Film Review
Suspicion is classic Hitchcock
- a suspenseful psychological thriller which takes a darkly comedic
look at one of the director's obsessions: the sacred institution of
marriage. The film gives Cary Grant his first leading role in a
Hitchcock film - three more were to follow, culminating in
North By Northwest
(1959). The female lead was played Joan Fontaine, who had
previously starred in Hitchcock's
Rebecca (1950), a film which
has many similarities with this one. Fontaine won the Best
Actress Oscar for her role in this film. There's also a nice turn
from Nigel Bruce (taking a break from a run of films in which he played
Dr Watson to Basil Rathbone's Sherlock Holmes) - here he plays
a dim but likable Britisher with a penchant for Donald Duck impressions.
Suspicion deals with a
recurring theme in Hitchcock's work - the duality of human
nature. The perceived dual character of the film's hero/villain -
played superbly by Grant in one of his best performances - is
accentuated by the atmospheric film noir-style cinematography.
The stark shadows projected onto the walls and floor of the marital
home give the impression that the heroine is caught in a spider's web from
which death is the only escape. We never quite know whether the
threat is real or imaginary, until the last moment.
The film itself has a something of schizoid nature. It begins as
a light-hearted romantic comedy, but gradually darkens as our
suspicions over the Cary Grant character grow, and the second half of
the film is much more recognisable as a Hitchcock thriller. The
film was originally to have had a much darker ending, in which the
heroine allowed herself to be murdered by her husband, but the studio
bosses at RKO vetoed this to preserve Cary Grant's nice guy
image. As a result, the film has a contrived happy ending which
looks like a sloppy last-minute alteration and virtually undermines
everything that preceded it.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
Saboteur (1942)
Film Synopsis
From the moment they first met, sitting opposite one another on a
train, Lina MacKinlaw knew that Johnnie Aysgarth would be the love of
her life. A marriage hastily ensues but it isn't until after the
honeymoon that Lina discovers that Johnnie hasn't a penny to his
name. An inveterate gambler and wastrel, Johnnie is up to his
eyes in debt and Lina is horrfied when she later discovers that he was
dismissed for stealing from his employer. To raise money, Johnny
goes into partnership with an old friend, Beaky Thwaite, the latter
putting up the capital to start a real estate business. Not long
after they decide to wind up the scheme, Beaky is killed in a road
accident in Paris, before he can take his money out of the
company. When Lina learns that Johnnie was not where he claimed
to be at the time of Beaky's death, she draws the obvious
conclusion. How long will it be before he kills her...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.