“The silent pictures were the purest form of cinema.”—Alfred Hitchcock
Alfred Hitchcock directed a string of exuberantly inventive silent features between 1925 and 1929, but for all the fame of their director, many of these works have been accessible only in inferior prints—if they were available at all. Now, in the most ambitious restoration effort it has ever undertaken, the British Film Institute has digitally restored all nine of Hitchcock's surviving silents, not only creating cleaner, crisper images but recovering original material that had gone missing from available prints. Presented in conjunction with the San Francisco Silent Film Festival, this series brings “The Hitchcock 9” to the East Bay, offering a chance to discover new dimensions of Hitchcock's work and observe a master's style in the making.
By the time he landed his first directing assignment, The Pleasure Garden, at age twenty-five, Hitchcock had already worked as a title designer, scriptwriter, art director, and assistant director. His early films evidence both a precocious facility for visual storytelling and an enthusiasm for technical experimentation. “There was much dabbling about in so-called versatility before I found my niche,” he said of his youthful work, and his silent films are indeed varied in genre and tone, including comedies and melodramas as well as the thrillers that would become his stock in trade. Yet these works foreshadow many of Hitchcock's later themes and motifs—from the ambiguities of guilt and innocence to the blonde object of desire—and show that his stylistic audacity and distinctive humor were well established from the first.
Juliet Clark