âStrangers on a Trainâ
Is a Hitchcock Horror Film
Reviewed by Shirrel Rhoades
We constantly watch Tropic Cinemaâs marquee for new films, but sometimes overlook the Monday Night Classic Film Series that flickers weekly on its screens. My fellow movie reviewer Craig Wanous is host of this series, introducing these memorable movies and sharing anecdotes that add to the experience.
Tomorrow night, for example, is Alfred Hitchcockâs âStrangers on a Train.â Sure, you can catch it on Turner Classic Movies or download it from Netflix ⦠but thatâs not the same as watching this 1951 psychological thriller in a theater.
You remember the âcrisscrossâ plot: two strangers meet up on a train, get to chatting, and agree that it would be a perfect murder if man-about-town Bruno (Robert Walker) killed tennis ace Guyâs unfaithful wife so he can marry elegant Anne (Ruth Roman), and if Guy (Farley Granger) returned the favor by killing Brunoâs overbearing father. Who would connect them to the murders, since they donât know each other?
Turns out, Bruno is serious about this murder plot, but Guy isnât. And things begin to fall apart for Guy when the other fellow follows through, killing his wife at an amusement park, then begins to harangue Guy to live up to his end of the bargain.
Nobody can wring suspense out of a plot like this better than Hitchcock.
âStrangers on a Trainâ was based on Patricia Highsmithâs first novel. Hitch bought the rights anonymously and Highsmith was irked to discover sheâd sold the rights so cheaply to a famous director.
Guy and Bruno have been described as doppelgängers, two sides of the same personality. The theme of doubles is âthe key element in the filmâs structure,â explain Hitchcock biographer Donald Spoto. When discussing the structure of the film, Hitchcock said âIsnât it a fascinating design? One could study it forever.â
One scene in the film is studied in film schools, the strangulation thatâs viewed through the victimâs discarded eyeglasses. Itâs considered âone of the most memorable single shots in the Hitchcock canonâ -- a graceful ballet of murder that Spoto called âthe aestheticizing of the horror.â
âPsychoâ -- the subject of the recent âHitchcockâ film that recently played at the Tropic -- is considered his horror film, but Iâd argue that âStrangers on a Trainâ is also a horror film and that mamaâs boy Bruno in his own way is just as crazy as mamaâs boy Norman Bates.
A recent study titled âThe Psychology of Alfred Hitchcockâ opines, âFreud would have concluded that Hitchcockâs attitude towards women, and his obsession with strong mother figures, is probably due to Hitchcockâs experiences of his own mother, who sometimes made the young Hitchcock stand at the foot of her bed for several hours as a punishmentâ¦.â
As Hitchcock once said, âThe way to get rid of my fears is to make films about them.â
BTW, Hitchcockâs trademark cameo occurs 11 minutes into the film, when alert viewers will spot him boarding the train carrying a big bass fiddle case.
srhoades@aol.com
TROPIC CINEMA Movie Discussion Blog
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