Film Review
The absolute best of Alfred Hitchcock's British films is this exciting,
highly entertaining adaptation of John Buchan's novel
The Thirty-Nine Steps.
It was the culmination of everything that Hitchcock had achieved in his
preceding twenty or so films and a template for much of what was to
follow. Along with the subsequent
The
Lady Vanishes (1938) , this was the film that earned
Hitchcock his international reputation and his one-way ticket to
Hollywood.
To date there have been three other adaptations of the John Buchan
novel - one released in 1958, directed by Ralph Thomas, one in 1978 by
Don Sharp, and one by Robert Towne, to be released in 2009.
Hitchcock's version is unquestionably the best, although it is the one
which departs most radically from the original novel. The basic
plot is one that recurs in several of the director's
later films - notably
Saboteur (1942) and
North by Northwest (1959): a
sympathetic Mr Average is wrongly accused of a crime, finds the whole
world turned against him and has to expose the real culprit to clear
his name. It's a familiar storyline, one that provides the bare
bones for countless thriller novels and films, but somehow no one tells
it better than Hitchcock.
This is a film that demonstrates how brilliantly Hitchcock exploits
every aspect of filmmaking technique to craft a piece of cinema that
scores highly on both the artistic and entertainment scales. The
composition of shots, the choice of camera angles, the startling use of
lighting, the precise editing - all work to build suspense, create
atmosphere and tell the story as efficiently as possible. The
result is a film that rushes ahead like an express train, with plenty
of humour but also a great deal of tension and darkness.
Although the action slows down from time to time to allow the
characters and the audience time to catch their breath, the pace is
relentless, exhilarating, and fun.
The 39 Steps benefits from a
superlative cast of talented British actors. In his most
memorable role, Robert Donat makes a debonair and very likeable Richard
Hannay, an obvious forerunner of the suave James Bond-style action
heroes in cinema's later adventure thrillers. Donat has a natural
sparkly rapport with his co-star Madeleine Carroll, which most
manifests itself in the famous scene where they are handcuffed together
in a hotel bedroom, one of funniest and most erotic scenes in any
Hitchcock film. Two other great actors, John Laurie and Peggy
Ashcroft, bring a keen edge of realism to the film's most poignant
scene, the one where Hannay unwittingly causes ructions in the
crofter's cottage.
Although it was made six years after the arrival of sound recording,
The 39 Steps has something of the
feel of a silent film, and not just because it employs some of the
expressionistic touches of Hitchcock's very early films. It is a
good example of
pure cinema,
telling the story using images rather than dialogue. The
oft-cited scene transition from the shot of a woman screaming to the
shot of Hannay's train heading off to Scotland heightens the brutality
of the killing and emphasises the nature of the threat that our hero is
up against. The spectacular chase sequences across the bleak
Scottish moors remind us of Hannay's vulnerability and his seemingly
hopeless isolation. And the scene where the main villain reveals
himself is so spine-chilling because it is so economically realised - a
shot of a hand with one finger missing. Only a director who had
mastered his art in the silent era - as Hitchcock had - could have such
an innate appreciation of the potentialities of the moving image
to tell a story and engage with an audience. Maybe this is
the thing that most made Hitchcock a great cineaste and why his films
have such an enduring, universal appeal.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
Sabotage (1936)
Film Synopsis
Not long after arriving in London, the Canadian Richard Hannay visits a
music hall theatre to watch the star act, Mr Memory, a man who startles
his audience with his infallible recollection of trivial
facts. During the show, gunshots are fired. In the
panic, Hannay leaves the theatre holding a woman he has never met
before. Identifying herself as Annabella Smith, the woman insists
that Hannay takes her back to his flat. There, she reveals that
she is a secret agent who has just discovered that enemy agents are
planning to smuggle vital military secrets out of the country.
Later that night, Annabella is murdered but leaves a vital clue - a map
of Scotland with a town marked. Hannay takes the first
train to Scotland, but when Annabella's dead body is discovered, he is
the obvious suspect and the police are not far behind him. By a
combination of luck and ingenuity, Hannay manages to evade capture and
finally arrives at the location marked on the map, only to come
face-to-face with the head of the enemy spy ring...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.