Sunday, June 2, 2019
Rear Window, by Alfred Hitchcock Essay -- essays research papers
In the movie, Rear Window, Alfred Hitchcock uses the story of a cripple free lance photographer, Jeff Jeffries, to apologise the twisted sense of society in the 1950s. Hitchcock uses clever things from the way the apartments are being filmed to the dialogue between Jeffries, Lisa, and Stella to show societies interest in pain, tragedy, and discomfort, and in the end you see how tragedy is what makes everyone happy.From the very beginning of Rear Window we encounter scenes where Hitchcock shows Stella being sadistic, but we come to realize later that it is not estimable Stella. Stella is just the solitary(prenominal) one who speaks out just about it. You must observe all the other characters actions and reactions to truly see. Stella tells Jeffries that we have become a race of peeping toms and that the only thing that can come out of peeping toms is trouble. In no way do those comments make Jefferies feel like what his is doing is wrong. By his reactions to Stellas comments you rattling feel like they encourage him to continue watching his neighbors from his window. He reinforces the idea that he lives in a corrupted society when he replies to her comments that right now, I would welcome trouble. Jefferies is the source of the corrupted society and as the movie goes on you begin to see him corrupting the other characters, especially Stella and Lisa.When Stella is talking to Jeffries about Lisa and she describes Lisa as a great girl, you see Jeffries have a reaction that ...
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