Rear Window Movie Review
Rear Window Review

"Rear Window" Overview

Rating: PG
1954
Cast and Crew
Director : Alfred HitchcockProducer : Alfred Hitchcock
Screenwiter : John Michael Hayes
Starring : James Stewart,Grace Kelly,Wendell Corey,Thelma Ritter,Raymond Burr
Not only is Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window one of his best pictures, it's one
of the best films ever made altogether.
The master craftsmanship on display (placing virtually the entire film within
the confines of the apartment of hobbled photographer L.B. Jeffries -- the
inimitable James Stewart -- referred to as "J.B. Jeffries" on the back of the
DVD case) has few parallels in modern cinema. The story by John Michael Hayes
is one of Hitch's simplest yet most gripping: Jeffries spies the cleanup of a
supposed murder across the way from his Manhattan apartment -- a sinister
Raymond Burr cleaning knives and whatnot. He tells his girlfriend (Grace
Kelly) and she laughs. His nurse (the unforgettable Thelma Ritter) mocks him
also, urging him to marry instead of peeping out the window at strangers. But
slowly, the truth is revealed, and even his most ardent naysayers join in the
plot to uncover the reality of what happened in the apartment across the way.
By the end of the picture, Kelly is prepared to break into Burr's apartment via
fire escape because she's certain of what has happened inside.
The many nuances of Stewart's character, his opposites-attract love affair with
Kelly, and the dozen other denizens of the apartment complex make Rear Window
much more than a small tale of voyeurism, but it is that motif which will be
most remembered by history. Hitchcock himself was a man on the sidelines,
content to watch and stay out of the action, and the film is one that's truly
from his soul. Decades before The Real World and Survivor made voyeurs out of
all of us, Rear Window identified that most curious trend in the world's psyche.
Gloriously and painstakingly restored for this DVD release, the red on Kelly's
lips has never looked more brilliant and inviting. The extras on the disc
include a somewhat interesting hour-long interview montage with the restoration
crew and Hitchcock buffs, but a separate, brief conversation with writer Hayes
is actually the most entertaining part of the bonus material.
Any film buff will want to own this precious title, and any Hitch fan should be
shot if he doesn't line up for it on the day it's released. A must-have.
He liked to watch.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



