Alfred Hitchcock

This publisher’s first thriller broke pre-release sales records

The author, Dan Mallory, has packed his love of classic mysteries and film noir—and his own experience of depression—into a stellar debut

How the shower scene from ‘Psycho’ slashed its way into legend

An obsessive new documentary dives deep into Psycho’s iconic shower scene, which changed film and culture forever

Photographer Albert Watson on getting the stars to pose

Alfred Hitchcock and Queen Elizabeth II among iconic subjects

An obe? Really, you shouldn't have.

A long list of people who have snubbed the Queen

The roster of writers, artists and musicians who’ve snubbed the Queen reveals as much covert vanity as it does quiet principle

Dalton McGuinty wins again

Ontario’s unlikely premier now ranks among the most successful politicians of his generation

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The Psycho Effect

Fifty years ago, a movie by Alfred Hitchcock changed the way audiences viewed films. Its influence is still being felt.

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DVD Warning, Hitchcock-Style

Just a little warning for those of you who collect DVDs of great old movies: the new special edition of Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo, which came out today, has a completely screwed-up soundtrack. In 1996 when the film was restored, the producers wanted to create a stereo soundtrack, but they only had the musical score in stereo, not the sound effects. So they ill-advisedly dubbed in sound effects from a “modern” effects library, obviously not the original effects and just as obviously not in the same acoustic as the rest of the picture (including gunshot effects that come from a gun that didn’t even exist in 1958). It doesn’t sound so bad when put into words, but believe me, when watching the film, the fake sound effects are obvious and distracting. The new special edition claims on the box that it contains the mono soundtrack, but those who have seen the set have confirmed that Universal screwed up and just included two versions of the faked stereo soundtrack.