Film Review
Alfred Hitchcock was justifiably unenthused when his employers, British
International Pictures, requested him to make an adaptation of J.
Jefferson Farjeon's mediocre stage play
Number Seventeen. Hitchcock
rightly considered the play to be full of clichés and only took
on the project with great reluctance. Rather than make a serious
thriller, he used the opportunity to send up the genre as far as he
could, whilst performing experiments with lighting and camera movement
which would have been impossible on a more conventional film. The
end result is truly bizarre - looking like a film noir that was
concocted in Britain's maddest lunatic asylum.
Number Seventeen is certainly
an atypical Hitchcock film - an unbridled parody of the low
budget crime thrillers that were prevalent in the early 1930s. It
probably helped that this film had a shoestring budget - evidenced by
the poor quality of the models in the chaotic denouement. The
film has often been criticised for its production weaknesses and
virtually incomprehensible plot, but such criticisms generally miss the
point of the film.
Number
Seventeen is a warning of what cinema was in danger of becoming
- a mindless spectacle of muddled intrigue and artistic
self-indulgence, without any real substance or meaning. If
Hitchcock were around today he would probably grin nonchalantly and
mutter: "Told you so".
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934)
Film Synopsis
On entering a seemingly abandoned old house one night, a detective
discovers a Cockney tramp named Ben and a dead body. An
attractive young girl named Rose suddenly falls in through a
skylight. She hands over a telegram which announces a group of
thieves are shortly to arrive at the house to collect a stolen
necklace. Right on cue, a strange couple appear on the doorstep,
masquerading as a pair of nocturnal house hunters...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.