Hitchcock's Use Of Suspense In Rear Window And Vertigo

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Moreover, there was also a lack of understanding the protagonist. His and his wife's story was veiled in the film. Audiences only knew that Thorwald worked in a jewelry store and he had an invalid wife. No other details were provided as the neighbors' stories were also presented. It could be argued that very little actually happens, being made up of the suspicions and inferences of a very bored man (Condon & Sangston 195). Apparently, this was intended to add the suspense element of the story. In the whole course of the film, the suspense was heightened not just because of the uncertainty of what is to come but also due to the lack of the knowledge of the past. Audiences had this bias about the characters of Thorwald. The points of view of Jeffries pointed to this bias and the audiences simply relied upon these perceptions of suspicions. Additionally, the public's participation complemented to Hitchcock's mastery to his art of suspense and mystery. Douchet is …show more content…

Perhaps the important answer to this question would be the ways that he composed "Rear Window" with the whole geometry of terror. Although certain elements would appear the same with his other films such as the "The Man Who Knew Too Much" and "Vertigo," "Rear Window" was unique because it was Hitchcock in the most simplistic but ultimately fascinating film. Hitchcock was able to weave out all the elements of space, look, and narrative, making this film a "precision of the mathematical thought" (Pallasmaa 1). Pallasma added that Hitchcock defined how filmmaking ought to be as simplistic as possible in the form of combining only three spaces: Jeffries' condition, the part of what he sees, and his reaction. It was the complete measuring of these angles and connecting them to form a singular film that made it more like a combination of logic and art. There are highly significant combinations of the meaning, terror, and spectacle. It was Hitchcock defining

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