Peek into "Rear Window"

Valentin 2022-03-19 09:01:01

The day I watched "Rear Window" was Wednesday. It happened that my left foot had a plaster, and the hero in the film also got a plaster on his left foot. I didn't know it beforehand, and I found it more interesting. In and out of the scene, there were wounded, and they felt sorry for the same illness.
The story is about: Photojournalist Jeffery broke a leg in an accident, so he had to stay at home to heal his injuries. Observing the neighbors around through the window bored in every possible way, and revealing a case of a salesman's neighbor killing his wife. It is said to be a suspense film, but there is not much suspense left, because the result seems to be laid out early in the morning, using the protagonist's voyeuristic desire to expose it. Despite this, the film is still full of fun, waiting for you to prove how the salesman killed his wife. Although the director Hitchcock in the film is a little vague about this part, I don't agree with a friend's statement: The ending is too grassy, ​​the case failed to clarify where the body was and what was found in the flowers? I think it’s a good idea to draw a figurine, in fact, it’s a good idea to draw everything in the lens of talking and stopping?
If you want, you can also regard it as a romance film, because this film is not only based on solving crimes. , The opening and the end of the film are infiltrated with a lot of love factors. The heroes and heroines who are attracted to each other in love have objections to the future: Jeffrey wants to work in photojournalism, but Lisa hopes that he can follow in her footsteps. Fashion photography, and expressed dissatisfaction with his original work. And after this case-Jeffrey's keen sense of photography exposed a wife murder case, let everything calm down, let Lisa re-recognize Jeffrey's self-persistence value and admire his choice more. A witty shot at the end: Lisa noticed that Jeff was resting with her eyes closed, so she quietly replaced her novel and looked back at her favorite fashion magazine "BAZAAR".

PS:
1. Grace Kelly played Lisa. Even her mother praised her for being pretty. Several sets of costumes in the play set off her as noble as a princess. Only the previous stars are so sacred and inaccessible. Finally married to Monaco as the princess.
2. I found an interesting scene: the profile of the old man Hitchcock flashed when introducing the characters in the composer's room.
3. Stella: When two people love each other, they come together, like two taxis on Broadway. So many emotional sentences are spoken from the mouth of an elderly nursing woman like a preaching, it is a famous saying.
4. In the United States (foreign countries), a married woman must do her best to wear or bring her wedding ring around. However, the salesman’s wife, “Journey”, “forgot” the important wedding ring in the purse at home, making this the main evidence of the accidental encounter of its owner. ——This certificate may not be valid in China. Looking at married people around me, 60% of them don’t wear a wedding ring.
5. Lisa, played by Grace Kelly, appeared in the play. When introducing herself, she danced and turned on three lights while reporting her first name and last name three times, which was playful and elegant.
6. I don't like the apartment where the male protagonist lives. I can't see the blue sky even when I open the window. What I see is the inseparable buildings and streets, and I feel depressed.
7. At the end, the murderer entered the house to commit the crime, really nervous.
8. Peeping at the life of the neighbor's house from the window: sexy girls doing gymnastics and mate selection, elderly couples sleeping in the open air, lonely women looking for partners, etc., are humorous.
9. Everyone has a desire for voyeurism? !

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Extended Reading

Rear Window quotes

  • Stella: When I married Miles, we were both a couple of maladjusted misfits. We are still maladjusted misfits, and we have loved every minute of it.

  • L.B. Jefferies: Would you fix me a sandwich, please?

    Stella: Yes, I will. And I'll spread a little common sense on the bread.