No matter how you want to, or not want to, read into the subtext of some of the films from Alfred Hitchcock, he no doubt was pushing the limits of certain subject matters in some of his films. Whether it be sex, violence. or queerness, Hitchcock was not only a master of suspense, but subtext, getting different things past the censors and studio heads without them even realizing it. Next month, the Music Box Theatre is celebrating 4 of those films: Strangers on a Train (1951), Rebecca (1940), Psycho (1960), and Rope (1947). While Rebecca will be from a DCP, the rest of the films will be screening from 35mm prints.
Continue readingTag Archives: Farley Granger
Book Review: Criss-Cross
Criss-Cross: The Making of Hitchcock’s Dazzling, Subversive Masterpiece Strangers on a Train
Published by Running Press, 2025. 312 pages.
By Stephen Rebello
I don’t remember when I first watched Strangers on a Train, but the first time I saw clips of it (even though not knowing where it was from) was in the film Terror in the Aisles (1984), a compilation of scenes from different horror films, as well as some from the suspense sub-genre. For Strangers, it’s the scene at the carnival, where Robert Walker pops the kid’s balloon, and then strangles Laura Elliott. At the time, I didn’t even know it was a Hitchcock title. But when I finally got around to watching the entire film, it became one of my favorites of Hitchcock.
I was thrilled to see a book out on this film especially since it was written by Rebello, who had previously written about Hitchcock and the making of Psycho. Anytime I’ve read about a particular movie, or director, or anything in general about a film, I always come out of it learning something new as well as seeing the film a little different. Anytime you learn more about what exactly went into the making of one, from the casting, the set design, cinematography, it makes you see more but gives you more appreciation of it. But in the case of something from Hitchcock, it goes even further than that, when you come to understand what was going on in his mind during the making of one of his movies.
Continue readingMovie Review: The Prowler (1981)

The Prowler (1981)
Directed by Joseph Zito
Starring Farley Granger, Vicky Dawson, Christopher Goutman, Cindy Weintraub, Lawrence Tierney
While overseas during World War II, a soldier receives a “Dear John” letter from his girlfriend. Once he returns home, he gets revenge during the local graduation dance by stabbing a pitchfork through her and her new boyfriend. We now move ahead to present day (or 1980, for that matter), where the town is planning on its first graduation dance since those unsolved murders back at the end of the war. The sheriff is on his way out for his yearly fishing trip, and leaves the town in the hands of his young deputy. When the news of a fugitive on the loose in a nearby town, the deputy and his girlfriend start to get nervous. More importantly, who is this guy sneaking around in the army gear, armed with a bayonet and pitchfork? Continue reading

