 – they eviscerated it. “The only really satisfactory way to dispose of
Peeping Tom would be to shovel it up and flush it swiftly down the nearest
sewer,” one critic blared, joining a chorus of voices calling it “sick,”
“nasty,” and “beastly.” The film was pulled from theaters in less than a week,
and the foofaraw all but ended director Michael Powell’s big-screen career,
which was built on outsize – and much more polite – successes like The Red
Shoes and Black Narcissus, his collaborations with Emeric Pressburger. It wasn’
t until the late '70s, when Martin Scorsese celebrated the film, that it began
finding audiences again.
In most movie-business tales like this one, you can later look at the film in
question and wonder what the fuss was all about. That’s not the case here.
Peeping Tom remains an intense, thoroughly disarming film about madness – not
cackling, loony-bin madness, but the sort of insanity where the person is
painfully aware of just what’s cracked inside him. Psycho, to which this movie’
s often compared (they were released the same year) eventually reveals Norman
Bates as utterly certifiable. That doesn’t happen to Mark Lewis (a tremendous
Carl Boehm), the handsome gent who spends his days as a focus puller at a film
studio and his nights killing women – and filming the proceedings. Only until
the very end is Lewis revealed as unsalvageable – until then, you’re half
rooting for the guy, and that’s both the brilliance and the horror of the film.
Much of the tension in Peeping Tom comes from its constant scenes of people
looking at things they shouldn’t. Lewis spends part of his time shooting pin-up
photos above a tobacco shop; in a subtle but riotous scene, one sweaty visitor
to the shop works up the nerve to ask to see the dirty photos on sale, and the
cool, mannered tone of the shopkeeper, Mr. Peters (Bartlett Mullins) gives the
moment a subtle hilarity. But mostly the effect is creepy: Helen (Anna Massey),
Mark’s sweet and slightly mousy downstairs neighbor, invades his dark lair of
snuff films, and it’s easy to sympathize with her eagerness to watch, even if
what she’s looking at is terrible.
And then, of course, there’s Mark himself. In the film’s most chilling scene, a
film actress played by Moira Shearer is slowly enchanted by Mark, who postures
as a budding director, until she’s finally done in. Part of the creepiness
comes from the fact that you, the viewer, are implicated in all this – you’re
watching people watching what they shouldn’t watch, and you can’t resist their
inability to resist. It’s not an accident that the de facto heroine of the
film, Helen’s mother (Maxine Audley), is blind.
With its knives in the tripod and its somewhat overcooked psychology, the film
could easily have degenerated into cut-rate Hitchcock or a B-movie. But it
turns out to be the best sort of horror film. Most scary movies rely on the
quick jump-cut, where a pleasant moment is whacked by something awful. In
Peeping Tom, there’s a constantly gorgeous surface – a handsome hero, lots of
bright Technicolor – and a constant moral rot at play underneath. The whole
damn thing is a jump-cut scare.
Reviewer: Mark Athitakis



