Frenzy

Frenzy, arguably the last of the true Hitchcock oeuvre is, like the early film The Lodger (1926), set in London and is about a killer of women. In both, a man innocent of the rape-murders he is accused of barely can control his own violence and plans deadly revenge on the real killer, with whom he has a disturbing affinity. The studio imposed a happy ending on The Lodger, and the heroine instead of getting murdered gets married. There were no such restrictions on Hitchcock when he came to make Frenzy. The world he depicts is a vicious one, without hope. The fear of being incorporated by another stronger and dominant personality, so prominent in Hitchcock's later work, is given grotesque literal expression in a complex of images that link food, sex, and death, and the film contains one of the most loathsome and disturbingly detailed rape-murders in the history of film.-Marilyn Fabe Written by Anthony Shaffer, based on the novel Goodbye Piccadilly, Farewell Leicaster Square by Arthur La Bern. Photographed by Gil Taylor. With Jon Finch, Barry Foster, Barbara Leigh-Hunt, Anna Massey. (116 mins, Color, 35mm, From IPMA Inc./Universal)Followed by:

This page may by only partially complete.