Discover
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Alfred Hitchcock
Screenplay -
Ronald Neame
Assistant Camera -
Michael Powell
Assistant Camera -
Charles Bennett
Theatre Play -
Hubert Bath
Original Music Composer -
Jack E. Cox
Director of Photography -
John Reynders
Conductor -
Harry Miller
Sound Editor
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CinemaSerf 11/2/2023 8:07:33 AM
I saw the silent version recently with an expertly played piano accompaniment that added loads to an, admittedly rather too long, drama. "Alice" (Anny Ondra) has a silly spat with policeman boyfriend "Frank" (John Longden) and then rather foolishly hooks up with an odious artist (Cyril Ritchard) who attempts to push his luck too far and whom she accidentally, rather brutally, despatches. Terrified that nobody would believe her, and rather than call the authorities, she flees the scene - but not before she is spotted and subsequently has to deal with the venal aspirations of her blackmailer (a perfectly cast Donald Calthrop). Meantime, the police get the wrong end of the stick during their investigation and another tragedy ensues - leaving poor old "Alice" riddled with even more guilt! The one thing that takes a bit of getting used to is the really rather static nature of the photography, but once you adopt a perspective that you are in the same seat (in the cinema) as the cameraman then that actually starts to work quite well as we become more immersed in a solid story of fickleness and deceit. The inter-titles are sparing but do all that is necessary to augment Hitchcock's innate ability to tell us a story using the limited technology available in 1929, that capitalises on light, shade, and the environment around the characters. Somehow, I reckon that the talkie version that followed almost immediately would be anywhere near as effective.
Alfred Hitchcock
Man on Subway (uncredited)Anny Ondra
Alice WhiteDonald Calthrop
TracyJoan Barry
Alice White (voice) (uncredited)John Longden
Detective Frank WebberEx-Det. Sergt. Bishop
The Detective SergeantCyril Ritchard
The ArtistSara Allgood
Mrs. White