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The ‘Last Laugh’ is on Jeff: Murnau and Rear Window

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The Master of Surprise: Alfred Hitchcock’s Epistemic Doubt

HitchCon '22: Hitchcock in a Time of Crisis • 15m

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  • The ‘Last Laugh’ is on Jeff: Murnau a...

    A comparison between screenshots from F. W. Murnau's The Last Laugh (1924) with Rear Window (1954) demonstrates that Hitchcock referenced Murnau to present the disintegrating ego of a war vet as the cultural memory of war fades.

    Polly Thompson has worked as an editor and writer in Vancouver, Ott...

  • Sunday Morning Panel Discussion

    The speakers gather to field your questions and comments and discuss each other's research.

    Steven DeRosa is a HitchCon Advisory Board member. Steven is the author of “Writing with Hitchcock: The Collaboration of Alfred Hitchcock and John Michael Hayes.” He’s appeared on-screen in the documentar...

  • GAS

    A GLIMPSE OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN
    In 1919, at age 19, Hitchcock began publishing short stories in the Henley Telegraph. "Gas" was his first effort. This video uses clips from a half dozen of his early films (and one by E. A. Dupont) to bring his short story to life, neatly demonstrating how ...