Significant texts in any genre arise from specific social and cultural conditions and possess an enduring relevance. To what extent is this true of the text you have studied.
Alfred Hitchcock explores a number of concepts within his film ‘Rear Window’. The three major concepts include; voyeurism, gender roles and loss of community. Hitchcock heavily applies these social and cultural conditions throughout the movie, conditions that have found themselves to possess a strong enduring relevance, even from the 1950’s until this very day in the 21st century.
From the very start of the film, we are immediately introduced to the idea of voyeurism, with Hitchcock using a zooming out shot through the window of Jeff’s apartment. This zooming shot is connected with the slow lingering pan of the neighbourhood that follows, with his neighbours busy with their own lives and in their own confined apartments. This serves to emphasise how the characters have no connection towards one another, therefore putting forward the social condition of loss of community. As the camera continues to zoom into specific people, we are never able to see them from a personal distance as we are stopped by the window, which symbolises a movie theatre experience, reinforcing the idea of voyeurism and disconnection with the communities lives with one another.
Through the aspect of voyeurism, we are also able to see the gender roles which were incredibly prevalent within Jeff’s era (1950s). A helicopter hovers above the apartments, which once again symbolises Jeff’s spying. He is gazing at women getting undressed and of his neighbour, who he names, ‘Miss Torso’, dancing around half naked around her apartment. This brings to light the social and cultural condition of gender roles, which sees Jeff looking at women without any respect towards their privacy or their body. He is creating images of them in a negative light and controlling what society thinks of them, forming this view of them being ditzy women who belong to men’s desires.
This is further reiterated by the way that Jeff communicates with his partner, Lisa, ‘Well if she’s pretty enough, she doesn’t have to go
steady job and the wife cooked, cleaned and took care of their perfect well behaved children. Released in 1954, Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window, serves as an inside look into the male psyche and the truth behind the 'perfect' institution of 1950's marriage. Viewed from the perspective of the injured L.B Jefferies, an action photographer, the characters in Jeff's rear window serve as a representation of what he thinks he will give up, have to deal with, and what he will suffer through if he were to get…
brought with him a distinctive and recognizable style that better defines him as an auteur. Instead of using recycled plots and overused Classic Hollywood Cinema shooting techniques, Hitchcock emphasized style over story. One of his best films, Rear Window, captures his stylistic ingenuity by portraying all of his techniques on the big screen for everyone to view. Hitchcock is best known for his use of suspense in which he creates throughout the entire movie in order to build to that one moment where…
USU1330 Creative Arts – Spring 2014 WORKSHEET #4: Rear Window SUBMISSION DATE: Friday April 11th Rear Window (1954) is one of director Alfred Hitchcock’s most successful and well-known films. Upon its initial release it was both a critical and commercial success and its reputation as one of the Hitchcock’s masterpieces has grown over the decades since. In a recent AFI (American Film Institute) poll, Rear Window came in at #42 on the list of the 100 greatest films ever made with three other…
Fear of Marriage and Voyeurism in Rear Window In Alfred Hitchcock's 1954 classic thriller Rear Window, Jimmy Stewart stars as L.B. Jeffries, a world traveling magazine photographer accustomed to living a fast pace active lifestyle. When Jefferies injures himself taking a risky picture he is immobilized, confined to a wheelchair inside his apartment for two months. Bored with his uneventful life he becomes completely obsessed with the lives of his neighbors spending the majority of his…
Sound is everywhere. It is part of our everyday lives and our interactions and definitely a part of film. Sound, especially dialogue, makes it easier to understand what is happening. But it also provides texture and emotion to each scene. Though most moviegoers might think of film as an essentially visual experience, we cannot underestimate the importance of sound and music in film. Most movies would not be interesting at all if you were to take away the sound and music. Sound enables the director…
Assignment Like Mulvey, Modleski analysed Rear Window (Hitchcock, 1954). However Modleski came to the conclusion that “Jeff himself – and, by extension, the male film viewer – is forced to identify with the woman” (2004: 858). Compare Modleski’s interpretation to Mulvey’s original essay. Renowned director Alfred Hitchcock has often been accused of having a negative attitude in his portrayal of female characters in many of his films. His 1954 classic, “Rear Window (1954)” has drawn particular attention…
M U L V E Y As a feminist film theorist, Lara Mulvey is well known for her nearly infamous essay entitled "Visual Pleasure in the Narrative Cinema" (full text can be found here). The essay outlines an idea about the "male gaze" in which men have the power to actively look upon passive female bodies. Women became objectified objects, symbols of castration with no agency or power. Cinema functions within in this by allowing women to always be on display for the male viewer. Obviously, this idea is…
life. In this essay I will be talking about the auteur theory in relation to Alfred Hitcock and his works and how the theory itself comes into practice within the themes and the aesthetics of his films. Hitchcock’s films regularly have the theme of voyeurism within them, they also have very similar visuals like the extreme close-up as well as rather jarring music that complement perfectly to the scene both diegetic and non-diegetic like Psychos screeching shower theme and Rear Windows street sounds…
Rear Window. North By Northwest. Vertigo. Psycho. Four intense, groundbreaking thrillers, released between 1954 and 1960, which both shocked and terrified audiences across the globe. Four films that redefined the thriller genre, shaping it into the riveting, emotional roller coaster we recognize today. Four films that, if not for a young, intelligent young title card designer for Paramount Pictures (London Branch), may never have been greenlit for production. Alfred Hitchcock was born on August…
Essay by Bianca bryant Question (4). Explain how undue aggression, high anxiety, and unresolved oppositional behavior, interfere with emotional development in childhood. Can this interference make a difference in adolescence? There are several factors that can interfere during the early childhood stage in particular a child's emotional development which is a very important part of who a child becomes when they start making a life for themselves as adolescents then onto adulthood, even moving on…