| ABOUT US | ARCHIVES | LINKS | RSS FEED | MONDAYS | |

3quarksdaily

An Eclectic Digest of Science, Art and Literature

« What does Nietzsche mean to philosophers today? | Main | Cultural Crossoads of the Levant »

June 28, 2008

Chris Marker on Hitchcock's Vertigo

Speaking of filmmakers on filmmakers, one of my favorite film essays:

`Power and freedom'. Coupled together, these two words are repeated three times inVertigo. First, at the twelfth minute by Gavin Elster ('freedom' under-lined by a move to close-up) who, looking at a picture of Old San Francisco, expresses his nostalgia to Scottie ('San Francisco has changed. The things that spelled San Francisco to me are disappearing fast'), a nostalgia for a time when men - some men at least - had `power and freedom'. Second, at the thirty-fifth minute, in the bookstore, where `Pop' Liebel explains how Carlotta Valdes's rich lover threw her out yet kept her child: `Men could do that in those days. They had the power and the freedom ... ' And finally at the hundred and twenty-fifth minute - and fifty-first second to be precise - but in reverse order (which is logical, given we are now in the second part, on the other side of the mirror) by Scottie himself when, realizing the workings of the trap laid by the now free and powerful Elster, he says, a few seconds before Judy's fall - which, for him, will be Madeleine's second death -'with all his wife's money and all that freedom and power ... '.Just try telling me these are coincidences.

Such precise signs must have a meaning. Could it be psychological, an explanation of the criminal's motives? If so, the effort seems a little wasted on what is, after all, a secondary character. This strategic triad gave me the first inkling of a possible reading of Vertigo. The vertigo the film deals with isn't to do with space and falling; it is a clear, understandable and spectacular metaphor for yet another kind of vertigo, much more difficult to represent - the vertigo of time. Elster's `perfect' crime almost achieves the impossible: reinventing a time when men and women and San Francisco were different to what they are now. And its perfection, as with all perfection in Hitchcock, exists in duality. Scottie will absorb the folly of time with which Elster infuses him through Madeleine/Judy. But where Elster reduces the fantasy to mediocre manifestations (wealth, power, etc), Scottie transmutes it into its most utopian form: he overcomes the most irreparable damage caused by time and resurrects a love that is dead.

Posted by Robin Varghese at 05:59 PM | Permalink

Comments

Thanks for reminding me of that brilliant, haunting movie, undoubtably one of the best ever made. Striking how one of Holywood's greatest "good guys" Jimmy Stewart, who is the nominal victim of the fraud in the movie, becomes the obsessed inquisitor, while Madeleine/Judy is turned from con-artist into victim.

Posted by: aguy109 | Jun 30, 2008 8:05:34 AM

Post a comment






Subscribe to this blog's feed  

3QD Politics Prize

3QD ADVERTISING


3QD on Twitter


Miscellany

Lijit Search

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Add to Google


Recent Comments

Abbas Raza on Naqvi's prose is evocative of Nabokov

Ruchira on The New Inquisition

Pepito on Naqvi's prose is evocative of Nabokov

Dave Ranning on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

saifedean on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Denis Dutton on Morgan Meis Wins $30,000 Warhol Foundation Award

jb on People Hear with Their Skin, As Well As Their Ears

Pepito on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Pohanginapete on Wednesday Poem

Carlos on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Ruchira on Morgan Meis Wins $30,000 Warhol Foundation Award

saifedean on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Butters on We May Be Born With an Urge to Help

Butters on Scientists Grow Pork Meat in a Laboratory

Pepito on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Chris Schoen on The New Inquisition

Pepito on Cyrus Hall on the Swiss Islamic Minaret Ban

Abbas Raza on congo dandies (for Abbas)

Louise Gordon on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

wagonjak on Picasso's Guernica in 3D

Gajasimha on Scientists Grow Pork Meat in a Laboratory

Pepito on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Chris Schoen on Cyrus Hall on the Swiss Islamic Minaret Ban

Lambness on Wednesday Poem

Carlos on Picasso's Guernica in 3D


Acclaim For 3QD


"I couldn't tear myself away from 3 Quarks Daily, to the point of neglecting my work. Congratulations on this superb site."—Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University.

"I have placed 3 Quarks Daily at the head of my list of web bookmarks."—Richard Dawkins, Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University.

"Just wanted you to know I’m one of many who reads and enjoys 3 Quarks....almost daily."—David Byrne, musician, former lead-singer of the Talking Heads, artist, intellectual.


The 3QD Prizes


Logos designed by Vicki Winters

Subscribe to this blog's feed