ALFRED HITCHCOCK: A LIFE IN DARKNESS AND LIGHT
By Patrick McGilligan
Every biographer has some explaining to do. But just how do you explain the
particular genius of a Napoleon or a Michelangelo? The achievements of even an
exceptional life don't tell us anything. We read biography not to find out what
happened and what was done, but how and why. We are looking for interpretation.
The interpreting of personality has the unfortunate effect of introducing a
lot of amateur psychoanalysis. Freud himself dabbled in biography, suggesting
(among other things) that Leonardo Da Vinci's originality was the result of
his fiercely repressed love of his mother (the smile of the Mona Lisa was that
of Leonardo's mom). Today's biographers tend to be a little more
subtle and sophisticated, but the need to explain their subject's personality
still requires some speculation and labeling.
In 1983 Donald Spoto wrote just such a speculative psycho-biography of Alfred
Hitchcock. Titled The Dark Side of Genius, it portrayed the Master of
Suspense as a latter-day Leonardo, an impotent man ("It's Hitch . . .
without the cock") whose films were essentially
an outlet for repressed sexual desire and childhood anxieties. It was one way of
explaining an obsessive fantasist and voyeur with a thing for degrading his icy blonde
leading ladies. This Hitch was an easy figure to label with the Freudian
palette: "a macabre joker, a frightened child,
and a tyrannical artist."
Such a critical reading didn't sit well with
everyone. Patrick McGilligan's A
Life in Darkness and Light is obviously meant as an antidote (an
intention signaled by its balanced, and thoroughly banal, subtitle).
McGilligan's book is informative and readable. It is also devoid of criticism
and interpretation.
It is mainly a history of Hitchcock's professional
life. The result is detailed and reliable, but also discreet to the point
of seeming shallow and impersonal - less a life study than a reference work. For
example, we learn scarcely anything about the nature of Hitchcock's relationship
with his wife Alma. And this isn't to complain about the lack of dirt. At one
point we are told that Alma was more mechanically inclined than her husband.
Given Hitch's technical expertise I found this rather odd. But it is something
only mentioned in passing and then dropped.
McGilligan's deference also colours his approach to the films. The genesis
and story behind the making of Hitchcock's movies and his work habits on set are
all capably rendered, but there is little analysis, interpretation or opinion.
McGilligan (who has written a number of Hollywood lives) is generous to a fault.
He even tries to say nice things about Under Capricorn and Torn
Curtain. This doesn't take us very far into explaining Hitchcock's mystery.
And there is a mystery to be explained. McGilligan ends his story with a Coda
discussing Hitchcock's continuing influence on today's filmmakers. He has this
to say about the re-make of Psycho:
But Gus Van Sant's "faithful" remake of Psycho (also 1998),
made from Joseph Stefano's original script - only this time in color -
illustrates that you can copy the script and style, even the exact shots,
without getting close to the essence of Hitchcock.
Exactly. But what is the "essence of Hitchcock"? I found
myself wondering the same thing when I recently re-watched Vertigo.
There's no denying this is a great movie, but when you start picking it apart
you have a hard time explaining why. The story is nonsense, the female lead is
miscast, and many of the special visual effects have dated. But the whole thing
works.
Hitchcock was that rarest of blends: the inspired professional. His career in
film, quite fully documented here, spanned most of the history of the medium.
And with each new development in the state of the art (sound, colour, 3-D, the
long take, neorealism and the nouvelle vague) he was eager to experiment
and adapt. He was a pure filmmaker, someone for whom telling a story in pictures
was as natural as breathing. If the screenplay didn't cohere - and it rarely did
- so much the worse for it (he frequently derided critics with an eye for every
hole in the plot as the "plausibles").
Like all great artists, he knew he was just playing a game. Or, as he put it,
playing his audience like an organ. He honestly couldn't understand the critical
demand for plausibility, any more than he could understand a Method actor's need
for "motivation." What he was crafting was an experience and what he
brought to every project was a vision. Placing all his self-deprecation aside,
these are graces beyond the reach of art.
Notes:
Review first published online April 13, 2004.
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