If you can find Raymond Durgnat's Hitchcock book, he has some interesting and quirky things to say about the director, stuff that would certainly leaven your thesis. George Robinson -- Man is the only [creature] that kills for fun; he is the only one that kills in malice, the only one that kills for revenge [. . .] He is the only creature that has a nasty mind. -- Mark Twain On 10/30/2010 10:23 PM, Peter Longworth wrote: > Hi > > I'm an undergraduate student studying Cultural and Media Studies at > the University of Newcastle, Australia. The reason I am writing is I > have a major essay on Alfred Hitchcock as an auteur, and to make my > essay more interesting I'd like to locate articles / books which > criticise Hitchcock somewhat negatively. I've been directed to > criticism from feminist scholars, but was wondering where else I > should be looking, and if anyone could please recommend any articles > where I may concentrate my study. > > Apart from the feminist angle, I know of a couple of articles written > by Andrew Sarris who comments on Hitchcock's films not being taken > seriously in the 1960s because they weren't considered serious films > like what the European directors were making such as Antonioni and > Bergmann. > > Other place I could go with my essay is for Hitchcock's use of > violence in Frenzy - I actually find the strangle scenes today pretty > disturbing, and I understand critical reception to the film's use of > violence was mixed. I think Rope might have been criticised also from > a moralistic point of view. There is also Hitchcock's attack on > religion in his films, such as the Catholic church, in how he > represents / shows nuns in Vertigo, which is the key film i'll be > discussing in my paper. > > I hope someone might be able to recommend me to resources articles > giving a negative criticism, or mixed criticism of Hitchcock, because > mostly everyone says positive things about his films. I seek to make > my essay a mixture of positive and negative criticisms. > > Thanks > > Peter > > ---- > Learn to speak like a film/TV professor! Listen to the ScreenLex > podcast: > http://www.screenlex.org > ---- To sign off Screen-L, e-mail [log in to unmask] and put SIGNOFF Screen-L in the message. Problems? Contact [log in to unmask]