Film Review
Buoyed by the immense success of
Psycho
(1960), Alfred Hitchcock chose to stick with the horror genre for his
next film,
The Birds, which
was to provide one of cinema's most chilling apocalyptic visions of the
future. Like
Psycho,
The Birds begins slowly, heading
down what looks like a familiar cosy lane, and then suddenly it veers
off sharply to the left, becoming a completely different kind of film
to the one any audience might have expected. This is
Hitchcock's most horrifying and darkest films, because it deals with
the bleakest of subjects - the extinction of the human race.
The Birds is based on a short
story by Daphne du Maurier, which Hitchcock had originally intended for
his TV series "Alfred Hitchcock Presents". The screenplay was
written by Evan Hunter, who is better known as the novelist Ed
McBain. This was to be Hitchcock's most technically challenging
film, making use of state of the art special effects which look pretty
good even by today's standards. Some of the film's most ambitious
sequences (such as the one where the running children are attacked by
birds) were realised using a sodium vapour variant of the "travelling
mat" or "blue screen" process that had been widely used in film and
television to create the illusion of objects flying. The sodium
vapour approach was far more difficult to set up but avoided the
"fringing" defect associated with blue screen. These effects
earned the film an Oscar nomination, but as it turned out the Academy
of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences felt that Joseph L. Mankiewicz's
historical epic
Cleopatra
(1963) should be the recipient of the Best Special Effects award that
year - an outcome that is incomprehensible to anyone who has ever seen
both films.
The Birds has some of the most
disturbing and suspenseful sequences of any Hitchcock film. Most
memorable is the manically edited sequence in which Tippi Hedren is
mauled for what seems like an eternity by psychopathic birds in a
creepy attic. This manages to surpass the famous Janet Leigh
murder scene in
Psycho in its
visceral shock value and relentless brutality. The sequence took
five days to film and Hedren (in her first major film role) had
mistakenly believed that mechanical bird models, not real birds, would
be used, right up until the day of the first shoot. The actress
was so drained after having had live birds thrown at her for the best
part of a week that she was not well enough to appear in some of the
later scenes, so these were shot using a double.
One of the things which most contributes to the unsettling and very
distinctive mood of
The Birds
is its eerie electronic effects (produced by a device called a
mixtrautonium), which are used in place of a conventional film
score. These effects mimic the sound of birds and are played over
sequences where there is no human speech. This, together with the
dominating bird's eye shots, adds to the impression of the birds
rapidly gaining ascendancy over human beings.
The ending of
The Birds has been
criticised for its apparent ambiguity, although from the final shot, in which thousands
of birds assemble to watch the humans make a last dash for freedom, it
is self-evident how the story will pan out. The immense poetry
and horror of that final shot contains within it a powerful statement
on the transience of things. We may think we are secure, but
there will come a day when humans will no longer be the masters of the
Earth. Our end may come in a million years' time - or it may be
tomorrow.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
Marnie (1964)
Film Synopsis
On a whim, bored socialite Melanie Daniels decides to pay a home visit
to Mitch Brenner, a lawyer she met by chance in a San Francisco bird
shop. Shortly after arriving at Brenner's home in Bodega Bay, a
small coastal town in northern California, Melanie is attacked by a
seagull. Mitch invites her to stay at his house, which he shares
with his mother and his younger sister Cathy. The next day, at a
children's outdoor party to celebrate Cathy's birthday, there is
another avian attack - by several different species of
birds. Melanie and Mitch become increasingly concerned that
the birds appear to be turning against mankind. Sure enough, a
day or two later, the birds make an assault of even greater ferocity on
the town, killing dozens of people and causing destruction to
property. One drunken man proclaims: "It's the end of the
world...!" Maybe it is - for its human population...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.