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Alfred Hitchcock's comments in his frequent interviews have encouraged many critics to assume that the director's true career
began in 1934 with The Man Who Knew Too Much, the first in a long, almost unbroken string of thrillers. Then, having defined
Hitchcock as a specialist, these critics select from his earlier work only those films that anticipate his later career: The
Lodger (1927), Blackmail (1929), Murder! (1930), and Number Seventeen (1932). Such a perspective, mired in the confidence
of hindsight, results in a highly misleading view of the director, one that dismisses his 12 other early features - eight
silent and four sound - and implies that he was merely marking time until his 'true' creative personality emerged. Hitchcock
was, in fact, a major director from the very start of his career in 1925 and for 10 years he made substantial, mature features
that reveal an impressive consistency in content and form. This book examines those all important films.
$20 + $5 priority mail (foreign orders, please add $12 for airmail)
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6x9 paperback, 224 pages
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