Tonight I'm having cocktails at the Rabbit In Red Cocktail Lounge...
I don't think HALLOWEEN is the scariest movie ever made, but it's the film of the day. Saw it when it first came out - and probably saw it the next night, too. Here's what HALLOWEEN did - it wasn't the first stalk and slash film, but it was the first one to get it right... so all of the ones that came after it copied and stole from it without mercy. The cavalcade of bodies scenes comes from this film - even though PSYCHO kind of sets the stage with Mrs. Bates in the fruit cellar. And one of the reasons why we all saw it was because it was Janet Leigh's daughter.
Carpenter really took the time to *build* the suspense and create the dread - and the film sticks with you. He also came up with story details that made it seem real... and frightening. And, unlike the stupid remake, Carpenter knew the way to scare the crap out of you was to show a perfectly normal suburban family and world... and have the killer come from that world. The cute little kid who knocks at your door tonight? Michael Myers. He's sweet and polite and maybe a *member of your family* - and he could just take a knife and stab the life out of you...
If he saw you having sex. It's not about family (stupid sequels), it's not about some pagan cult crap (stupid sequels), Michael sees his sister naked and kills her. Michael sees PJ and Nancy in sexual situations - and kills them. Dude doesn't like sexual situations!
Carpenter's shots are elegant, he makes Michael into a ghost - he's there one minute and gone the next... so you never know when or where he will pop up. This film still works (unlike the remake). The film was made for $300k... and made $58 million.
I think it's on Hulu *free* today.
- Bill
The adventures of a professional screenwriter and frequent film festival jurist, slogging through the trenches of Hollywood, writing movies that you have never heard of, and getting no respect.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Sunday, October 30, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: The Haunting (1963)
"It was an evil house from the beginning - a house that was born bad."
I first saw this film in grade school on a rainy day when instead of going out to play we went to the multi-purpose room for a movie... and instead of just getting wet outside, all of us got scared to death and probably scarred for life. This film scares me *now*.
THE HAUNTING doesn't have any blood at all... yet it has regular scares throughout the film - and lots of DIRECT CONFLICT between the source of the scares and the protagonists. This is tricky, because THE HAUNTING is about ghosts and has no special effects - no guys in sheets, no double exposure FXs, nothing we can *see*.
The biggest mistake of the remake was turning it into a CGI fest... we fear the unknown, when we see a bunch of FX, it isn't unknown anymore.
"'Unknown.' That's the key word. 'Unknown.' When we become involved in a supernatural event, we're scared out of our wits just because it's unknown. The night cry of a child. A face on the wall. Knockings, bangings. What's there to be afraid of? You weren't threatened. It was harmless, like a joke that doesn't come out."
Though we can't see the ghosts in the original, we CAN see what they do. The original version of THE HAUNTING has five characters and only one of them dies - at the very end. But they are constantly in peril throughout the film, and often in conflict with each other. Even though nobody dies for 99% of the film's running time, there are a bunch of big scary scenes - it's as much fun to have a character *almost* killed as it is to have them killed.
"Haven't you noticed how nothing in this house seems to move until you look away and then you just... catch something out of the corner of your eye?"

It's a haunted house story about a team of ghostbusters who are going to "cleanse" a very haunted house. Richard Johnson is the professor leading the expedition into the world's most haunted house. Claire Bloom and Julie
Harris are two different kinds of psychics, Rusty Tamblin (from my INVISIBLE MOM movie) represents the owner of the house and the actress playing Johnson's wife (can't remember her name). The scares are (brilliantly directed) scenes with ghosts pounding on the walls or doors samming on their own or people almost being swept off balconies by the wind or spiral staircases becoming untethered and almost falling over or people having to walk down long hallways in the dark while wind or shadows chase them. The ghosts are constantly chasing our heroes! The ghosts are looking for fresh blood - and our five ghostbusters are in peril from the moment they enter that house. The ghosts don't just call on the phone and breathe heavy, they actively try to kill every member of the team!
"Look, I know the supernatural is something that isn't supposed to happen, but it does happen."
Though the most famous scary scene is probably that spiral staircase sequence, my favorite couple of minutes of absolute terror is a scene where ghosts pounding on the door to Harris and Bloom's bedroom actually begin to push the door inwards - bending it to the breaking point! The door just keeps bending inwards. Will the ghosts break through the door to get our team of psychics? This scene goes on so long you almost pass out from holding your breath in fear! And that door bows so far inwards you know it will break any minute! No blood (but the scene will drain the blood from *you*!) but scary as hell! This is the kind of "old school horror" audiences
are looking for - direct conflict between the terrifying and the protagonists... and when a movie like PARANORMAL ACTIVITY (1,2,3) comes along, the reason why it's a success is that it builds that sense of dread that gets us on a primal level...
Real suspense based on a real threat.
"When people believed the earth was flat, the idea of a round world scared them silly. Then they found out how the round world works. It's the same with the world of the supernatural. Until we know how it works, we'll continue to carry around this unnecessary burden of fear."
The best part about the original HAUNTING is that between these great bloodless scare scenes, you get to "catch your breath" with scenes of mentally unbalanced romance as Julie Harris interprets everything that Richard Johnson does as proof that he's secretly in love with her. The guy's married and doesn't even flirt with her - but she's so delusional that she's sure it's love. This is almost as creepy as the ghost attacks (just in a different way). So the "valleys" in the ghost story are "peaks" in the twisted romance story (kind of Harris's character coming of age late in life - she's been sheltered since that incident where stones rained on the family home when she was a kid... and has never been on her own or in love before). There are no slow spots in a (good) movie, just different kinds of excitement.
Robert Wise, the director, got his start as editor of a little film called CITIZEN KANE... and went on to direct CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE and BODY SNATCHER for Val Lewton. After that, he directed a string of great films - everything from ODDS AGAINST TOMORROW to WEST SIDE STORY to THE SOUND OF MUSIC to ANDROMEDA STRAIN. I think he kind pf blows apart the autuer theory because all of his films are just *good* - but I don't see much connection between them other than - *good*. THE HAUNTING was the height of his career - and it's a million times for frightening than the remake.
It was totally cool working with Rusty Tamblyn on INVISIBLE MOM - I made sure to show up on his days. It was totally cool.
Though THE HAUNTING is okay for kids - no sex, no blood, no gore - know that it is damned scary...
- Bill
I first saw this film in grade school on a rainy day when instead of going out to play we went to the multi-purpose room for a movie... and instead of just getting wet outside, all of us got scared to death and probably scarred for life. This film scares me *now*.
THE HAUNTING doesn't have any blood at all... yet it has regular scares throughout the film - and lots of DIRECT CONFLICT between the source of the scares and the protagonists. This is tricky, because THE HAUNTING is about ghosts and has no special effects - no guys in sheets, no double exposure FXs, nothing we can *see*.
The biggest mistake of the remake was turning it into a CGI fest... we fear the unknown, when we see a bunch of FX, it isn't unknown anymore.
"'Unknown.' That's the key word. 'Unknown.' When we become involved in a supernatural event, we're scared out of our wits just because it's unknown. The night cry of a child. A face on the wall. Knockings, bangings. What's there to be afraid of? You weren't threatened. It was harmless, like a joke that doesn't come out."
Though we can't see the ghosts in the original, we CAN see what they do. The original version of THE HAUNTING has five characters and only one of them dies - at the very end. But they are constantly in peril throughout the film, and often in conflict with each other. Even though nobody dies for 99% of the film's running time, there are a bunch of big scary scenes - it's as much fun to have a character *almost* killed as it is to have them killed.
"Haven't you noticed how nothing in this house seems to move until you look away and then you just... catch something out of the corner of your eye?"
It's a haunted house story about a team of ghostbusters who are going to "cleanse" a very haunted house. Richard Johnson is the professor leading the expedition into the world's most haunted house. Claire Bloom and Julie
Harris are two different kinds of psychics, Rusty Tamblin (from my INVISIBLE MOM movie) represents the owner of the house and the actress playing Johnson's wife (can't remember her name). The scares are (brilliantly directed) scenes with ghosts pounding on the walls or doors samming on their own or people almost being swept off balconies by the wind or spiral staircases becoming untethered and almost falling over or people having to walk down long hallways in the dark while wind or shadows chase them. The ghosts are constantly chasing our heroes! The ghosts are looking for fresh blood - and our five ghostbusters are in peril from the moment they enter that house. The ghosts don't just call on the phone and breathe heavy, they actively try to kill every member of the team!
"Look, I know the supernatural is something that isn't supposed to happen, but it does happen."
Though the most famous scary scene is probably that spiral staircase sequence, my favorite couple of minutes of absolute terror is a scene where ghosts pounding on the door to Harris and Bloom's bedroom actually begin to push the door inwards - bending it to the breaking point! The door just keeps bending inwards. Will the ghosts break through the door to get our team of psychics? This scene goes on so long you almost pass out from holding your breath in fear! And that door bows so far inwards you know it will break any minute! No blood (but the scene will drain the blood from *you*!) but scary as hell! This is the kind of "old school horror" audiences
are looking for - direct conflict between the terrifying and the protagonists... and when a movie like PARANORMAL ACTIVITY (1,2,3) comes along, the reason why it's a success is that it builds that sense of dread that gets us on a primal level...
Real suspense based on a real threat.
"When people believed the earth was flat, the idea of a round world scared them silly. Then they found out how the round world works. It's the same with the world of the supernatural. Until we know how it works, we'll continue to carry around this unnecessary burden of fear."
The best part about the original HAUNTING is that between these great bloodless scare scenes, you get to "catch your breath" with scenes of mentally unbalanced romance as Julie Harris interprets everything that Richard Johnson does as proof that he's secretly in love with her. The guy's married and doesn't even flirt with her - but she's so delusional that she's sure it's love. This is almost as creepy as the ghost attacks (just in a different way). So the "valleys" in the ghost story are "peaks" in the twisted romance story (kind of Harris's character coming of age late in life - she's been sheltered since that incident where stones rained on the family home when she was a kid... and has never been on her own or in love before). There are no slow spots in a (good) movie, just different kinds of excitement.
Robert Wise, the director, got his start as editor of a little film called CITIZEN KANE... and went on to direct CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE and BODY SNATCHER for Val Lewton. After that, he directed a string of great films - everything from ODDS AGAINST TOMORROW to WEST SIDE STORY to THE SOUND OF MUSIC to ANDROMEDA STRAIN. I think he kind pf blows apart the autuer theory because all of his films are just *good* - but I don't see much connection between them other than - *good*. THE HAUNTING was the height of his career - and it's a million times for frightening than the remake.
It was totally cool working with Rusty Tamblyn on INVISIBLE MOM - I made sure to show up on his days. It was totally cool.
Though THE HAUNTING is okay for kids - no sex, no blood, no gore - know that it is damned scary...
- Bill
Saturday, October 29, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: The Exorcist (1973)
My first job(other than moving lawns and delivering papers and helping my dad) was at the Century Movie Theater in Pleasant Hill... when THE EXORCIST opened. I was too young to see the film, but old enough to work in the cinema... so I ended up seeing it 144 times. I can tell you how each scene works, how many shots are in the stair roll at the end, and all kinds of little details about the film.
But the big details are what make it scary.
The film (and novel) was a product of its time - but has also seemed to stand the test of time. The turbulent late 60s and early 70s, when children grew up too fast and became fouled mouthed hippies who believed in free love. Your kid was having sex and doing drugs and saying words that would make a sailor blush. So a film about a kid who goes through all of that - because they are possessed by Satan - connected with the audience on a primal level. The perfect film for parents.
But one of the reasons why it is with us today is that it's also a perfect film for kids. You reach puberty, and all of these crazy things happen to you - and it's as if you are possessed. You are not in control. I think the best horror films are the ones that take some real life problem and twist it - so that you can imagine this (impossible) thing happening to you, or someone you love. THE EXORCIST manages to work for parents of teens *and* teens. Plus, people who used to be teens and have had parents. The idea of someone you love turning into a monster is *emotional* and scary.
It's amazing how much fear a few gallons of split pea soup can produce.
- Bill
But the big details are what make it scary.
The film (and novel) was a product of its time - but has also seemed to stand the test of time. The turbulent late 60s and early 70s, when children grew up too fast and became fouled mouthed hippies who believed in free love. Your kid was having sex and doing drugs and saying words that would make a sailor blush. So a film about a kid who goes through all of that - because they are possessed by Satan - connected with the audience on a primal level. The perfect film for parents.
But one of the reasons why it is with us today is that it's also a perfect film for kids. You reach puberty, and all of these crazy things happen to you - and it's as if you are possessed. You are not in control. I think the best horror films are the ones that take some real life problem and twist it - so that you can imagine this (impossible) thing happening to you, or someone you love. THE EXORCIST manages to work for parents of teens *and* teens. Plus, people who used to be teens and have had parents. The idea of someone you love turning into a monster is *emotional* and scary.
It's amazing how much fear a few gallons of split pea soup can produce.
- Bill
Friday, October 28, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: Rosemary's Baby (1968)
ROSEMARY'S BABY deals with a first pregnancy... and all of the unexpected feeling and side effects. Rosemary (Mia Farrow) is a typical New York newlywed - her husband (John Cassavettes) is an actor in commercials, not famous, more the struggling type. She's quit her job so that they can start a family. When she becomes pregnant, it's a joyous occasion, but she isn't quite sure what to expect - are these odd pains she keeps having normal? What about the weight loss? The strange cravings for raw meat? Hey, pickles and ice cream is one thing, but raw meat? Is that normal? Her new doctor tells Rosemary that every pregnancy is an individual experience, you can't compare it to your friend's pregnancies. It's impossible to know what to expect. Some pregnancies are easy, some are hard... some are painful. Feeling it kick is one thing, but did it just *bite* her? What's growing inside Rosemary? It's a baby, but a baby *what*?
The great thing about this film is how it takes a normal thing and twists it - even if you have never been pregnant, you know someone who has - and nothing that happens is *that* strange. But just enough strange that Rosemary wonders what the hell is going on.
Did the nice old couple next door give her a glass of unusually potent wine which lead to a not-so-immaculate conception involving Satan? Was she drunk, or did that guy really have horns? Was it all a dream? She wakes up with claw marks on her back and there's this thing growing inside of her causing strange cravings, dizziness, nausea, and depression. Rosemary's husband and the next door neighbors seem to be controlling her life - telling her what she should do for the sake of the baby. Pregnant for the first time, she doesn't want to do anything that might harm the baby. When she stops drinking those strange tanis root "vitamin drinks" the baby begins twisting her guts - making her so sick she can't even stand up. The baby is controlling her! Hey, it could be worse - she just gets ultra-morning sickness... her husband's business rival is suddenly struck blind the day before his job interview!

Rosemary's loving husband starts out thinking her strange beliefs about their neighbors are just a side effect of her pregnancy. The more weird stuff she uncovers, the more he believes she's just imagining things. Of course, her loving husband is a member of the Satanic cult. He's turned against her - allowed Satan to have his way with her in exchange for a role on a TV series... let's hope it wasn't the CHARLIE'S ANGELS revamp.
ROSEMARY'S BABY is not a scream-outloud scare movie - it's all slow build and things that are slightly creepy. But because it seems like something happening in the real world, it gets under your skin - this could really happen!
- Bill
The great thing about this film is how it takes a normal thing and twists it - even if you have never been pregnant, you know someone who has - and nothing that happens is *that* strange. But just enough strange that Rosemary wonders what the hell is going on.
Did the nice old couple next door give her a glass of unusually potent wine which lead to a not-so-immaculate conception involving Satan? Was she drunk, or did that guy really have horns? Was it all a dream? She wakes up with claw marks on her back and there's this thing growing inside of her causing strange cravings, dizziness, nausea, and depression. Rosemary's husband and the next door neighbors seem to be controlling her life - telling her what she should do for the sake of the baby. Pregnant for the first time, she doesn't want to do anything that might harm the baby. When she stops drinking those strange tanis root "vitamin drinks" the baby begins twisting her guts - making her so sick she can't even stand up. The baby is controlling her! Hey, it could be worse - she just gets ultra-morning sickness... her husband's business rival is suddenly struck blind the day before his job interview!
Rosemary's loving husband starts out thinking her strange beliefs about their neighbors are just a side effect of her pregnancy. The more weird stuff she uncovers, the more he believes she's just imagining things. Of course, her loving husband is a member of the Satanic cult. He's turned against her - allowed Satan to have his way with her in exchange for a role on a TV series... let's hope it wasn't the CHARLIE'S ANGELS revamp.
ROSEMARY'S BABY is not a scream-outloud scare movie - it's all slow build and things that are slightly creepy. But because it seems like something happening in the real world, it gets under your skin - this could really happen!
- Bill
Thursday, October 27, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: DAWN OF THE DEAD (2004)
So, I'm not usually one for remakes - and I'm a big fan of Romero's original DAWN OF THE DEAD because it's all about how consumerism has turned us all into zombies wandering through the mall mindlessly shopping - but the 2004 remake with a script by SLITHER's James Gunn works on its own terms. When I first did my Horror Screenwriting class at the Raindance Film Festival in London, I didn't bring any clips... but *did* have the DVD of DAWN OF THE DEAD in my luggage, and found an illustration of almost every point I was going to make in the film.
The opening scene is *textbook* horror - we start out in suburbia on a normal morning...
As you can see, in very little time we have gone from order to chaos, and the police and authorities are powerless, and the monster could be anyone - the littel girl next door, the man you love - ANYONE. You are not safe.
- Bill
The opening scene is *textbook* horror - we start out in suburbia on a normal morning...
As you can see, in very little time we have gone from order to chaos, and the police and authorities are powerless, and the monster could be anyone - the littel girl next door, the man you love - ANYONE. You are not safe.
- Bill
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)
When I was a kid this was one of my favorite movies... because it was funny *and* scary. And it was so scary when I was a kid that parts of it were seen through the fingers covering my eyes. Though Bob Hope had made a comedy horror film before, this is the movie that does it best - and I think inspires most of the others. The great thing about the film is that it never makes fun of the monsters and treats the horror elements seriously. So there are real scares.
Universal studios had their two big box office draws fading fast - the monsters from their monster movie series and their comedy team Abbott & Costello - and some genius at the studio deciced to combine them in the kind of "MEETS" movie that we might come up with as a joke today (HANGOVER MEETS JASON?). But the studio wanted to protect their monsters and not have them ridiculed, and that resulted in a great film where the comedy team ends up in a horror movie and cracks jokes in response to the situations. They never laught at the monsters - they never make fun of them... they are real, and the conflict - the danger - is the fuel for the gags.
In that clip Lou Costello is not making fun of Dracula - he believes in him! He believes he is real danger.
In my horror class I talk about this film, and how the comedy makes the horror more frightening and the horror makes the comedy more funny. They compliment each other. In successful modern horror comedies they treat the horror elements seriously - but the characters are funny. Everything from PIRANHA to THE HOWLING to AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON to SLITHER to BLACK SHEEP to SHAUN OF THE DEAD to SCEAM keep the scares real but has funny characters making jokes while they are in danger.
(My first produced script, the Oscar nominated NINJA BUSTERS, was inspired by this film... and even has a version of the Dracula coffin scene above... just with Ninjas.)

I don't remember whether the first time I saw this film as a kid was on TV or at one of the Bob Wilkins Creature Features roadshow screenings he did during the summer at the middle school behind my house. They would take over the multipurpose room and show films for kids and raffle off prizes. I'm sure the purpose was to keep us from getting into trouble, but these films were an important part of my life growing up. We didn't have much money when I was a kid so the only time I ever saw a movie was either at the drive in (reflected off the back window of the car while I was *supposed* to be asleep on the back seat) or those rare times we saw a Disney film at the cinema where my Aunt Norma worked (she'd sneak us in). But just going to the movies? Didn't happen. So these weekly summer showings were like heaven - it was all of the kids from my neighborhood - all of my friends (Mickey Gillan, Mike Webb, Bob Hayes, John Thomas, etc) and we'd sit together and scream at the monsters and laugh at the jokes. Once I won an autographed picture of Godzilla!
Now that I'm writing movies, I often write funny horror movies inspired by ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN...
- Bill
PS: Here's John Landis talking about the film on TRAILERS FROM HELL:
Universal studios had their two big box office draws fading fast - the monsters from their monster movie series and their comedy team Abbott & Costello - and some genius at the studio deciced to combine them in the kind of "MEETS" movie that we might come up with as a joke today (HANGOVER MEETS JASON?). But the studio wanted to protect their monsters and not have them ridiculed, and that resulted in a great film where the comedy team ends up in a horror movie and cracks jokes in response to the situations. They never laught at the monsters - they never make fun of them... they are real, and the conflict - the danger - is the fuel for the gags.
In that clip Lou Costello is not making fun of Dracula - he believes in him! He believes he is real danger.
In my horror class I talk about this film, and how the comedy makes the horror more frightening and the horror makes the comedy more funny. They compliment each other. In successful modern horror comedies they treat the horror elements seriously - but the characters are funny. Everything from PIRANHA to THE HOWLING to AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON to SLITHER to BLACK SHEEP to SHAUN OF THE DEAD to SCEAM keep the scares real but has funny characters making jokes while they are in danger.
(My first produced script, the Oscar nominated NINJA BUSTERS, was inspired by this film... and even has a version of the Dracula coffin scene above... just with Ninjas.)
I don't remember whether the first time I saw this film as a kid was on TV or at one of the Bob Wilkins Creature Features roadshow screenings he did during the summer at the middle school behind my house. They would take over the multipurpose room and show films for kids and raffle off prizes. I'm sure the purpose was to keep us from getting into trouble, but these films were an important part of my life growing up. We didn't have much money when I was a kid so the only time I ever saw a movie was either at the drive in (reflected off the back window of the car while I was *supposed* to be asleep on the back seat) or those rare times we saw a Disney film at the cinema where my Aunt Norma worked (she'd sneak us in). But just going to the movies? Didn't happen. So these weekly summer showings were like heaven - it was all of the kids from my neighborhood - all of my friends (Mickey Gillan, Mike Webb, Bob Hayes, John Thomas, etc) and we'd sit together and scream at the monsters and laugh at the jokes. Once I won an autographed picture of Godzilla!
Now that I'm writing movies, I often write funny horror movies inspired by ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN...
- Bill
PS: Here's John Landis talking about the film on TRAILERS FROM HELL:
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: Sisters (1973)
Brian DePalma is one of my favorite directors, and not just because he does a great job of immitating Hitchcock - I love his comedies like HI MOM! and HOME MOVIES... and his dramas like CASUALTIES OF WAR. Though he makes a mis-step or two, he's always interesting and has done some amazing visual experiments - he's the king of split screen. My favorite faux Hitchcock film of his is OBSESSION, but his film SISTERS is creepy and has enough jump moments to keep you above your seat when you aren't on the edge of it.
We basically have the old "Two sisters: One Good, One Evil" - but this time they have a deeper connection. They were conjoined twins. Danielle and Dominique. The problem is - which one is this? The nice one, or the psycho? The movie opens with a Candid Camera type TV show where a guy in the men's locker room at a gym sees a hot blind girl come in and start taking off her clothes. How long before he tells her she's in the wrong locker room? After the episode is over, the guy and the girl hook up - she's Danielle and she lives in a NYC apartment with her sister Dominique. They go back to her place, her sister is out, and make love. The next morning, the guy discovers that today is Danielle's birthday... goes out and buys a cake... but when he comes back, runs into Dominique...
The scene ends with him writing Help Me on the window in his blood, and reporter Jennifer Salt sees it and calls the police. Dominique splits, leaving Danielle with the dead guy. Great split screen sequence where Danielle's ex-husband (Bill Phantom Of The Paradise Finley) is trying to clean up the blood and dispose of the body on one side while Jennifer Salt is leading the police up to the apartment on the other side. Instead of cross cutting for suspense, our eyes do the cutting as we look back and forth between the two sides of the screen.
The great thing about this film is that it's PSYCHO and REAR WINDOW and FREAKS and EYES WITHOUT A FACE and several other flicks all put into a blender and turned into one seamless story that never seems like it rips off a specific movie. The ending is in a mega-spooky metal institution - and is ultra-creepy.
Music by Bernard Herrmann, who did so many great scores for Hitchcock. DePalma uses all of *his* stock company of actors, from Jennifer Salt to Bill Finley to Charles Durning - the only guy who doesn't show up is DePalma discovery Robert DeNiro. One of the great things in the end is when Jennifer Salt is attached to Dominique in a FREAKS inspired scene... so there's kind of a PERSONA reference going on there as well. This was a drive in movie that did really well and put DePalma back on the map after GET TO KNOW YOUR RABBIT flopped big time, and though it was schlock horror back then, today it's a Critereon DVD with a bunch of extras. The music is creepy enough to give you nightmares! And a textbook on how to use split screen. You'll never sit on a sofa bed again.
- Bill
We basically have the old "Two sisters: One Good, One Evil" - but this time they have a deeper connection. They were conjoined twins. Danielle and Dominique. The problem is - which one is this? The nice one, or the psycho? The movie opens with a Candid Camera type TV show where a guy in the men's locker room at a gym sees a hot blind girl come in and start taking off her clothes. How long before he tells her she's in the wrong locker room? After the episode is over, the guy and the girl hook up - she's Danielle and she lives in a NYC apartment with her sister Dominique. They go back to her place, her sister is out, and make love. The next morning, the guy discovers that today is Danielle's birthday... goes out and buys a cake... but when he comes back, runs into Dominique...
The scene ends with him writing Help Me on the window in his blood, and reporter Jennifer Salt sees it and calls the police. Dominique splits, leaving Danielle with the dead guy. Great split screen sequence where Danielle's ex-husband (Bill Phantom Of The Paradise Finley) is trying to clean up the blood and dispose of the body on one side while Jennifer Salt is leading the police up to the apartment on the other side. Instead of cross cutting for suspense, our eyes do the cutting as we look back and forth between the two sides of the screen.
The great thing about this film is that it's PSYCHO and REAR WINDOW and FREAKS and EYES WITHOUT A FACE and several other flicks all put into a blender and turned into one seamless story that never seems like it rips off a specific movie. The ending is in a mega-spooky metal institution - and is ultra-creepy.
Music by Bernard Herrmann, who did so many great scores for Hitchcock. DePalma uses all of *his* stock company of actors, from Jennifer Salt to Bill Finley to Charles Durning - the only guy who doesn't show up is DePalma discovery Robert DeNiro. One of the great things in the end is when Jennifer Salt is attached to Dominique in a FREAKS inspired scene... so there's kind of a PERSONA reference going on there as well. This was a drive in movie that did really well and put DePalma back on the map after GET TO KNOW YOUR RABBIT flopped big time, and though it was schlock horror back then, today it's a Critereon DVD with a bunch of extras. The music is creepy enough to give you nightmares! And a textbook on how to use split screen. You'll never sit on a sofa bed again.
- Bill
Monday, October 24, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: Freaks (1932)
Tod Browning was one of the most gifted silent directors, with films like THE UNHOLY THREE and THE UNKNOWN to his credit when he was hired to direct DRACULA - which became a massive hit. His follow up movie pretty much ended his career. FREAKS was his pet project, a story that takes place in a carnival freak show and starred actual freaks. Even though this was a pre-code movie (no censorship or ratings existed for films) the studio demanded that it be cut and cut and cut... and the version released was too disturbing for the audience at the time. The film was officially banned in England and unofficially banned in the United States (MGM locked it away) until the late 60s, early 70s when the legend of the film resulted in some prints and a midnight showings... and a new audience. I saw it sometime in the late 70s, and it was most disturbing.
A Fan Made Trailer...
The film is now part of our culture - the "Gobble-Gobble One Of Us" scene pops up in everything from SOUTH PARK to DePalma's SISTERS. Interesting that DePalma was inspired by the film for SISTERS because the story has some similarities to CARRIE which he would also direct...

The freak show for a travelling carnival are like a family - they all watch out for each other. The film shows you the every day life of the freaks - and it's fascinating. The Human Torso - a guy with no arms or legs - lights his own cigarette. Armless woman uses her feet as hands. The Siamese Twins date. When hot trapeeze artist Cleopatra learns that midget Hans is rich, she seduces him, marries him... and then slowly poisons him so that she can inherit his fortune and run away with the Strong Man. Only, what you do to one of the Freaks, you do to all... and they may seem harmless, but they get their revenge for being abused by Cleopatra and the Strong Man.
One of us...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9C4uTEEOJlM
Like CARRIE, the film is a slow build to a big finish when they get their revenge... but that end is the stuff of nightmares!
- Bill
Today's Amazon ranking:
A Fan Made Trailer...
The film is now part of our culture - the "Gobble-Gobble One Of Us" scene pops up in everything from SOUTH PARK to DePalma's SISTERS. Interesting that DePalma was inspired by the film for SISTERS because the story has some similarities to CARRIE which he would also direct...
The freak show for a travelling carnival are like a family - they all watch out for each other. The film shows you the every day life of the freaks - and it's fascinating. The Human Torso - a guy with no arms or legs - lights his own cigarette. Armless woman uses her feet as hands. The Siamese Twins date. When hot trapeeze artist Cleopatra learns that midget Hans is rich, she seduces him, marries him... and then slowly poisons him so that she can inherit his fortune and run away with the Strong Man. Only, what you do to one of the Freaks, you do to all... and they may seem harmless, but they get their revenge for being abused by Cleopatra and the Strong Man.
One of us...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9C4uTEEOJlM
Like CARRIE, the film is a slow build to a big finish when they get their revenge... but that end is the stuff of nightmares!
- Bill
Today's Amazon ranking:
Sunday, October 23, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: Don't Look Now (1973)
The last entry in Fridays With Hitchcock was JAMAICA INN based on a novel by Daphne DuMaurier... and this film is also based on one of her stories (as was THE BIRDS). And here we have another one of my favorite directors Nic Roeg - who began as a cinematographer on films like Richard Lester's brilliant PETULIA starring the always beautiful Julie Christie... who also stars in DON'T LOOK NOW along with Donald Sutherland. This is one of those creepy movies that gets under your skin - you may watch it and only be scared at the end and think it's not so bad... but days later it will flash back into your memory.
And memory is what the film is about - Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie lose their little girl in a tragic accident and it tears them apart. Sutherland takes a job in Venice, Italy - hoping that they can use the time away from home to put their marriage back together again. But everywhere he looks in Venice he keeps seeing his dead daughter... and the two strange women they meet in a restaurant have seen her, too. One is psychic - and has seen their daughter's ghost. Oh, and there is a serial killer on the loose in Venice as well - bodies popping up everywhere. All of these things are connected, but we don't understand the connection until the very end.

Roeg is an amazing stylist - he loves to connect elements by *image* instead of chronology. This gives the film a poetic feel. It's a beautiful horror film. Oh, and there's a famous sex scene that rumor has it was not staged but real. This is not a *scary* film, it's a *creepy* one.
- Bill
Today's Amazon Ranking:
And memory is what the film is about - Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie lose their little girl in a tragic accident and it tears them apart. Sutherland takes a job in Venice, Italy - hoping that they can use the time away from home to put their marriage back together again. But everywhere he looks in Venice he keeps seeing his dead daughter... and the two strange women they meet in a restaurant have seen her, too. One is psychic - and has seen their daughter's ghost. Oh, and there is a serial killer on the loose in Venice as well - bodies popping up everywhere. All of these things are connected, but we don't understand the connection until the very end.
Roeg is an amazing stylist - he loves to connect elements by *image* instead of chronology. This gives the film a poetic feel. It's a beautiful horror film. Oh, and there's a famous sex scene that rumor has it was not staged but real. This is not a *scary* film, it's a *creepy* one.
- Bill
Today's Amazon Ranking:
Saturday, October 22, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: Dead Of Night (1945)
James Wan who directed SAW has a thing about killer puppet movies, and I'll bet it can all be traced back to seeing this film as a kid on TV. I know *my* fear of killer puppets stems from this, and the knowledge that Grover on Sesame Street is really a serial killer. But all of the ventriloquist dummy movies like William Goldman's MAGIC come from this creepy film.
An architect arrives at a country estate and has a strange feeling of deja vu. The group of people at the estate each tell stories of terror... while the architect's deja vu increases. Has he been here before? He feels as if he has heard each story before... and feels like something terrible will happen when the last tale has been told. Each of the stories is frightening, but the ventriloquist and the dummy that controls him is the one most people remember...
The cast is worth noting, since most of them were in Hitchcock's LADY VANISHES (next up on Friday's With Hitchcock next month). Not only do we get a variation on Caldecott & Charters, we get Bridesmaid Googie Withers and leading man Michael Redgrave! It's the whole gang! The cast is great, the film is spooky... yet realistic enough that you believe everything that happens no matter how crazy. The film was from Ealing Studios, famous for comedies... but this may be their most famous non-comedy film.

Five great stories of terror, with the "wrap" at the country house with our group. Directed by 4 different directors. "Christmas Party" is about a girl at a Christmas Party who finds a hidden staircase that leads to... "The Haunted Mirror" is about an newlywed couple - the wife buys a mirror that is... haunted. "The Hearse Driver" is about a man who dreams a hearse drives by him and the driver says: "There's room for one more"... and then his dream seems to come true. "Golfing Story" is about two golfers (Wayne & Radford) make a bet on the golf course - winner gets to marry the girl they both love, and the loser must die. "The Ventriloquist" is the most frightening of all, about a ventriloquist who thinks his dummy is out to get him... and he is. Often stories like this peter out at the end, but DEAD OF NIGHT has an ending that will give you nightmares!
"There's room for one more."
- Bill
An architect arrives at a country estate and has a strange feeling of deja vu. The group of people at the estate each tell stories of terror... while the architect's deja vu increases. Has he been here before? He feels as if he has heard each story before... and feels like something terrible will happen when the last tale has been told. Each of the stories is frightening, but the ventriloquist and the dummy that controls him is the one most people remember...
The cast is worth noting, since most of them were in Hitchcock's LADY VANISHES (next up on Friday's With Hitchcock next month). Not only do we get a variation on Caldecott & Charters, we get Bridesmaid Googie Withers and leading man Michael Redgrave! It's the whole gang! The cast is great, the film is spooky... yet realistic enough that you believe everything that happens no matter how crazy. The film was from Ealing Studios, famous for comedies... but this may be their most famous non-comedy film.
Five great stories of terror, with the "wrap" at the country house with our group. Directed by 4 different directors. "Christmas Party" is about a girl at a Christmas Party who finds a hidden staircase that leads to... "The Haunted Mirror" is about an newlywed couple - the wife buys a mirror that is... haunted. "The Hearse Driver" is about a man who dreams a hearse drives by him and the driver says: "There's room for one more"... and then his dream seems to come true. "Golfing Story" is about two golfers (Wayne & Radford) make a bet on the golf course - winner gets to marry the girl they both love, and the loser must die. "The Ventriloquist" is the most frightening of all, about a ventriloquist who thinks his dummy is out to get him... and he is. Often stories like this peter out at the end, but DEAD OF NIGHT has an ending that will give you nightmares!
"There's room for one more."
- Bill
Friday, October 21, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: Black Christmas (1974)
Before there was John Carpenter's HALLOWEEN there was Bob Clark's BLACK CHRISTMAS - the original "We've traced the call... it's coming from INSIDE the house!" movie. I caught this at a drive in on a double bill with Larry Cohen's IT'S ALIVE - and IT'S ALIVE was the "A" feature! But this film really creeped me out, and also had me laughing outloud. Margot Kidder's phone number had me laughing for months - because this was a time when people didn't say things like that in the movies.
But the main thing about BLACK CHRISTMAS is that it's spooky and probably the first "kill a bunch of people in a house" movie. Okay, TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE was released the same year, so it may have technically been the second movie with that basic plot - but BLACK CHRISTMAS is the version of that basic plot that you can trace through HALLOWEEN to SCREAM. In fact, HALLOWEEN began as a sequel to BLACK CHRISTMAS.

The great thing about this film - other than the call coming from inside the house - is the way the characters turn against each other when the bodies begin to pop up. Also a great cast - Olivia Hussey who was Juliet in ROMEO & JULIET plays the lead, Keir Dullea from some damned Kubrick movie was her boyfriend, John Saxon plays the cop in a horror movie for the first time, Andrea Martin from SECOND CITY is one of the gals, Margot Kidder is *hot* as one of the other gals - she had already starred in Brian DePalma's SISTERS and the next year would play the female lead in THE GREAT WALDO PEPPER opposite some guy named Redford. SISTERS is coming up in a couple of days...
What the heck, I love Larry Cohen, so let's look at the trailer for the "A" film on the double bill many years ago...
What I love about Larry Cohen movies is that the guy always has a social or political message in his weirdass horror films. His films like THE STUFF are complete cult flicks, but underneath it all are about something important. Here we have mutant killer babies caused by prescription drug side effects - kind of the ultimate Thalidomide baby. By the time Cohen got to IT'S ALIVE 3: ISLAND OF THE ALIVE he was doing a cult horror film that dealt with AIDS babies (except they were the killer mutant babies in the series).

He's one of my favorite filmmakers and one of those prolific screenwriters who is hit and miss - but when he hits he knocks it out of the park. Still alive and kicking and making films. He wrote PHONE BOOTH and CELLULAR! His last screenwriting credit was a couple of years ago... but his first writing credit was 1958. Oh, and he created the TV show THE INVADERS.
- Bill
IMPORTANT UPDATE:
TODAY'S SCRIPT TIP: EVERY STORY ASKS A QUESTION - Is yours asking the *right* question?
Dinner: Chicken, potatos, corn at Boston Market.
Pages: Almost finished another chapter - but got sidetracked.
But the main thing about BLACK CHRISTMAS is that it's spooky and probably the first "kill a bunch of people in a house" movie. Okay, TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE was released the same year, so it may have technically been the second movie with that basic plot - but BLACK CHRISTMAS is the version of that basic plot that you can trace through HALLOWEEN to SCREAM. In fact, HALLOWEEN began as a sequel to BLACK CHRISTMAS.
The great thing about this film - other than the call coming from inside the house - is the way the characters turn against each other when the bodies begin to pop up. Also a great cast - Olivia Hussey who was Juliet in ROMEO & JULIET plays the lead, Keir Dullea from some damned Kubrick movie was her boyfriend, John Saxon plays the cop in a horror movie for the first time, Andrea Martin from SECOND CITY is one of the gals, Margot Kidder is *hot* as one of the other gals - she had already starred in Brian DePalma's SISTERS and the next year would play the female lead in THE GREAT WALDO PEPPER opposite some guy named Redford. SISTERS is coming up in a couple of days...
What the heck, I love Larry Cohen, so let's look at the trailer for the "A" film on the double bill many years ago...
What I love about Larry Cohen movies is that the guy always has a social or political message in his weirdass horror films. His films like THE STUFF are complete cult flicks, but underneath it all are about something important. Here we have mutant killer babies caused by prescription drug side effects - kind of the ultimate Thalidomide baby. By the time Cohen got to IT'S ALIVE 3: ISLAND OF THE ALIVE he was doing a cult horror film that dealt with AIDS babies (except they were the killer mutant babies in the series).
He's one of my favorite filmmakers and one of those prolific screenwriters who is hit and miss - but when he hits he knocks it out of the park. Still alive and kicking and making films. He wrote PHONE BOOTH and CELLULAR! His last screenwriting credit was a couple of years ago... but his first writing credit was 1958. Oh, and he created the TV show THE INVADERS.
- Bill
TODAY'S SCRIPT TIP: EVERY STORY ASKS A QUESTION - Is yours asking the *right* question?
Dinner: Chicken, potatos, corn at Boston Market.
Pages: Almost finished another chapter - but got sidetracked.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: Night Of The Living Dead
One of the other films I first saw on Bob Wilkins' Creature Features was the original NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD – and it freaked me out! I think it freaked out everyone who saw it, and basically created the modern zombie film. Before that, Zombies were from Haiti and under the spell of a Voodoo Priest... after NOTLD zombies were flesh eating undead friends and relatives. The reason this works even today is because it takes regular people and turns them into the monsters. You can not trust *anyone*. The person sitting next to you in the cinema or on the sofa in your living room can turn into a flesh eating goul!
When I was a kid I used to scare the crap out of my little sister by saying “I am the monster!” - and the idea that someone you know and love can suddenly turn into a monster is at the heart of many horror films. In NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD Barbara and her brother go to visit their father's grave on the same day a satellite from Venus crashes in the country side and brings the dead back to life... a harmless old man puts the bite on her brother, killing him... Barbara eventually runs into her brother Johnny again - but now he's a mindless zombie with a taste for human flesh. The people who you love have lost their free will and have turned into monsters! "They're dead! They're all messed up!" Some of the other survivors in the farm house, Cooper and his wife, watch their cute little daughter slowly turning into a monster... then she attacks Cooper and eats him! When mom tries to stop her, she attacks and eats her, too. You can't reason with these zombies, all you can do is shoot them in the head or burn them. And if one bites you? You lose your free will and start thinking of your friends and loved ones as lunch. That's a scary core concept!

The other element of NOTLD is the gore factor – which was way beyond anything I had ever seen at that time... and is even pushing the envelope by today's standards. Of course, the guts they eat are animal parts – but even *that* is pretty sick! Though Romero has said the casting of Duane Jones as the lead was not intended to make a racial point, the timing was in the film's favor – it hit at the height of the Civil Rights Movement and showed a hick sheriff killing an innocent African American man – our hero!
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD is the ultimate in friends turning against you. You can't trust anyone, because they may turn into a zombie. Kids attack and eat their own parents! Don't see it with someone you love... you'll wonder about them later.
- Bill
TODAY'S JACK-O-LANTERN:

IMPORTANT UPDATE:
TODAY'S SCRIPT TIP: HIGH CONCEPT... OR HIGH STAKES? - Global or Personal stakes.
Dinner: Chicken Caesar Salad to make up for all of the junk I've been eating lately.
Pages: Finished a chapter on the Action Book!
Today's Amazon Rank:
When I was a kid I used to scare the crap out of my little sister by saying “I am the monster!” - and the idea that someone you know and love can suddenly turn into a monster is at the heart of many horror films. In NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD Barbara and her brother go to visit their father's grave on the same day a satellite from Venus crashes in the country side and brings the dead back to life... a harmless old man puts the bite on her brother, killing him... Barbara eventually runs into her brother Johnny again - but now he's a mindless zombie with a taste for human flesh. The people who you love have lost their free will and have turned into monsters! "They're dead! They're all messed up!" Some of the other survivors in the farm house, Cooper and his wife, watch their cute little daughter slowly turning into a monster... then she attacks Cooper and eats him! When mom tries to stop her, she attacks and eats her, too. You can't reason with these zombies, all you can do is shoot them in the head or burn them. And if one bites you? You lose your free will and start thinking of your friends and loved ones as lunch. That's a scary core concept!
The other element of NOTLD is the gore factor – which was way beyond anything I had ever seen at that time... and is even pushing the envelope by today's standards. Of course, the guts they eat are animal parts – but even *that* is pretty sick! Though Romero has said the casting of Duane Jones as the lead was not intended to make a racial point, the timing was in the film's favor – it hit at the height of the Civil Rights Movement and showed a hick sheriff killing an innocent African American man – our hero!
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD is the ultimate in friends turning against you. You can't trust anyone, because they may turn into a zombie. Kids attack and eat their own parents! Don't see it with someone you love... you'll wonder about them later.
- Bill
TODAY'S JACK-O-LANTERN:
TODAY'S SCRIPT TIP: HIGH CONCEPT... OR HIGH STAKES? - Global or Personal stakes.
Dinner: Chicken Caesar Salad to make up for all of the junk I've been eating lately.
Pages: Finished a chapter on the Action Book!
Today's Amazon Rank:
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
The 13 Days Of Halloween: The Creature From The Black Lagoon
When I was a kid, one of the most scary movies I had ever seen was THE CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON. May have been on Bob Wilkins' Creature Features or on C3PM Theater on KCRA (Sacramento). The movie is really creepy, and uses the water to hide the monster the same way JAWS used the water to hide the shark. You never know when or where it will strike. The film also has great music with some of the earliest use of "stings" - dant-dunt-da! The group of people, isolated, with a monster out there... somewhere... builds dread. Every time someone gets into the water because there's a tree or something in the way of the boat, you worry that the creature will attack. This was one of those movies I watched as a kid with hands covering my eyes - peeking between my fingers.
Not as scary as an adult, but still *fun* - it has some real suspense and real thrills and actually has an environmental message (great shot of a cigarette butt being thrown into the lagoon... camera dips underwater to show the Creature looking up at the butt and garbage floating in his pool). I didn't notice the environmental stuff when I was a kid. This is one of those films that people my age saw on TV as kids and remember - which is why Universal keeps trying to remake it (latest attempt was with Will Smith). The cheese-fest ANACONDA owes just about everything to this film.

For a while there was a slot machine in Vegas based on BLACK LAGOON, and I always played it becuase it had clips from the film with some clever quips. I have no idea if kids today would find this scary, or just silly - there's no gore at all... but when people dangle their feet in the water and you know it's down there, that scared the heck out of me when I was young!
- Bill
TODAY'S JACK-O-LANTERN:

IMPORTANT UPDATE:
TODAY'S SCRIPT TIP: HOW You Tell The Story - It's not just the story, it's how you decide to tell it... backwards?
Dinner: Pork chop, salad, potatoes... danged cold is still hanging in there!
Pages: Half a chapter on the action book rewrite plus a thing that I needed to work on for months... that I finally finished.
Not as scary as an adult, but still *fun* - it has some real suspense and real thrills and actually has an environmental message (great shot of a cigarette butt being thrown into the lagoon... camera dips underwater to show the Creature looking up at the butt and garbage floating in his pool). I didn't notice the environmental stuff when I was a kid. This is one of those films that people my age saw on TV as kids and remember - which is why Universal keeps trying to remake it (latest attempt was with Will Smith). The cheese-fest ANACONDA owes just about everything to this film.

For a while there was a slot machine in Vegas based on BLACK LAGOON, and I always played it becuase it had clips from the film with some clever quips. I have no idea if kids today would find this scary, or just silly - there's no gore at all... but when people dangle their feet in the water and you know it's down there, that scared the heck out of me when I was young!
- Bill
TODAY'S JACK-O-LANTERN:
TODAY'S SCRIPT TIP: HOW You Tell The Story - It's not just the story, it's how you decide to tell it... backwards?
Dinner: Pork chop, salad, potatoes... danged cold is still hanging in there!
Pages: Half a chapter on the action book rewrite plus a thing that I needed to work on for months... that I finally finished.
Friday, October 14, 2011
Fridays With Hitchcock: Rebecca (1940)
Screenplay by Joan Harrison and Robert E. Sherwood, story by Michael Hogan and Philip MacDonald, based on the novel by Daphne Du Maurier.
“Do you think the dead come back to watch the living?”
Hitchcock is one of the best known directors in the world, a director who understood the language of film like few others (and is studied in cinema classes), has probably had more books on cinema written about his work than any other director, and most people know what he looks like and sounds like... yet he never won an Oscar! He was given one of those consolation prize Oscars before he died... but for all of the visual experiments and story experiments he did to push the envelope of cinema, and for all of the precise, quality direction he did in his 53 films (where every shot was carefully chosen to create emotion in the viewer), he got nada. REBECCA won the Best Picture Oscar... but that went to Selznick, the producer.

I think it’s interesting that a quiet costume drama has a better chance of winning a Best Picture Oscar than a movie that makes you feel something - maybe once a movie becomes something experienced on an emotional level it can no longer be analyzed intellectually - and those Oscar voters set it aside.
When I am writing Script Tips for the website, the most difficult films to use as examples are the ones that engaged me - where I became so caught up in the story and characters that I forgot I was watching a movie and felt as if I was just living that story. These are the films that I must see several times before I have the ability to pull myself out of the film enough to analyze the story and jot down notes... yet even then I find myself sucked into the tale no matter how hard I fight it. But a bad movie? My mind is free to wander and analyze all of the faults - the reasons why it is *not* engaging me. Same with a dispassionate movie, or a story “told from outside” where I am viewing what happens but not emotionally involved in the outcome. Those are the easy ones to write Script Tips about, because I’m sitting on the sidelines - they don’t involve me emotionally, only intellectually. Yes, this means those bad parody films like DATE MOVIE only involve me intellectually - I have no emotional connection to those stories and can easily analyze why the suck. One of the reasons why I love AIRPLANE so much is that it actually pulls me into the story emotionally every time, even though it’s a parody. I find myself wanting Robert Hayes to get over his fear of flying and save the passengers and get back together with Julie Haggerty. So it doesn’t matter what the *genre* of the film is, I get pulled into the story based on the writing and characters and situations and direction.
And emotionally involving films are kind of frightening, because we are no longer in control - we are just along for the ride. A great film kidnaps us, and whisks us away to their world for a couple of hours. We forget we are sitting in a cinema... and maybe we aren’t. Maybe a great film transports us in our minds into the world of that film, and leaves our mortal shells in that sticky-floored theater. We are swept away by the film, whether we like it or not. This loss of control may be uncomfortable to some people, so they attempt to intellectually reject these films. I know many people who hate horror movies because they get scared - the very thing a horror movie is supposed to do! Though I understand not wanting to be frightened, this is intellectually rejecting a film *because it works*. The film is stronger than they are, so it is feared and rejected. A film that makes them feel little or nothing, that does *not* sweep them away, is something they can control and therefor like. That staid costume drama is an *easier* film for them to watch than a genre film that kidnaps them for two hours and then dumps them back in their cinema seat emotionally spent. Part of the intellectual is to reject the emotional. To be *civilized*.
Hitchcock films are also filled with plot twists - they are designed to fool you into believing one thing, then springing in that twist Again, critics don’t like to be *fooled* because it makes them into fools - so they often dislike films with plot twists or decide that it is as cheap plot device... because it worked. They may be intellectuals, but they were tricked! By a genre movie! They must say they saw the twist coming, because if they didn’t they are admitting to being fools. Plot twists make them feel stupid, so the *must* dislike and belittle a film with a plot twist in order to save face. So add plot twists to your emotional story and you have a film that critics will dismiss... because it works.
So Hitchcock never won an Oscar... though his film REBECCA did. Who wants to reward the kidnapper who makes you feel like a fool?
Nutshell: REBECCA is a Gothic Romance - a popular fiction genre where the paperback cover usually shows a woman in a nightgown fleeing a castle with the silhouette of a stern man in the window. This subgenre dates back to the novels of those wacky Bronte Sisters, and at times REBECCA seems like a contemporary version of the first half of WUTHERING HEIGHTS by Emily... and by some coincidence Laurence Olivier was hot off playing Heathcliff in the film version only a year before playing Maxim in REBECCA. JANE EYRE by that other Bronte Sister has a similar haunted dude the chick falls for named Eddie Rochester (not the Jack Benny one). Gothic Romances always have some dark, troubled romantic dude who has some terrible secret, hooking up with some innocent young woman who is not prepared for a guy with this much baggage. So she’s running away in her nightgown while he’s looking out the window in silhouette. (Weird Bill aside - the only part of that I had to look up was the year Olivier was in WUTHERING HEIGHTS!)
REBECCA is kind of the Cinderella story from Hell.

Our leading lady (who has no name and is called “The Second Mrs. De Winter” sometimes in the film, and “I” in the screenplay) (Joan Fontaine) is the mousey assistant to tasteless rich blowhard Edyth Van Hopper (Florence Bates) and her job seems to consist of being constantly insulted and doing all sorts of menial tasks. She is at least ten times as intelligent and Mrs. Van Hopper even though she is in some sort if servant class. While on vacation in Monte Carlo, the boorish Mrs. Van Hooper keeps trying to force herself into the company of rich, brooding widower Maxim de Winter (Laurence Olivier) who does everything possible to avoid her - even though she never gets the hint. Maxim seems to be the only one who notices our leading lady’s wit, and they begin going out together... only Maxim isn’t exactly the best companion. He’s a quiet, brooding man who seems to be haunted by... something. But our leading lady seems to cheer him up, and when the vacation is over, Maxim asks her to marry him. By this point I think she’d marry Jabba The Hutt to get away from Mrs. Van Hooper, so she says yes, they are married in a civil ceremony, and go on a fabulous honeymoon in Europe. Maxim may be quiet and preoccupied by... something... but he’s still a great catch. He’s rich and lives in a massive estate named Manderley and is handsome and kind.
When they return from the honeymoon, things begin to go wrong for our leading lady. She is basically a servant who must now be a princess - and that includes managing the huge mansion and huge staff... headed by the seemingly evil Mrs. Danvers (Judith Anderson - stealing the show). Mrs. Danvers was the personal maid to Maxim’s first wife, Rebecca, and remains loyal to the dead woman. Our leading lady just isn’t in the same league as Rebecca was, and Mrs. Danvers manages to sneak this into every single conversation the two have. If the giant mansion and all of the servants weren’t intimidating enough, Mrs. Danvers seems to be trying to be making her life hell. Add to all of this - Maxim seems even more preoccupied at home than when he was on vacation. He takes “distant” to new lengths. Our leading lady pokes around the big house, but one room is locked - Rebecca’s bedroom (about twice the size of my entire apartment) - which has been kept exactly as it was the day she died. Creepy!

Our leading lady becomes obsessed by Rebecca in two ways - there is a mystery surrounding her death and no one talks about it, and she tries to dress and act like Rebecca in order to win the attention of the distant Maxim. Rebecca’s life and death include all kinds of strange things - she drowned while sailing, but was an expert swimmer. He also seemed to have a “cousin” (ultra-suave George Sanders) who may have actually been her lover. And there’s a boathouse that no one is allowed to go near - which may be where the lovers met. And many mysteries within the house that concern Rebecca, which Mrs. Danvers is trying to make sure our leading lady does not solve. The other element - our leading lady trying to become Rebecca - is something that pops up in other Hitchcock movies like VERTIGO. Here we have our intelligent but unsophisticated leading lady trying to do a full makeover into the ideal society woman... but when she asks Mrs. Danvers what Rebecca was like in order to duplicate it, she’s usually sabotaged.
Eventually she goes to Maxim and asks about Rebecca’s death, and he tells her what happened - he killed her! Not the answer she wanted to hear. (Actually, he doesn’t say he killed her, he says “I put her there” when asked how she ended up in that sailboat at the bottom of the sea... but in Brian DePalma’s excellent Hitchcock homage OBSESSION - written by the great Paul Schrader - the Maxim-like widower tells his fiancé who is trying ever-so-hard to be like his dead first wife that he killed her. It’s a much better line, kind of the Paul Schrader rewrite of REBECCA 35 years later.)
Well, our leading lady pokes around some more and discovers that Maxim didn’t kill Rebecca, he found her dead and planted her body in the sailboat to avoid a scandal. He didn’t love Rebecca - she was a manipulative slut who only married him for his money and when she died it was the best thing that ever happened to him... except he’s worried that someone will open up the whole can of worms and discover he covered up her death... and now our leading lady has done that very thing!
Experiment: This is Hitchcock’s first film in the United States after a successful career in England, so he’s kind of playing it safe. The cast is mostly British and the story is from a novel by Du Maurier who wrote the novel Hitch’s previous film was based on JAMAICA INN and the story THE BIRDS was based on. But the film is almost the opposite of Hitchcock style suspense - instead of big suspense set pieces the film works mostly on mood. This is interesting because it almost works by the *absence* of action, by the stillness of locations and story and Mrs. Danver’s face. For a director whose style is action oriented, moving camera and editing oriented, the lack of movement ends up being an experiment.
Hitch Appearance: Walking past a phone booth.
Sound Track: Another great Franz Waxman score.
Great Scenes: Though the film does have some great scenes, like when Mrs. Danvers sabotages our leading lady at the costume ball, what makes the film work is the mood, the way it turns the Cinderella story on its head, the secrets and reveals, and the way it always seems to put three characters together with shifting alliances. So let’s look at those aspects of the story.

Mood: The film establishes the mood right out of the gate - which is exactly what you want. The opening image not only sets the tone for the entire story, it also sets up the story itself. We open at night on a winding driveway leading to the huge country estate named Manderley - the mansion shrouded in fog and darkness. Our unnamed leading lady says in voice over, “Last night, I dreamt I went to Manderley again. It seemed to me I stood by the iron gate leading to the drive, and for a while I could not enter for the way was barred to me. Then, like all dreamers, I was possessed of a sudden with supernatural powers and passed like a spirit through the barrier before me. The drive wound away in front of me, twisting and turning as it had always done. But as I advanced, I was aware that a change had come upon it. Nature had come into her own again, and little by little had encroached upon the drive with long tenacious fingers, on and on while the poor thread that had once been our drive. And finally, there was Manderley - Manderley - secretive and silent. Time could not mar the perfect symmetry of those walls. Moonlight can play odd tricks upon the fancy, and suddenly it seemed to me that light came from the windows. And then a cloud came upon the moon and hovered an instant like a dark hand before a face. The illusion went with it. I looked upon a desolate shell, with no whisper of the past about its staring walls. We can never go back to Manderley again. That much is certain. But sometimes, in my dreams, I do go back...” The mansion is from her past - a memory in the darkness. It begins as a dream, but as we get closer to the mansion, the fog breaks and we see that it is the skeleton of a mansion - burned out by fire. Some tragedy has taken place here. The beautiful mansion destroyed. The fog concealing, and then revealing the shocking wreckage - and that is how the story works as well. Dark things are revealed. Things have been destroyed in the past...

Beginning with a strong image is a great way to open any kind of screenplay, and here the image of the once beautiful mansion in ruins prepares us for the rest of the story.
Situation and location are important elements in setting the mood, as is time period. Imagine a children’s playground in summer... now imagine that same playground in the dead of winter. These are some of the tools we use when setting mood, along with word choice. The opening of any screenplay can be used to establish mood and location through word choice and description that is poetic... before getting down to the nuts and bolts of action oriented description. But even after a strong image opening, the choice of words used in your action/description is critical to maintaining that mood. I bought a hard copy of the REBECCA script, hoping to post a few evocative descriptions as an example, but this was an adaptation, and the only available version was the shooting script - which was pretty dry and mechanical. I would suggest a script like this is where you get to use the *writing* skills in screenwriting and find the most evocative words you can to paint the picture, without becoming verbose. The key is not to use *many* words, but to use *the right* words - the one that add tone and mood and feeling to the actions.

But every situation, every scene, should be used to create mood. Because this is a romance, there is a “meet cute” - that clever scene where the romantic couple meet. In a rom-com it would be a funny scene, but in REBECCA our female lead comes upon Maxim at the edge of a cliff where he is about to jump to his death. They have an awkward conversation and he moves away from the cliff so that she’ll go away.
After they get married by a justice of the peace - a brief scene of happiness - they drive through the rain to the hulking mansion Manderlay.
Manderley is not a location that is surrounded by life and people - it is secluded at the end of a long, winding, drive - completely isolated from everyone. Though it is surrounded by nature - it seems to be autumn, and the trees are barren. This gives us not only isolation, but *desolation* as an element of location. These things create mood in the background of every scene. The mansion itself is big and empty - creating isolation and desolation even when the scenes are indoors. The mansion is mostly empty rooms shrouded in darkness. To add to the mood, our leading lady is often exploring the closed west wing... where Rebecca used to live. The rooms are not lighted, and she dare not bring a candle or flashlight. Other great locations that create mood are an abandoned beach house filled with cobwebs and dusty boating equipment. Locations, time of day, characters, and story are all selected to create that mood of death and danger and darkness. Consider location as an element of mood.
Negative Cinderella: Once Maxim and our leading lady get to the fairy tale castle of Manderley, the fairy tale romance is over. Because she can never measure up to Rebecca, and everything is a minefield waiting for her to make the wrong step.

There are four minefields in Manderley, beginning with Cinderella having no idea how to be a Princess. She is supposed to be in charge ogf the house, and that includes the huge staff of servants... but she is a servant herself and has no idea how to order people to do things. Not because she isn’t intelligent enough, but because she isn’t aggressive enough - she is still that mousey little "paid companion". Questions about the dinner menu (which is *printed out* every day) need to be answered right away. The gardening staff is here, what do you want them to do? She has no personal maid of her own, which means someone will have to be pulled from some other job to take care of her. She is in charge of correspondence, and there is a huge desk with drawers full of envelopes and stationery and an address book - all monogrammed with Rebecca’s initials. She doesn’t know who any of these people are - and when she scans down the address book everyone is some form of royalty or society... except her. She has no idea that there is a “morning room” where you have tea in the morning, and some other room for later in the day. All kinds of rooms and rules and customs she is unaware of... and she is so far out of her league that everything she does is a potential mistake (and usually an actual mistake). Suspense is built around her not knowing “the rules”, being completely out of her depth and making mistake after mistake. How will she keep from looking like a fool? When she knocks over a China Cupid on her desk and it shatters, she hides the pieces in a drawer rather than call for a maid to clean up the mess. Being a Princess means that if she uses the wrong fork at dinner, people will think she’s an not worthy of being Max’s wife.


Another minefield is that monogrammed stationery... and Rebecca`s ghost. Though there is no translucent figure or someone in a sheet, Rebecca’s ghost is still present in every scene. “Mrs. DeWinter always...” She lives in the shadow of the former mistress of the house, and *everything* has her monogram on it - her territory is marked. Scene after scene has our leading lady bumping up against the memory of Rebecca - the perfect woman. It’s bad enough that Mrs. Danvers and the other servants seem to be constantly comparing her to Rebecca, but even Maxim changes at Manderlay - he’s more moody, always brooding, and distant. Rebecca is present in every scene, every decision that our leading lady makes, and every time Maxim looks at her. In a scene where she cries, Maxim hands her a handkerchief... with Rebecca’s monogram! Maxim seems to still be in love with his dead wife, using our leading lady as nothing more than a romantic band-aid to cover his pain. REBECCA is a ghost story without a physical ghost - just the strong memory of Rebecca, and almost everything in Manderlay is a reminder of Rebecca and a part of Rebecca and designed by Rebecca or created by Rebecca. There is no escape from Rebecca - she haunts our leading lady no matter where she tries to hide in Manderlay.

To give the ghost of Rebecca a human form, we have Mrs. Danvers - who began service at Manderlay as Rebecca’s personal maid. She is constantly peering over our leading lady’s shoulder, waiting for her to make a mistake... waiting to point out how much more sophisticated Rebecca was. She asks our leading lady if Maxim approves of her terrible hair style... which makes her doubt Max’s affections when she probably needs them most. It is impossible for our leading lady to win Mrs. Danver’s approval, yet that seems to be what is required to exist in Manderlay. Mrs. Danvers has kept Rebecca’s room exactly as it was - like a shrine to the dead woman. Her brush in *exactly* the same place - not a centimeter to the right or left. When our leading lady sneaks into Rebecca’s room, Mrs. Danvers *materializes* in the room to discover her, and then gives her a full tour - every single moment designed to compare our leading lady to the always superior Rebecca. Rebecca’s lingerie was hand made by nuns - how can you compete with that? Also - you can see right through Rebecca’s night gown - her body so perfect that she wanted it to be seen.

Mrs. Danvers is a great character - and maybe the model for Hannibal Lecter - she is almost never shown moving - she just appears in a room... or disappears. Her face is always so still it looks dead - the only expression she has is disdain. Her voice is quiet and expressionless - almost robotic. She provides a few shock moments when she suddenly appears somewhere to criticize our leading lady, then vanishes in the time it takes you to look away. The use of stillness, long pauses, and a slower pace builds suspense by creating *denser* conflict - and Mrs. Danvers character is that stillness incarnate. By the end of the tour it is obvious that our leading lady will never measure up to Rebecca - it is impossible. And she can never win Mrs. Danvers’ approval - everything she does will always be wrong. Minor issues of etiquette result in major disdain and disappointment from Mrs. Danvers.

The biggest minefield is Maxim - he has some dark past, some secret, and our leading lady has no idea what it is. Everyone seems to know the backstory of Rebecca’s life and death except her. A dinner conversation mention of *swimming* brings up Max’s memories of Rebecca *drowning*. Everything for conversations about sailing to the boat house to what she wears to a costume party might be the thing that sets Maxim off - flooding him with painful memories of Rebecca’s death. These things make Maxim angry and sullen and he pulls farther and farther away from our leading lady. Isolating her in the huge house with Rebecca’s ghost. By having her *not* know the Rebecca backstory, almost anything she says or does might trigger Max. A scene where he is joyously showing her home movies from their honeymoon *instantly* goes south when she says the wrong thing. Completely innocent, nothing you would ever think would trigger the tirade from Maxim that follows. Suspense is built around our leading lady saying the wrong thing at the wrong time or wearing the wrong clothes... and Maxim exploding. And scenes are created where she must tip-toe through the minefield, knowing that one false step...

Three’s A Crowd: I believe that good drama requires three characters. Two characters is an argument where either may be right, and it just goes back and forth. Add a third character and you have someone who can be convinced that one or the other is right - or maybe that both are wrong and they are right. You have a character who can go back and forth between the two possibilities. When you have a third wheel, that person can end up “stakes” (whether they side with a character or not) or “conflict” (if they come between two characters). The great thing about three characters is the character who is an obstacle to one character can be the stakes to another... and all the way around the circle! Three is one of those magic numbers... and in REBECCA almost every scene and plot element are about groups of three characters.
We start out with our leading lady, her bitchy boss Mrs. Van Hopper and Maxim - one of those three gets in the way of the other two.
At Manderlay we get our leading lady, Maxim, and Mrs. Danvers - one of those three gets in the way of the other two.
We also have our leading lady, Rebecca’s ghost, and Maxim - one of those three gets in the way of the other two.
We find out that Rebecca had an affair: Maxim, Rebecca, her “cousin” Jack Favell (George Sanders) - with Favell getting in the way of Maxim’s marriage to Rebecca.
Again and again in the film we are given a situation with three characters, one who gets in the way of the other two - one who is the antagonist in this scene or situation. Look at your scenes - if you have two characters who are together, who or what keeps them apart? Though this may be more important in a romance or rom-com, in any situation where two characters are in agreement (lack of conflict) who is the character that forces them apart and creates conflict? If you have two people who agree on a solution to a problem, who disagrees to create conflict and drama? And which of the two characters in agreement begins to be swayed to the other side? (which is kind of a betrayal.) Look for the magic number three - it can be the key to drama and conflict!

Secrets & Reveals: The most important thing in a gothic romance is that character with a dark past that hangs over them like a cloud and must be brought into the light in order to be resolved. The minefield that is Maxim DeWinter is all about that dark secret surrounding Rebecca’s death, and even though every time our leading lady stumbles into some aspect of that dark secret it creates conflict with Maxim, the man she loves, the only way to resolve the conflict is to get Maxim to reveal that secret. There is a built in dilemma there, and that’s what makes the story work. The thing that will cause our leading lady the most pain is the thing that is required in order for her to find eventual happiness. Rebecca’s ghost must be laid to rest - and the only way to do that is for Maxim to reveal what really happened that night.
The key to a great reveal is that the *audience* wants to know the information. Needs to know the information. Are *hungry* for the information. Reveals that don’t work are just information dumps with shocking information - but as soon as that shock is over, we don’t really care. The information may not alter the story in any discernable way or may not satisfy any need in the audience. This was one of the problems with UNDER CAPRICORN - the reveals were a soap opera shock, but nothing much else. To make the reveal a *real* moment, you need to tease us - to make the audience ask “What is the secret behind Rebecca’s death?” The more you tease the audience and make us wonder what the big secret is, the more they want to know the secret, and the more impact that secret will have when it is revealed (provided it is not what we expected).

Most movies have a big question at their core, and the screenwriter’s job is to know what that question is and keep the viewer asking it. In a romantic comedy the question may be - will the couple get past all of the obstacles and hook up at the end? In RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK and other quest movies the question is - will Indiana Jones get the ark and keep it away from the Nazis? In a romantic thriller movie like SEA OF LOVE the question is - is the woman the cop loves a serial killer? There is usually some question at the heart of every story, and in REBECCA that question is - how did she die and did Maxim kill her? The movie keeps teasing us with this question again and again - it is what drives the story. For our Cinderella to live happily ever after, Maxim must no longer be obsessing about Rebecca... and she must know the location of all of those hidden mines so that she doesn’t step on one... and maybe even have Maxim *defuse* those mines. To do that, we need to know what happened that night, the night Rebecca was killed. So the whole story *needs* to be building to the moment of the reveal, we need to know that there is a big secret, and wonder exactly what that secret is. Did Maxim kill her? Is Cinderella married to a murderer? By keeping this question alive throughout the film, so that the audience *needs* to know the answer, when it is revealed it has impact. It is a *resolution* not just a shock. A good reveal *answers* questions, instead of creating more questions.
That means whatever is reveals *can not* be what we expect... making a reveal like a plot twist. It needs to be something that is logical and motivated and *present* in the story so far (not something you pull out of your ass at the end), but at the same time not what that audience thought it was going to be. So we need to create a “red herring” reveal that we hint at, that the audience believes will be the big reveal... so that they can be surprised by the actual reveal. In REBECCA we are lead to believe that Maxim was madly in love with Rebecca, and when he discovered that she was cheating on him with Favell, he murdered her. But that is *not* what happened at all! When the truth is revealed, it makes perfect sense - but Maxim is not the killer at all. So the reveal can be a surprise even after 2 hours of teasing the audience with the secret.
What that secret is I have already revealed in one of the opening paragraphs... but maybe you have forgotten it by now? If so, you may still be surprised at that moment of the film when you watch it. REBECCA is a great lush romance that still works well 60 years later.
- Bill
The other Fridays With Hitchcock.
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“Do you think the dead come back to watch the living?”
Hitchcock is one of the best known directors in the world, a director who understood the language of film like few others (and is studied in cinema classes), has probably had more books on cinema written about his work than any other director, and most people know what he looks like and sounds like... yet he never won an Oscar! He was given one of those consolation prize Oscars before he died... but for all of the visual experiments and story experiments he did to push the envelope of cinema, and for all of the precise, quality direction he did in his 53 films (where every shot was carefully chosen to create emotion in the viewer), he got nada. REBECCA won the Best Picture Oscar... but that went to Selznick, the producer.
I think it’s interesting that a quiet costume drama has a better chance of winning a Best Picture Oscar than a movie that makes you feel something - maybe once a movie becomes something experienced on an emotional level it can no longer be analyzed intellectually - and those Oscar voters set it aside.
When I am writing Script Tips for the website, the most difficult films to use as examples are the ones that engaged me - where I became so caught up in the story and characters that I forgot I was watching a movie and felt as if I was just living that story. These are the films that I must see several times before I have the ability to pull myself out of the film enough to analyze the story and jot down notes... yet even then I find myself sucked into the tale no matter how hard I fight it. But a bad movie? My mind is free to wander and analyze all of the faults - the reasons why it is *not* engaging me. Same with a dispassionate movie, or a story “told from outside” where I am viewing what happens but not emotionally involved in the outcome. Those are the easy ones to write Script Tips about, because I’m sitting on the sidelines - they don’t involve me emotionally, only intellectually. Yes, this means those bad parody films like DATE MOVIE only involve me intellectually - I have no emotional connection to those stories and can easily analyze why the suck. One of the reasons why I love AIRPLANE so much is that it actually pulls me into the story emotionally every time, even though it’s a parody. I find myself wanting Robert Hayes to get over his fear of flying and save the passengers and get back together with Julie Haggerty. So it doesn’t matter what the *genre* of the film is, I get pulled into the story based on the writing and characters and situations and direction.
And emotionally involving films are kind of frightening, because we are no longer in control - we are just along for the ride. A great film kidnaps us, and whisks us away to their world for a couple of hours. We forget we are sitting in a cinema... and maybe we aren’t. Maybe a great film transports us in our minds into the world of that film, and leaves our mortal shells in that sticky-floored theater. We are swept away by the film, whether we like it or not. This loss of control may be uncomfortable to some people, so they attempt to intellectually reject these films. I know many people who hate horror movies because they get scared - the very thing a horror movie is supposed to do! Though I understand not wanting to be frightened, this is intellectually rejecting a film *because it works*. The film is stronger than they are, so it is feared and rejected. A film that makes them feel little or nothing, that does *not* sweep them away, is something they can control and therefor like. That staid costume drama is an *easier* film for them to watch than a genre film that kidnaps them for two hours and then dumps them back in their cinema seat emotionally spent. Part of the intellectual is to reject the emotional. To be *civilized*.
Hitchcock films are also filled with plot twists - they are designed to fool you into believing one thing, then springing in that twist Again, critics don’t like to be *fooled* because it makes them into fools - so they often dislike films with plot twists or decide that it is as cheap plot device... because it worked. They may be intellectuals, but they were tricked! By a genre movie! They must say they saw the twist coming, because if they didn’t they are admitting to being fools. Plot twists make them feel stupid, so the *must* dislike and belittle a film with a plot twist in order to save face. So add plot twists to your emotional story and you have a film that critics will dismiss... because it works.
So Hitchcock never won an Oscar... though his film REBECCA did. Who wants to reward the kidnapper who makes you feel like a fool?
Nutshell: REBECCA is a Gothic Romance - a popular fiction genre where the paperback cover usually shows a woman in a nightgown fleeing a castle with the silhouette of a stern man in the window. This subgenre dates back to the novels of those wacky Bronte Sisters, and at times REBECCA seems like a contemporary version of the first half of WUTHERING HEIGHTS by Emily... and by some coincidence Laurence Olivier was hot off playing Heathcliff in the film version only a year before playing Maxim in REBECCA. JANE EYRE by that other Bronte Sister has a similar haunted dude the chick falls for named Eddie Rochester (not the Jack Benny one). Gothic Romances always have some dark, troubled romantic dude who has some terrible secret, hooking up with some innocent young woman who is not prepared for a guy with this much baggage. So she’s running away in her nightgown while he’s looking out the window in silhouette. (Weird Bill aside - the only part of that I had to look up was the year Olivier was in WUTHERING HEIGHTS!)
REBECCA is kind of the Cinderella story from Hell.
Our leading lady (who has no name and is called “The Second Mrs. De Winter” sometimes in the film, and “I” in the screenplay) (Joan Fontaine) is the mousey assistant to tasteless rich blowhard Edyth Van Hopper (Florence Bates) and her job seems to consist of being constantly insulted and doing all sorts of menial tasks. She is at least ten times as intelligent and Mrs. Van Hopper even though she is in some sort if servant class. While on vacation in Monte Carlo, the boorish Mrs. Van Hooper keeps trying to force herself into the company of rich, brooding widower Maxim de Winter (Laurence Olivier) who does everything possible to avoid her - even though she never gets the hint. Maxim seems to be the only one who notices our leading lady’s wit, and they begin going out together... only Maxim isn’t exactly the best companion. He’s a quiet, brooding man who seems to be haunted by... something. But our leading lady seems to cheer him up, and when the vacation is over, Maxim asks her to marry him. By this point I think she’d marry Jabba The Hutt to get away from Mrs. Van Hooper, so she says yes, they are married in a civil ceremony, and go on a fabulous honeymoon in Europe. Maxim may be quiet and preoccupied by... something... but he’s still a great catch. He’s rich and lives in a massive estate named Manderley and is handsome and kind.
When they return from the honeymoon, things begin to go wrong for our leading lady. She is basically a servant who must now be a princess - and that includes managing the huge mansion and huge staff... headed by the seemingly evil Mrs. Danvers (Judith Anderson - stealing the show). Mrs. Danvers was the personal maid to Maxim’s first wife, Rebecca, and remains loyal to the dead woman. Our leading lady just isn’t in the same league as Rebecca was, and Mrs. Danvers manages to sneak this into every single conversation the two have. If the giant mansion and all of the servants weren’t intimidating enough, Mrs. Danvers seems to be trying to be making her life hell. Add to all of this - Maxim seems even more preoccupied at home than when he was on vacation. He takes “distant” to new lengths. Our leading lady pokes around the big house, but one room is locked - Rebecca’s bedroom (about twice the size of my entire apartment) - which has been kept exactly as it was the day she died. Creepy!
Our leading lady becomes obsessed by Rebecca in two ways - there is a mystery surrounding her death and no one talks about it, and she tries to dress and act like Rebecca in order to win the attention of the distant Maxim. Rebecca’s life and death include all kinds of strange things - she drowned while sailing, but was an expert swimmer. He also seemed to have a “cousin” (ultra-suave George Sanders) who may have actually been her lover. And there’s a boathouse that no one is allowed to go near - which may be where the lovers met. And many mysteries within the house that concern Rebecca, which Mrs. Danvers is trying to make sure our leading lady does not solve. The other element - our leading lady trying to become Rebecca - is something that pops up in other Hitchcock movies like VERTIGO. Here we have our intelligent but unsophisticated leading lady trying to do a full makeover into the ideal society woman... but when she asks Mrs. Danvers what Rebecca was like in order to duplicate it, she’s usually sabotaged.
Eventually she goes to Maxim and asks about Rebecca’s death, and he tells her what happened - he killed her! Not the answer she wanted to hear. (Actually, he doesn’t say he killed her, he says “I put her there” when asked how she ended up in that sailboat at the bottom of the sea... but in Brian DePalma’s excellent Hitchcock homage OBSESSION - written by the great Paul Schrader - the Maxim-like widower tells his fiancé who is trying ever-so-hard to be like his dead first wife that he killed her. It’s a much better line, kind of the Paul Schrader rewrite of REBECCA 35 years later.)
Well, our leading lady pokes around some more and discovers that Maxim didn’t kill Rebecca, he found her dead and planted her body in the sailboat to avoid a scandal. He didn’t love Rebecca - she was a manipulative slut who only married him for his money and when she died it was the best thing that ever happened to him... except he’s worried that someone will open up the whole can of worms and discover he covered up her death... and now our leading lady has done that very thing!
Experiment: This is Hitchcock’s first film in the United States after a successful career in England, so he’s kind of playing it safe. The cast is mostly British and the story is from a novel by Du Maurier who wrote the novel Hitch’s previous film was based on JAMAICA INN and the story THE BIRDS was based on. But the film is almost the opposite of Hitchcock style suspense - instead of big suspense set pieces the film works mostly on mood. This is interesting because it almost works by the *absence* of action, by the stillness of locations and story and Mrs. Danver’s face. For a director whose style is action oriented, moving camera and editing oriented, the lack of movement ends up being an experiment.
Hitch Appearance: Walking past a phone booth.
Sound Track: Another great Franz Waxman score.
Great Scenes: Though the film does have some great scenes, like when Mrs. Danvers sabotages our leading lady at the costume ball, what makes the film work is the mood, the way it turns the Cinderella story on its head, the secrets and reveals, and the way it always seems to put three characters together with shifting alliances. So let’s look at those aspects of the story.
Mood: The film establishes the mood right out of the gate - which is exactly what you want. The opening image not only sets the tone for the entire story, it also sets up the story itself. We open at night on a winding driveway leading to the huge country estate named Manderley - the mansion shrouded in fog and darkness. Our unnamed leading lady says in voice over, “Last night, I dreamt I went to Manderley again. It seemed to me I stood by the iron gate leading to the drive, and for a while I could not enter for the way was barred to me. Then, like all dreamers, I was possessed of a sudden with supernatural powers and passed like a spirit through the barrier before me. The drive wound away in front of me, twisting and turning as it had always done. But as I advanced, I was aware that a change had come upon it. Nature had come into her own again, and little by little had encroached upon the drive with long tenacious fingers, on and on while the poor thread that had once been our drive. And finally, there was Manderley - Manderley - secretive and silent. Time could not mar the perfect symmetry of those walls. Moonlight can play odd tricks upon the fancy, and suddenly it seemed to me that light came from the windows. And then a cloud came upon the moon and hovered an instant like a dark hand before a face. The illusion went with it. I looked upon a desolate shell, with no whisper of the past about its staring walls. We can never go back to Manderley again. That much is certain. But sometimes, in my dreams, I do go back...” The mansion is from her past - a memory in the darkness. It begins as a dream, but as we get closer to the mansion, the fog breaks and we see that it is the skeleton of a mansion - burned out by fire. Some tragedy has taken place here. The beautiful mansion destroyed. The fog concealing, and then revealing the shocking wreckage - and that is how the story works as well. Dark things are revealed. Things have been destroyed in the past...
Beginning with a strong image is a great way to open any kind of screenplay, and here the image of the once beautiful mansion in ruins prepares us for the rest of the story.
Situation and location are important elements in setting the mood, as is time period. Imagine a children’s playground in summer... now imagine that same playground in the dead of winter. These are some of the tools we use when setting mood, along with word choice. The opening of any screenplay can be used to establish mood and location through word choice and description that is poetic... before getting down to the nuts and bolts of action oriented description. But even after a strong image opening, the choice of words used in your action/description is critical to maintaining that mood. I bought a hard copy of the REBECCA script, hoping to post a few evocative descriptions as an example, but this was an adaptation, and the only available version was the shooting script - which was pretty dry and mechanical. I would suggest a script like this is where you get to use the *writing* skills in screenwriting and find the most evocative words you can to paint the picture, without becoming verbose. The key is not to use *many* words, but to use *the right* words - the one that add tone and mood and feeling to the actions.
But every situation, every scene, should be used to create mood. Because this is a romance, there is a “meet cute” - that clever scene where the romantic couple meet. In a rom-com it would be a funny scene, but in REBECCA our female lead comes upon Maxim at the edge of a cliff where he is about to jump to his death. They have an awkward conversation and he moves away from the cliff so that she’ll go away.
After they get married by a justice of the peace - a brief scene of happiness - they drive through the rain to the hulking mansion Manderlay.
Manderley is not a location that is surrounded by life and people - it is secluded at the end of a long, winding, drive - completely isolated from everyone. Though it is surrounded by nature - it seems to be autumn, and the trees are barren. This gives us not only isolation, but *desolation* as an element of location. These things create mood in the background of every scene. The mansion itself is big and empty - creating isolation and desolation even when the scenes are indoors. The mansion is mostly empty rooms shrouded in darkness. To add to the mood, our leading lady is often exploring the closed west wing... where Rebecca used to live. The rooms are not lighted, and she dare not bring a candle or flashlight. Other great locations that create mood are an abandoned beach house filled with cobwebs and dusty boating equipment. Locations, time of day, characters, and story are all selected to create that mood of death and danger and darkness. Consider location as an element of mood.
Negative Cinderella: Once Maxim and our leading lady get to the fairy tale castle of Manderley, the fairy tale romance is over. Because she can never measure up to Rebecca, and everything is a minefield waiting for her to make the wrong step.
There are four minefields in Manderley, beginning with Cinderella having no idea how to be a Princess. She is supposed to be in charge ogf the house, and that includes the huge staff of servants... but she is a servant herself and has no idea how to order people to do things. Not because she isn’t intelligent enough, but because she isn’t aggressive enough - she is still that mousey little "paid companion". Questions about the dinner menu (which is *printed out* every day) need to be answered right away. The gardening staff is here, what do you want them to do? She has no personal maid of her own, which means someone will have to be pulled from some other job to take care of her. She is in charge of correspondence, and there is a huge desk with drawers full of envelopes and stationery and an address book - all monogrammed with Rebecca’s initials. She doesn’t know who any of these people are - and when she scans down the address book everyone is some form of royalty or society... except her. She has no idea that there is a “morning room” where you have tea in the morning, and some other room for later in the day. All kinds of rooms and rules and customs she is unaware of... and she is so far out of her league that everything she does is a potential mistake (and usually an actual mistake). Suspense is built around her not knowing “the rules”, being completely out of her depth and making mistake after mistake. How will she keep from looking like a fool? When she knocks over a China Cupid on her desk and it shatters, she hides the pieces in a drawer rather than call for a maid to clean up the mess. Being a Princess means that if she uses the wrong fork at dinner, people will think she’s an not worthy of being Max’s wife.
Another minefield is that monogrammed stationery... and Rebecca`s ghost. Though there is no translucent figure or someone in a sheet, Rebecca’s ghost is still present in every scene. “Mrs. DeWinter always...” She lives in the shadow of the former mistress of the house, and *everything* has her monogram on it - her territory is marked. Scene after scene has our leading lady bumping up against the memory of Rebecca - the perfect woman. It’s bad enough that Mrs. Danvers and the other servants seem to be constantly comparing her to Rebecca, but even Maxim changes at Manderlay - he’s more moody, always brooding, and distant. Rebecca is present in every scene, every decision that our leading lady makes, and every time Maxim looks at her. In a scene where she cries, Maxim hands her a handkerchief... with Rebecca’s monogram! Maxim seems to still be in love with his dead wife, using our leading lady as nothing more than a romantic band-aid to cover his pain. REBECCA is a ghost story without a physical ghost - just the strong memory of Rebecca, and almost everything in Manderlay is a reminder of Rebecca and a part of Rebecca and designed by Rebecca or created by Rebecca. There is no escape from Rebecca - she haunts our leading lady no matter where she tries to hide in Manderlay.
To give the ghost of Rebecca a human form, we have Mrs. Danvers - who began service at Manderlay as Rebecca’s personal maid. She is constantly peering over our leading lady’s shoulder, waiting for her to make a mistake... waiting to point out how much more sophisticated Rebecca was. She asks our leading lady if Maxim approves of her terrible hair style... which makes her doubt Max’s affections when she probably needs them most. It is impossible for our leading lady to win Mrs. Danver’s approval, yet that seems to be what is required to exist in Manderlay. Mrs. Danvers has kept Rebecca’s room exactly as it was - like a shrine to the dead woman. Her brush in *exactly* the same place - not a centimeter to the right or left. When our leading lady sneaks into Rebecca’s room, Mrs. Danvers *materializes* in the room to discover her, and then gives her a full tour - every single moment designed to compare our leading lady to the always superior Rebecca. Rebecca’s lingerie was hand made by nuns - how can you compete with that? Also - you can see right through Rebecca’s night gown - her body so perfect that she wanted it to be seen.
Mrs. Danvers is a great character - and maybe the model for Hannibal Lecter - she is almost never shown moving - she just appears in a room... or disappears. Her face is always so still it looks dead - the only expression she has is disdain. Her voice is quiet and expressionless - almost robotic. She provides a few shock moments when she suddenly appears somewhere to criticize our leading lady, then vanishes in the time it takes you to look away. The use of stillness, long pauses, and a slower pace builds suspense by creating *denser* conflict - and Mrs. Danvers character is that stillness incarnate. By the end of the tour it is obvious that our leading lady will never measure up to Rebecca - it is impossible. And she can never win Mrs. Danvers’ approval - everything she does will always be wrong. Minor issues of etiquette result in major disdain and disappointment from Mrs. Danvers.
The biggest minefield is Maxim - he has some dark past, some secret, and our leading lady has no idea what it is. Everyone seems to know the backstory of Rebecca’s life and death except her. A dinner conversation mention of *swimming* brings up Max’s memories of Rebecca *drowning*. Everything for conversations about sailing to the boat house to what she wears to a costume party might be the thing that sets Maxim off - flooding him with painful memories of Rebecca’s death. These things make Maxim angry and sullen and he pulls farther and farther away from our leading lady. Isolating her in the huge house with Rebecca’s ghost. By having her *not* know the Rebecca backstory, almost anything she says or does might trigger Max. A scene where he is joyously showing her home movies from their honeymoon *instantly* goes south when she says the wrong thing. Completely innocent, nothing you would ever think would trigger the tirade from Maxim that follows. Suspense is built around our leading lady saying the wrong thing at the wrong time or wearing the wrong clothes... and Maxim exploding. And scenes are created where she must tip-toe through the minefield, knowing that one false step...
Three’s A Crowd: I believe that good drama requires three characters. Two characters is an argument where either may be right, and it just goes back and forth. Add a third character and you have someone who can be convinced that one or the other is right - or maybe that both are wrong and they are right. You have a character who can go back and forth between the two possibilities. When you have a third wheel, that person can end up “stakes” (whether they side with a character or not) or “conflict” (if they come between two characters). The great thing about three characters is the character who is an obstacle to one character can be the stakes to another... and all the way around the circle! Three is one of those magic numbers... and in REBECCA almost every scene and plot element are about groups of three characters.
We start out with our leading lady, her bitchy boss Mrs. Van Hopper and Maxim - one of those three gets in the way of the other two.
At Manderlay we get our leading lady, Maxim, and Mrs. Danvers - one of those three gets in the way of the other two.
We also have our leading lady, Rebecca’s ghost, and Maxim - one of those three gets in the way of the other two.
We find out that Rebecca had an affair: Maxim, Rebecca, her “cousin” Jack Favell (George Sanders) - with Favell getting in the way of Maxim’s marriage to Rebecca.
Again and again in the film we are given a situation with three characters, one who gets in the way of the other two - one who is the antagonist in this scene or situation. Look at your scenes - if you have two characters who are together, who or what keeps them apart? Though this may be more important in a romance or rom-com, in any situation where two characters are in agreement (lack of conflict) who is the character that forces them apart and creates conflict? If you have two people who agree on a solution to a problem, who disagrees to create conflict and drama? And which of the two characters in agreement begins to be swayed to the other side? (which is kind of a betrayal.) Look for the magic number three - it can be the key to drama and conflict!
Secrets & Reveals: The most important thing in a gothic romance is that character with a dark past that hangs over them like a cloud and must be brought into the light in order to be resolved. The minefield that is Maxim DeWinter is all about that dark secret surrounding Rebecca’s death, and even though every time our leading lady stumbles into some aspect of that dark secret it creates conflict with Maxim, the man she loves, the only way to resolve the conflict is to get Maxim to reveal that secret. There is a built in dilemma there, and that’s what makes the story work. The thing that will cause our leading lady the most pain is the thing that is required in order for her to find eventual happiness. Rebecca’s ghost must be laid to rest - and the only way to do that is for Maxim to reveal what really happened that night.
The key to a great reveal is that the *audience* wants to know the information. Needs to know the information. Are *hungry* for the information. Reveals that don’t work are just information dumps with shocking information - but as soon as that shock is over, we don’t really care. The information may not alter the story in any discernable way or may not satisfy any need in the audience. This was one of the problems with UNDER CAPRICORN - the reveals were a soap opera shock, but nothing much else. To make the reveal a *real* moment, you need to tease us - to make the audience ask “What is the secret behind Rebecca’s death?” The more you tease the audience and make us wonder what the big secret is, the more they want to know the secret, and the more impact that secret will have when it is revealed (provided it is not what we expected).
Most movies have a big question at their core, and the screenwriter’s job is to know what that question is and keep the viewer asking it. In a romantic comedy the question may be - will the couple get past all of the obstacles and hook up at the end? In RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK and other quest movies the question is - will Indiana Jones get the ark and keep it away from the Nazis? In a romantic thriller movie like SEA OF LOVE the question is - is the woman the cop loves a serial killer? There is usually some question at the heart of every story, and in REBECCA that question is - how did she die and did Maxim kill her? The movie keeps teasing us with this question again and again - it is what drives the story. For our Cinderella to live happily ever after, Maxim must no longer be obsessing about Rebecca... and she must know the location of all of those hidden mines so that she doesn’t step on one... and maybe even have Maxim *defuse* those mines. To do that, we need to know what happened that night, the night Rebecca was killed. So the whole story *needs* to be building to the moment of the reveal, we need to know that there is a big secret, and wonder exactly what that secret is. Did Maxim kill her? Is Cinderella married to a murderer? By keeping this question alive throughout the film, so that the audience *needs* to know the answer, when it is revealed it has impact. It is a *resolution* not just a shock. A good reveal *answers* questions, instead of creating more questions.
That means whatever is reveals *can not* be what we expect... making a reveal like a plot twist. It needs to be something that is logical and motivated and *present* in the story so far (not something you pull out of your ass at the end), but at the same time not what that audience thought it was going to be. So we need to create a “red herring” reveal that we hint at, that the audience believes will be the big reveal... so that they can be surprised by the actual reveal. In REBECCA we are lead to believe that Maxim was madly in love with Rebecca, and when he discovered that she was cheating on him with Favell, he murdered her. But that is *not* what happened at all! When the truth is revealed, it makes perfect sense - but Maxim is not the killer at all. So the reveal can be a surprise even after 2 hours of teasing the audience with the secret.
What that secret is I have already revealed in one of the opening paragraphs... but maybe you have forgotten it by now? If so, you may still be surprised at that moment of the film when you watch it. REBECCA is a great lush romance that still works well 60 years later.
- Bill
The other Fridays With Hitchcock.
BUY THE DVD AT AMAZON:

Thursday, October 13, 2011
Still #3!
Sorry, folks, I have a terrible head cold so the LADY VANISHES entry isn't going to pop tomorrow, and the half finished links entry never got up for today. My good news is that my laptop is back from the shop, so I'm working on the SECRETS OF ACTION rewrite between nose-blows.
The miracle of the two Blue Books on Kindle continues, here's today's ranking on Amazon:
Next up will be Dialogue (#10) - which is mostly rewritten and waiting for the three new articles... which I have to write between nose-blows.
Hope to have e-book version of SECRETS OF ACTION ready around the start of November. There will be an excerpt in the November issue of Script Magazine. The excerpt is 2,500 words (10 pages of typing) and was a *single sentence* in the original version! That's the problem with this danged rewrite - every chapter has more information and is twice as long!
- Bill
IMPORTANT UPDATE:
TODAY'S SCRIPT TIP: Do You Have The Wrong Idea - Making sure you have the best version of the story before you write it.
Dinner: Chicken breast, salad, mashed potatoes... at home while blowing my nose. Yech. Couldn't taste any of it.
Pages: Got my laptop back from repairs... but now *I* need repairs. Mon & Tue wrote a new article for Script. Also did a quick pass on a script requested by a manager.
The miracle of the two Blue Books on Kindle continues, here's today's ranking on Amazon:
NEW!
*** YOUR IDEA MACHINE *** - For Kindle!
*** YOUR IDEA MACHINE *** - For Nook!
Expanded version with more ways to find great ideas! Print version is 48 pages, Kindle version is around 155 pages!
Only $2.99 - and no postage!
NEW!
*** CREATING STRONG PROTAGONISTS *** - For Kindle!
*** CREATING STRONG PROTAGONISTS *** - For Nook!
Expanded version with more ways to create interesting protagonists! Print version is 48 pages, Kindle version is once again around 155 pages!
Only $2.99 - and no postage!
Next up will be Dialogue (#10) - which is mostly rewritten and waiting for the three new articles... which I have to write between nose-blows.
Hope to have e-book version of SECRETS OF ACTION ready around the start of November. There will be an excerpt in the November issue of Script Magazine. The excerpt is 2,500 words (10 pages of typing) and was a *single sentence* in the original version! That's the problem with this danged rewrite - every chapter has more information and is twice as long!
- Bill
TODAY'S SCRIPT TIP: Do You Have The Wrong Idea - Making sure you have the best version of the story before you write it.
Dinner: Chicken breast, salad, mashed potatoes... at home while blowing my nose. Yech. Couldn't taste any of it.
Pages: Got my laptop back from repairs... but now *I* need repairs. Mon & Tue wrote a new article for Script. Also did a quick pass on a script requested by a manager.
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Raindance Film Festival Winners
BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE presented by Lomography
WINNER
Just Between Us / Rajko Grlic - Croatia
Set in contemporary Zagreb, Just Between Us is a beautifully told tale of infidelity charting the convoluted love lives of two middle-aged brothers, their wives and their mistresses.
BEST UK presented by Yahoo! Movies
WINNER
Stranger Things / Eleanor Burke - UK
An unusual and touching bond develops when grieving Oona reaches out to a mysterious homeless man, offering him a place to stay in her shed.
BEST DEBUT presented by Digital Cinema Media
WINNER
Tilt / Viktor Chouchkov Jr. - Bulgaria
This Bulgarian coming-of-age drama is about four friends who dream of opening up their own bar. Things get complicated when one of them falls in love, the group are busted for illegal distribution of pornography and exiled from their home country.
BEST MICROBUDGET FEATURE presented by Electric Sheep
WINNER
MONK3YS / Drew Cullingham - UK
Voluntarily locked in a cell for 48 hours with no restrictions and no outside help three emotional archetypes battle for psychological supremacy before they can be destroyed by their own weaknesses.
BEST DOCUMENTARY presented by VICE
WINNER
How to Start A Revolution / Ruaridh Arrow - UK
HOW TO START A REVOLUTION is the remarkable untold story of Nobel Peace Prize nominee Gene Sharp, the world's leading expert on non-violent revolution.
BEST INTERNATIONAL SHORTS
WINNER
Words / Sven Vinge - Denmark
A stranger, apparently a great fan of the author, asks for a signed copy of Strøm's recent novel ... the one with the girl.
BEST UK SHORT presented by Raindance TV
WINNER
Love At First Sight / Michael Davies - UK
Do you believe in love at first sight? When Arthur spots Ruth he knows in his heart that it's true...
- Bill
WINNER
Just Between Us / Rajko Grlic - Croatia
Set in contemporary Zagreb, Just Between Us is a beautifully told tale of infidelity charting the convoluted love lives of two middle-aged brothers, their wives and their mistresses.
BEST UK presented by Yahoo! Movies
WINNER
Stranger Things / Eleanor Burke - UK
An unusual and touching bond develops when grieving Oona reaches out to a mysterious homeless man, offering him a place to stay in her shed.
BEST DEBUT presented by Digital Cinema Media
WINNER
Tilt / Viktor Chouchkov Jr. - Bulgaria
This Bulgarian coming-of-age drama is about four friends who dream of opening up their own bar. Things get complicated when one of them falls in love, the group are busted for illegal distribution of pornography and exiled from their home country.
BEST MICROBUDGET FEATURE presented by Electric Sheep
WINNER
MONK3YS / Drew Cullingham - UK
Voluntarily locked in a cell for 48 hours with no restrictions and no outside help three emotional archetypes battle for psychological supremacy before they can be destroyed by their own weaknesses.
BEST DOCUMENTARY presented by VICE
WINNER
How to Start A Revolution / Ruaridh Arrow - UK
HOW TO START A REVOLUTION is the remarkable untold story of Nobel Peace Prize nominee Gene Sharp, the world's leading expert on non-violent revolution.
BEST INTERNATIONAL SHORTS
WINNER
Words / Sven Vinge - Denmark
A stranger, apparently a great fan of the author, asks for a signed copy of Strøm's recent novel ... the one with the girl.
BEST UK SHORT presented by Raindance TV
WINNER
Love At First Sight / Michael Davies - UK
Do you believe in love at first sight? When Arthur spots Ruth he knows in his heart that it's true...
- Bill
Friday, October 7, 2011
Fridays With Hitchcock: Jamaica Inn (1939)
Screenplay by Sidney Gilliat and Joan Harrison based on the novel by Daphne DuMaurier.
JAMAICA INN was Hitchcock’s last film in England and his first of three films based on a Daphne DuMaurier story. His next film would also be from a DuMaurier novel - REBECCA - which would win the Oscar for Best Picture. In doing some research for this entry, I read an article that said REBECCA almost didn’t happen due to JAMAICA INN. It seems DuMaurier - kind of the J.K. Rowlings of her time - had seen JAMAICA INN and *hated* it, and was making waves about Hitchcock directing REBECCA.
And she had good reason to hate this film - it took me several viewings to make it all of the way through. It’s a Gothic Melodrama - which probably ends up being the second most common type of Hitchcock movie after Man On The Run Thrillers. That seems odd when you think about it, but so many of Hitchcock’s films end up in that genre: from MARNIE (sort of) UNDER CAPRICORN to SUSPICION to REBECCA. This films are usually about innocent women who come under the spell of men with dark secrets and suspense and drama ensues. On the paperback aisle these books have covers that show a woman in a nightgown running away from a castle or mansion that has the silhouette of a stern looking man in the window. Though these stories can be filled with suspense and intrigue like REBECCA, they can also be over-the-top melodrama like UNDER CAPRICORN. JAMAICA INN fits somewhere between the two, and the film’s major flaw seems not so much Hitchcock’s direction or even the subject matter... but the star.

Nutshell: In 1800 England, young Mary (a hot 18 year old Maureen O’Hara in her very first role) is an orphan sent to live with her Aunt Patience and Uncle Joss in a costal village in Cornwall, where Uncle owns a scummy tavern called Jamaica Inn. This place is so rough the stage coach won’t even stop *near* there and dumps Mary and her baggage in front of the Governor’s Mansion. Governor Sir Humphrey (Charles Laughton) offers to escort Mary to Jamaica Inn - a place so dangerous Sir Humphrey’s groom tries to talk him out of it. They ride to the Inn, and Sir Humphrey gets the hell out of there. Mary meets her Uncle (Leslie Banks) and Aunt (Marie Ney) and is shown to her room. Downstairs in the bar, a criminal gang - lead by her Uncle - are arguing over the loot from a bit of piracy. Seems these fellows have an inside man who tells them when ships are passing the rugged coast, and they cover the lighthouse light so that the ships crash into the shore, then steal the cargo and Uncle Joss takes it to his fence. Mary discovers all of this, saves a gang member Trehearne (Robert Newton) from death, Trehearne kidnaps her, she goes to Sir Humphrey for help, and gets kidnaped a couple more times before the film is over. Along the way, she meets a nice guy and some romance blossoms... the end.
We’ll look at the plot details in a few minutes.
Experiment: This is a case of “Be careful what you wish for”. Hitchcock had worked his way up from drawing title cards to directing films, and had managed to direct a string of hits that sold tickets not only in England, but in the world. His 39 STEPS and LADY VANISHES were massive international successes... but both were genre films and looked down upon by some critics. Hitch wasn’t working with top tier stars, he was often working with B level actors in the U.K. Hey, everyone knows who Nova Pilbeam is, right? She’s the *star* of YOUNG AND INNOCENT, the film he made just between LADY VANISHES and SABOTAGE. As soon as someone like Robert Donat became a star, he quit doing genre films (and moved to the America to do dramas like GOODBYE, MR. CHIPS). Hitchcock’s films were successes despite not having big name stars in the leads.
But just as LADY VANISHES resulted in a contract from GONE WITH THE WIND producer David O. Selznick and a ticket to America, it also attracted the attention of Oscar winning movie star Charles Laughton. Finally - a movie star who wanted to work with Hitchcock! Laughton was born in England, had become a star there, and then moved to America where the real money was. In America he was the star of prestige films like MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY and LES MISERABLES. Having him in a Hitchcock film guaranteed both box office and critical success - and a chance for Hitchcock to be seen as more than just a genre filmmaker.
But everything has a price, and Laughton was the 300 lb gorilla - instead of JAMAICA INN being a Hitchcock movie, it ended up a Charles Laughton movie... and instead of the story being about an innocent girl sent to live in a den of scum and villainy... it became the story of Sir Humphrey the Governor of the district and his descent into madness (and over acting). I’m sure the reason why DuMaurier hated the film was that it was no longer about the lead character, but about a side character from her book who had now taken center stage. But let’s face it - the lead character of Mary was played by an actress who had never done a film before, and Sir Humphrey was played by an Oscar winner. Who do you think should get more screen time?

In the Hitchcock/Truffaut Book, Hitch has little good to say about Laughton, telling a story about how Laughton refused to be shot from the waist down until he figured out how his character would walk. Other weird elements are Laughton’s *eye brows* which have been shaved and replaced by crazy melodramatic eyebrows about halfway up his forehead. But the biggest problem are all of the endless scenes that feature Laughton but have little to do with the story - there is an additional writer credited and I wonder if Laughton brought in his own pet scribe to beef up his role. The character is supposed to be the villain (oops, spoiler!) but there are a bunch of scenes that show him descending into madness - which allow Laughton to chew through a whole studio full of scenery - so that by the end, instead of being the bad guy... he has a big end scene where we are supposed to feel sorry for him because he’s crazy. Even Mary, who he has tried to kill several times in the story, yells that the police should leave him alone because he doesn’t know what he is doing. They try to make the villain into the victim - and that manages to undermine the whole damned film! But it’s easy to image the Oscar winner Laughton insisting on the rewrite that turns him from bad guy into poor victim... even if it kills the film. Though I am no fan of the auteur theory and believe the *producer* should be in charge (though, maybe not if that producer is Selznick), I think actors are the last people who should be in charge. Most of them are vain and more interested in how many lines they have in the script than what the script is about. And this is a case where that prestigious star who could have turned a Hitchcock film into something critics may have respected ended up killing the film. It’s a great (over) acting showcase for Charles Laughton, but not a great movie. Watchable (it’s not drek like UNDER CAPRICORN) but coming between LADY VANISHES and REBECCA it’s kind of a disappointment. Hitchcock did not leave England on a bang, but on a whimper.
Hitch Appearance: I’ve seen the film several times now, and can not tell you where he is... but he claims he is in there!
Bird Appearance: Seagulls flying over the crashed ship as it is being looted at the beginning, also the woman with the duck on the stage coach.
Hitchcock Stock Company: Basil Radford from LADY VANISHES is one of Laughton’s cronies. Leslie Banks (Joss) was the husband in the original MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH (freakin’ great actor... he was also Zaroff in THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME). One of the other cronies, George Curzon, is also in MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH and YOUNG AND INNOCENT.
Screenwriting Lessons: Even though this is not a great film, it *does* provide some great lessons. Part of the film’s problem is that it gets so much right that when it goes wrong it ruins everything - like a cigarette put out in a fried egg in a big British breakfast. The film has a great “experiment” in using “bumpers” between scenes, is a model of how to start a screenplay (first ten pages), shows us how to individualize supporting characters, and is a good example of the basic three act structure... and has some nice little suspense scenes.
Opening Scenes: Edgar Allan Poe said, "If the writer's initial sentence isn't effective, then he has failed in his first step," and the same is true with the opening scene of your screenplay. You want your script to hit the ground running and pull the reader, and later the viewer, into the story. JAMAICA INN has a great opening scene. And a great first image...

After the opening credit roll and a brief legend telling us about the treacherous coast of Cornwall, a wave crashes and *washes away the words*. Though this is direction rather than screenwriting, something like this might actually be in the screenplay. After you write the legend (similar to the one that begins STAR WARS) you could write that a wave crashes against the letters and washes them away. That would help illustrate that this is a savage place of action rather than words.
You want your opening pages to set the tone and mood and establish the world of your story in a way that is exciting and involving for the reader (and later viewer). My first experience at the American Film Market was at a screening where all of the buyers in the audience left after the first ten minutes... and every other film I saw at AFM had buyers splitting at about the ten minute mark. By that point they knew if they were going to buy the film (and it would be seen) or not buy it (and it would never hit a screen or video player or TV station). That was decided by the first ten minutes of the film. So if your script takes a while to get started, find a way to get the ball rolling earlier. Often the problem is just starting the story too soon - before anything happens. Start when the story starts.

JAMAICA INN goes from that crashing surf to the Inn itself - a strange German expressionistic building - at night, as a man scurries down the stairs, mounts a horse and rides to the beacon on the coast. The ride is done with a series of quick wipes, like in STAR WARS. Hey, transitions are not our job as screenwriters, but this gives you an idea of how *little* time was spent on the page for his ride. It’s not about riding to the beacon, it’s about what happens next...
Off the coast is a ship, using the beacon to navigate around the treacherous rocks on the coast. There is a great combination of models and real shots here - we see a model ship pitching in the rough waters, and cut to a real ship set where the captain and crew struggle to keep the ship on course. This looks real - it’s difficult at first to tell that models were used. Hitchcock has great model work in his films, and we’ll talk more about that in the YOUNG AND INNOCENT entry. But what the model and real life set combination does here is create some amazing spectacle in the first minute or two of the film. This is not some little story set in a house, this is a huge event!
The rider looks away from the ship, and takes a black cloth and completely covers the beacon! Now there is no way for the ship to navigate around the rocky coast! This is a great moment because it’s not at all what you would expect, and that *intrigues* us. On the page that’s a WTF? moment where you *must* read on to find out why someone would do such a thing. The most important thing to do in your first ten pages is *involve* the reader - all of the car chases and actions scenes and spectacle stuff in the world is meaningless if the reader isn’t pulled into the story. You want them to need to know what happens next.

Back on the ship, they have lost sight of the beacon and believe they are heading *away* from the rocky coast... Then the ship hits the rocks along the coast again and again - smashing and crashing! The mast breaks and comes down! The ship rolls to its side and crashes into the rocky shore. This is *huge* spectacle, and is impressive even today. Again, that combo of model and real ship with real actors allows Hitchcock to show the whole ship slam into the rocks and turn on its side... then cut to *real people* on a *real ship’s deck* (a set) react. Water washes over the damaged ship, and the crew jumps into the water and swims to shore. We are still wondering why that rider would black out the beacon, when...
The crew members make it to shore... and are attacked by armed men. WTF? Now we *really* want to know what is going on. The leader yells for the armed men to make sure there are no survivors. Soon the sea is filled with the floating bodies of dead sailors. Okay - why run a ship into the rocks just to kill the crew? Then we get the answer when the leader, Joss, yells at his gang to get the cargo before the ship is destroyed, and the armed men jump onto the ship and start passing down the cargo, which ends up on a horse drawn wagon. As they are ready to leave, a ship crew member staggers out of the water and Joss has one of his men murder him.
Usually a script will begin with either the protagonist or the antagonist, or the physical conflict. In this case we begin with the antagonist, Joss and his gang of thieves - pirates without a ship.
From here we cut to our protagonist, young Mary, on a stage coach rambling through the darkness of the countryside. She tells the people across from her - a man and a woman with a duck - that she is headed to Jamaica Inn and asks if they know of it. Both are evasive... This shows us that she is a stranger in these parts and naive. Each line of dialogue or action in this scene serves a purpose - it is all establishing her character, but also giving us information about Jamaica Inn. A two-fer! When the coach gets close to Jamaica Inn it *increases speed* and passes the point where Mary should have been dropped off! She yells at the driver that she wanted to get off there - and this shows that she is not a weak woman. She stands up for herself. Even if she is not worldly, she is also not a wimp. The coach stops in front of the Governor’s Mansion and they throw her trunk down and then roar away, leaving her in the darkness.
Creepy Dudes: Part of the Gothic Melodrama genre is the innocent girl in a world of creepy dudes. Mary is an orphan - her father is dead - and she is given two father figures in the story: Sir Humphrey and her Uncle Joss.

When Sir Humphrey is called away from dinner with his cronies by his butler because there is a young woman at the door, he waddles in to meet Mary... and goes into perv mode. He does everything he can to charm and flatter her, and asks for her to remove her coat so that he can get a good look at her. Um, total perv moment. When Mary says she is on her way to Jamaica Inn, he offers to put her up in his mansion. More prevy stuff. She doesn’t seem to notice - not worldly in the ways of men at all. Sir Humphrey insists on going with her to Jamaica Inn. When they arrive, he carefully lowers her trunk and then rides off... leaving her in the darkness in front of the spooky looking building.
She knocks on the door and it’s yanked open by Joss. Now, at this time we only know Joss as the leader of the gang that killed all of the sailors. Since he’s not dressed well, she believes him to be a servant or doorman and orders him to get her Aunt or her Uncle - the owner of the Inn. She has no idea how dangerous this man is. No idea that he is a cold blooded killer. This is a *good* example of audience superiority suspense - we fear for Mary because we know this guy is a killer and she just thinks that he’s a doorman or something, and is ordering him around. Then we get a good twist - he’s not a doorman, he is her Uncle Joss. Her Uncle is the leader of the gang of killers!

Now Uncle Joss shows what a great guy he is by trying to give her a big old incestuous mouth kiss... but Aunt Patience comes downstairs and Joss quickly moves away from Mary and puts his arm around his wife, trying to look innocent and failing miserably. Joss then orders his wife to grab the girl’s trunk or he’ll punch her... see what a nice guy he is! Once Patience is guiding Mary up to her room, Joss goes into the tavern where the gang waits...
Talk about creepy guys! The gang has seen Mary and are discussing who gets to rape her first. They are fighting about their place in the gangbang line when Joss enters the room and tells them to knock it off. The second in command, Harry, always trying to turn the others against Joss; asks why he wants her all to himself when there’s enough for everyone. After a bit more discussion Joss explains that she’s his niece... and one of the gang asks why he didn’t say that in the first place. It’s obvious that Mary is not safe here... there isn’t a single nice guy for miles!

The other pervs in the room are Alfred Hitchcock and *us*. Nudity and the hint of nudity have been part of cinema since the very beginning - and JAMAICA INN has the beautiful 18 year old Maureen O’Hara and isn’t above a bit of titillation. In a scene were Mary must escape the villainous gang she is forced to strip down to her slip and dive into the ocean... and later we get a wet slip clinging to her curves when she comes out of the water. This scene is completely innocent by today’s standards, but I’m sure back in 1939 it was completely pervy.

Bumpers: One of the interesting things done in the film (and probably the screenplay) is the use of a “bumper” between scenes instead of a fade out and fade back in. When we come to the end of a “chapter” instead of a traditional fade out we get a shot of the wooden sign for the Inn blowing in the wind. This is not only a unique way to marry scenes that may not connect to each other, it keeps the story moving forward. Every FADE OUT basically kills the pacing - putting on the brakes and bringing the film to a complete stop for a moment. By using the sign as a “bumper” we do not stop the story at all, we just move to the sign for a moment between chapters and then get back to the story. Because it is *always* the Jamaica Inn sign, we understand that it is an “end chapter” device and not just some random shot of the sign. If you do something like this, find a “bumper” that you can use throughout the screenplay.
Three Act Structure: Though the first screenwriting book was written by Oscar winner Frances Marion in the silent era, many folks think the three act structure is some fiendish device invented by Syd Field to sell books and shackle creativity. But the Three Act Structure predates movies by many years, being over 2,400 years old and the observation of that Aristotle dude. It’s kind of a story basic - a tool used to make sure you actually have a story. You can use the tool consciously or subconsciously - as long as in the end your story works. Let’s hear what 6 time Oscar winning screenwriter Billy Wilder (who made his last film years before Syd Field’s book came out) has to say about the three act structure...
Act 1: Introduce the conflict - get the cat up a tree.
Act 2: Escalate the conflict - throw rocks at the cat.
Act 3: Resolve the conflict - get the cat down from the tree.
It’s just that simple. No page numbers, no crazy rules. You have a person with a problem., the problem gets worse, the person solves the problem (or in a tragedy - the problem solves the person... Hamlet dies). Basic stuff.
JAMAICA INN was made when Syd Field was still a teenager, so he obviously had nothing to do with its three act structure, it’s most likely that Aristotle dude again. Whether the writers consciously used the three act structure or just wrote the screenplays and it ends up there subconsciously doesn’t really matter. It’s there, plain as day.
Act One has Mary coming to Jamaica Inn, surrounded by danger. No shortage of creepy guys who want to rape and murder her (in whatever order works) and because the Inn is in a remote area there is no place to run. Though she is not *locked in to the conflict* yet, she is surrounded by it. The conflict has been there from the very first scene.
When the gang in the tavern begins rumbling about not getting much from their haul, Trehearne (Robert Newton - who will also play a pirate later in his career) suggests that maybe the fence isn’t giving them good value. Maybe someone isn’t good at math. This forces Joss to defend his secret boss, and we see just how volatile this group is - several members think *they* should be running it, not Joss... especially second in command Harry (Emlyn Williams) who whistles his contempt for Joss.

But Joss shows why he is the leader in a scene that shows a clever way to introduce each of the gang members. He asks each how long they have been looting with him, and each has a unique way of answering. “Salvation”, the religious member of the gang, “We’ve been lost souls together for two years and seven months.” Dandy, the tattooed member, remembers the woman he was sleeping with, finds the heart tattoo with her name on his chest (filled with heart tattoos with women’s names) and answers “Four years.” Each member has a character related way of answering the question, so we not only get all of the information, but we learn who each character is. Finally it comes to Trehearne, and Joss answers for him: “Mr. Trehearne has been with us the *enormous* time of two months. Eight weeks. Fifty-six days. How’s that for arithmetic?”
The gang focuses on the new guy Trehearne, grabs him, searches his pockets, and finds some coins - proving that he is the thief among thieves. They decide to hang him right there in the tavern!

Mary’s room is above the tavern, and she has heard all of this - now she knows just how much danger she is in. Through a gap in the boards she watches as they grab a rope, make a noose, slip it around Trehearne’s neck... and hang him! One of the basic elements in a thriller is characters who spy on others, whether it’s Jimmy Stewart looking through binoculars in REAR WINDOW or Kyle MacLachlan looking through the slatted closet door in BLUE VELVET. Mary can’t just watch a man die, so she grabs the knife from her dinner plate (when they introduced the knife, you just thought it was for the meal) and pries off a board and cuts the rope - saving Trehearne’s life. But also ending Act One, because now the gang is after *her* as well as Trehearne! This is at the 30 minute point in the film.

Act Two has Mary escaping as the gang scrambles to find her. Outside the Inn (in the darkness) she tries to find a place to hide... can’t... and can hear the gang getting closer. When an arm descends from the roof, grabs her, and hauls her up... just as the gang storms out of the Inn. Trehearne has saved her life (just as she saved his) and they are on the run together. She has gone from being someone on the fringe of danger to the target for danger - and that’s why we are in Act Two. Now Mary is *locked into the conflict*. There are a handful of nice little suspense scenes were Mary and Trehearne must be quiet on the roof while the gang is right below them, one where they hide behind a boulder with the gang on the other side, and then Mary wakes up in a sea cave with Trehearne’s arm around her. Creepy dude alert! She tries to escape, finds a boat tethered outside the cave and unties it... when Trehearne pops up behind her. He drags her back into the cave, tells her she isn’t safe out there... but she thinks she isn’t safe in here with him and goes back out to the boat... which has now floated away. And on the cliffs above, one of the gang members sees the boat and yells for the others!

This is where we get the strip-to-your-slip scene so they can swim away (hiding behind a rock while gang members row past in a boat). Act Two is filled with conflict-conflict-conflict. They go to the Sir Humphrey for help (running from one father figure into the arms of another... and Humphrey is really creepy when she shows up in just a wet slip). And Trehearne and Sir Humphrey go back to Jamaica Inn to capture the gang... but end up captured themselves and tied to chairs where they await their deaths! Mary ends up captured by Joss, who takes her away to loot another ship. This brings us to Act Three, and it’s 100 minutes into the film.
Act Three has Mary grow a pair. She has been running for most of Act Two and now she is going to turn and fight. We get a replay of the opening scene - a gang member blacks out the beacon while the rest wait on the shore to kill the sailors and loot the ship. But this time, Mary is in the wagon. While the gang gets their weapons ready, Mary escapes and races up the cliff, fights the gang member at the beacon and *throws him off a cliff!* Then pulls off the cover so that the ship can see the beacon and steer away.

At the same time, Trehearne escapes and goes to the authorities about the gang. The gang is arrested, but the mastermind has escaped... and Trehearne and Mary team up to go after him... (even though Mary *does* managed to get kidnaped one more time - she is the most kidnaped person in the world!) This leads them to a ship in the harbor that the mastermind plans to escape on. From a production standpoint this is great, because I’m sure it is the exact same ship set they used in the opening scene. They corner the mastermind and we get a conclusion that resolves the problem. Act Three is all about resolving the conflict - and Mary becomes a kick ass heroine instead of the innocent woman surrounded by creepy guys. She and Trehearne are a couple... the end.
See how that works? Introduce the conflict. Escalate the conflict. Resolve the conflict. No page numbers, no formula, just kind of the basic way a story works.
Early Reveals: One of the issues with the film that can probably be traced back to Laughton is the early reveal that he is the villain. Instead of a twist later in the story, the reveal happens at the 23:30 minute mark. It’s a great scene where Uncle Joss goes upstairs to talk to his fence/boss and we do not see the mastermind’s face for a moment... just a roll of fine silk that is being pulled out by someone off screen... who asks for a pair of scissors so that he can cut off his share. That is obviously Laughton’s voice, and he is then revealed. Though this allows Laughton more screen time in Act Two (because we know he is the villain) it also wastes a twist at the end of Act Two when Laughton is revealed to Mary and Trehearne and everyone else as the villain. Though this may create some suspense from “audience superiority” when Mary and Trehearne go to Laughton for help, that is only a couple of scenes before his reveal, which means there isn’t much room for any suspense generated by the “audience superiority” to work. Instead, it kind of makes Mary and Trehearne look stupid.

Hitchcock does the same thing in VERTIGO when he reveals that Judy is actually Madeline - and that is controversial. People (including me) think by revealing the information instead of holding it for a twist, instead of creating impact on the audience it just makes us feel quesy and weird that Jimmy Stewart is making Judy over into Madeline. It’s off-putting. And I think that’s what happens in JAMAICA INN as well - instead of a great twist (which was probably in the novel) we get an entire Act Two where Charles Laughton gets to over-act and we think our leads are morons. When you reveal the information is an artistic choice, and there are times when an early reveal might intensify the suspense... but here it doesn’t serve much purpose at all. You have to weigh the decision and figure out whether your story is better served by and early reveal (and suspense) or a later reveal (and a twist).
Compare this to the later reveal that Trehearne is a policeman - something that really works. For most of Act Two Mary believes that Trehearne is a *criminal* and that she is in danger every moment that she is with him. Though he rescues her (and she rescued him), and protects her from the other cut-throats, he is still *one of them* and she doesn’t believe that she is safe. She spends much of Act Two trying to escape him, and it is only close to the *end* of Act Two when they go to Sir Humphrey’s mansion for help that he reveals himself to be an undercover police officer. At that point she believes that she is safe - and that would be a fine time to have revealed that Sir Humphrey is the villain. But throughout most of Act Two Mary is threatened both by Uncle Joss’s gang *and* by Trehearne who has kidnaped her. She is caught between a rock and a hard place. If Trehearne had been revealed as an undercover cop at the beginning of Act Two, it would have removed the conflict from them being together. She would have been between a rock and a comfy chair. Um, I pick the comfy chair.
Sound Track: Nice big adventurous score by Eric Fenby that fits the scope of the film.
JAMAICA INN isn’t a bad film, but Charles Laughton’s character and performance overshadow everything else making it a movie about a Governor going crazy instead of a movie about an innocent young woman in a world full of criminal cut throats. Laughton just knocks the whole thing out of balance, and you can’t stop looking at those crazy obviously fake eyebrows and wonder what the hell he was thinking. Laughton would later direct his own thriller, one of the best films ever made. But that’s for some other blog called One Friday With Laughton.
- Bill
The other Fridays With Hitchcock.
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JAMAICA INN was Hitchcock’s last film in England and his first of three films based on a Daphne DuMaurier story. His next film would also be from a DuMaurier novel - REBECCA - which would win the Oscar for Best Picture. In doing some research for this entry, I read an article that said REBECCA almost didn’t happen due to JAMAICA INN. It seems DuMaurier - kind of the J.K. Rowlings of her time - had seen JAMAICA INN and *hated* it, and was making waves about Hitchcock directing REBECCA.
And she had good reason to hate this film - it took me several viewings to make it all of the way through. It’s a Gothic Melodrama - which probably ends up being the second most common type of Hitchcock movie after Man On The Run Thrillers. That seems odd when you think about it, but so many of Hitchcock’s films end up in that genre: from MARNIE (sort of) UNDER CAPRICORN to SUSPICION to REBECCA. This films are usually about innocent women who come under the spell of men with dark secrets and suspense and drama ensues. On the paperback aisle these books have covers that show a woman in a nightgown running away from a castle or mansion that has the silhouette of a stern looking man in the window. Though these stories can be filled with suspense and intrigue like REBECCA, they can also be over-the-top melodrama like UNDER CAPRICORN. JAMAICA INN fits somewhere between the two, and the film’s major flaw seems not so much Hitchcock’s direction or even the subject matter... but the star.
Nutshell: In 1800 England, young Mary (a hot 18 year old Maureen O’Hara in her very first role) is an orphan sent to live with her Aunt Patience and Uncle Joss in a costal village in Cornwall, where Uncle owns a scummy tavern called Jamaica Inn. This place is so rough the stage coach won’t even stop *near* there and dumps Mary and her baggage in front of the Governor’s Mansion. Governor Sir Humphrey (Charles Laughton) offers to escort Mary to Jamaica Inn - a place so dangerous Sir Humphrey’s groom tries to talk him out of it. They ride to the Inn, and Sir Humphrey gets the hell out of there. Mary meets her Uncle (Leslie Banks) and Aunt (Marie Ney) and is shown to her room. Downstairs in the bar, a criminal gang - lead by her Uncle - are arguing over the loot from a bit of piracy. Seems these fellows have an inside man who tells them when ships are passing the rugged coast, and they cover the lighthouse light so that the ships crash into the shore, then steal the cargo and Uncle Joss takes it to his fence. Mary discovers all of this, saves a gang member Trehearne (Robert Newton) from death, Trehearne kidnaps her, she goes to Sir Humphrey for help, and gets kidnaped a couple more times before the film is over. Along the way, she meets a nice guy and some romance blossoms... the end.
We’ll look at the plot details in a few minutes.
Experiment: This is a case of “Be careful what you wish for”. Hitchcock had worked his way up from drawing title cards to directing films, and had managed to direct a string of hits that sold tickets not only in England, but in the world. His 39 STEPS and LADY VANISHES were massive international successes... but both were genre films and looked down upon by some critics. Hitch wasn’t working with top tier stars, he was often working with B level actors in the U.K. Hey, everyone knows who Nova Pilbeam is, right? She’s the *star* of YOUNG AND INNOCENT, the film he made just between LADY VANISHES and SABOTAGE. As soon as someone like Robert Donat became a star, he quit doing genre films (and moved to the America to do dramas like GOODBYE, MR. CHIPS). Hitchcock’s films were successes despite not having big name stars in the leads.
But just as LADY VANISHES resulted in a contract from GONE WITH THE WIND producer David O. Selznick and a ticket to America, it also attracted the attention of Oscar winning movie star Charles Laughton. Finally - a movie star who wanted to work with Hitchcock! Laughton was born in England, had become a star there, and then moved to America where the real money was. In America he was the star of prestige films like MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY and LES MISERABLES. Having him in a Hitchcock film guaranteed both box office and critical success - and a chance for Hitchcock to be seen as more than just a genre filmmaker.
But everything has a price, and Laughton was the 300 lb gorilla - instead of JAMAICA INN being a Hitchcock movie, it ended up a Charles Laughton movie... and instead of the story being about an innocent girl sent to live in a den of scum and villainy... it became the story of Sir Humphrey the Governor of the district and his descent into madness (and over acting). I’m sure the reason why DuMaurier hated the film was that it was no longer about the lead character, but about a side character from her book who had now taken center stage. But let’s face it - the lead character of Mary was played by an actress who had never done a film before, and Sir Humphrey was played by an Oscar winner. Who do you think should get more screen time?
In the Hitchcock/Truffaut Book, Hitch has little good to say about Laughton, telling a story about how Laughton refused to be shot from the waist down until he figured out how his character would walk. Other weird elements are Laughton’s *eye brows* which have been shaved and replaced by crazy melodramatic eyebrows about halfway up his forehead. But the biggest problem are all of the endless scenes that feature Laughton but have little to do with the story - there is an additional writer credited and I wonder if Laughton brought in his own pet scribe to beef up his role. The character is supposed to be the villain (oops, spoiler!) but there are a bunch of scenes that show him descending into madness - which allow Laughton to chew through a whole studio full of scenery - so that by the end, instead of being the bad guy... he has a big end scene where we are supposed to feel sorry for him because he’s crazy. Even Mary, who he has tried to kill several times in the story, yells that the police should leave him alone because he doesn’t know what he is doing. They try to make the villain into the victim - and that manages to undermine the whole damned film! But it’s easy to image the Oscar winner Laughton insisting on the rewrite that turns him from bad guy into poor victim... even if it kills the film. Though I am no fan of the auteur theory and believe the *producer* should be in charge (though, maybe not if that producer is Selznick), I think actors are the last people who should be in charge. Most of them are vain and more interested in how many lines they have in the script than what the script is about. And this is a case where that prestigious star who could have turned a Hitchcock film into something critics may have respected ended up killing the film. It’s a great (over) acting showcase for Charles Laughton, but not a great movie. Watchable (it’s not drek like UNDER CAPRICORN) but coming between LADY VANISHES and REBECCA it’s kind of a disappointment. Hitchcock did not leave England on a bang, but on a whimper.
Hitch Appearance: I’ve seen the film several times now, and can not tell you where he is... but he claims he is in there!
Bird Appearance: Seagulls flying over the crashed ship as it is being looted at the beginning, also the woman with the duck on the stage coach.
Hitchcock Stock Company: Basil Radford from LADY VANISHES is one of Laughton’s cronies. Leslie Banks (Joss) was the husband in the original MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH (freakin’ great actor... he was also Zaroff in THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME). One of the other cronies, George Curzon, is also in MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH and YOUNG AND INNOCENT.
Screenwriting Lessons: Even though this is not a great film, it *does* provide some great lessons. Part of the film’s problem is that it gets so much right that when it goes wrong it ruins everything - like a cigarette put out in a fried egg in a big British breakfast. The film has a great “experiment” in using “bumpers” between scenes, is a model of how to start a screenplay (first ten pages), shows us how to individualize supporting characters, and is a good example of the basic three act structure... and has some nice little suspense scenes.
Opening Scenes: Edgar Allan Poe said, "If the writer's initial sentence isn't effective, then he has failed in his first step," and the same is true with the opening scene of your screenplay. You want your script to hit the ground running and pull the reader, and later the viewer, into the story. JAMAICA INN has a great opening scene. And a great first image...
After the opening credit roll and a brief legend telling us about the treacherous coast of Cornwall, a wave crashes and *washes away the words*. Though this is direction rather than screenwriting, something like this might actually be in the screenplay. After you write the legend (similar to the one that begins STAR WARS) you could write that a wave crashes against the letters and washes them away. That would help illustrate that this is a savage place of action rather than words.
You want your opening pages to set the tone and mood and establish the world of your story in a way that is exciting and involving for the reader (and later viewer). My first experience at the American Film Market was at a screening where all of the buyers in the audience left after the first ten minutes... and every other film I saw at AFM had buyers splitting at about the ten minute mark. By that point they knew if they were going to buy the film (and it would be seen) or not buy it (and it would never hit a screen or video player or TV station). That was decided by the first ten minutes of the film. So if your script takes a while to get started, find a way to get the ball rolling earlier. Often the problem is just starting the story too soon - before anything happens. Start when the story starts.
JAMAICA INN goes from that crashing surf to the Inn itself - a strange German expressionistic building - at night, as a man scurries down the stairs, mounts a horse and rides to the beacon on the coast. The ride is done with a series of quick wipes, like in STAR WARS. Hey, transitions are not our job as screenwriters, but this gives you an idea of how *little* time was spent on the page for his ride. It’s not about riding to the beacon, it’s about what happens next...
Off the coast is a ship, using the beacon to navigate around the treacherous rocks on the coast. There is a great combination of models and real shots here - we see a model ship pitching in the rough waters, and cut to a real ship set where the captain and crew struggle to keep the ship on course. This looks real - it’s difficult at first to tell that models were used. Hitchcock has great model work in his films, and we’ll talk more about that in the YOUNG AND INNOCENT entry. But what the model and real life set combination does here is create some amazing spectacle in the first minute or two of the film. This is not some little story set in a house, this is a huge event!
The rider looks away from the ship, and takes a black cloth and completely covers the beacon! Now there is no way for the ship to navigate around the rocky coast! This is a great moment because it’s not at all what you would expect, and that *intrigues* us. On the page that’s a WTF? moment where you *must* read on to find out why someone would do such a thing. The most important thing to do in your first ten pages is *involve* the reader - all of the car chases and actions scenes and spectacle stuff in the world is meaningless if the reader isn’t pulled into the story. You want them to need to know what happens next.
Back on the ship, they have lost sight of the beacon and believe they are heading *away* from the rocky coast... Then the ship hits the rocks along the coast again and again - smashing and crashing! The mast breaks and comes down! The ship rolls to its side and crashes into the rocky shore. This is *huge* spectacle, and is impressive even today. Again, that combo of model and real ship with real actors allows Hitchcock to show the whole ship slam into the rocks and turn on its side... then cut to *real people* on a *real ship’s deck* (a set) react. Water washes over the damaged ship, and the crew jumps into the water and swims to shore. We are still wondering why that rider would black out the beacon, when...
The crew members make it to shore... and are attacked by armed men. WTF? Now we *really* want to know what is going on. The leader yells for the armed men to make sure there are no survivors. Soon the sea is filled with the floating bodies of dead sailors. Okay - why run a ship into the rocks just to kill the crew? Then we get the answer when the leader, Joss, yells at his gang to get the cargo before the ship is destroyed, and the armed men jump onto the ship and start passing down the cargo, which ends up on a horse drawn wagon. As they are ready to leave, a ship crew member staggers out of the water and Joss has one of his men murder him.
Usually a script will begin with either the protagonist or the antagonist, or the physical conflict. In this case we begin with the antagonist, Joss and his gang of thieves - pirates without a ship.
From here we cut to our protagonist, young Mary, on a stage coach rambling through the darkness of the countryside. She tells the people across from her - a man and a woman with a duck - that she is headed to Jamaica Inn and asks if they know of it. Both are evasive... This shows us that she is a stranger in these parts and naive. Each line of dialogue or action in this scene serves a purpose - it is all establishing her character, but also giving us information about Jamaica Inn. A two-fer! When the coach gets close to Jamaica Inn it *increases speed* and passes the point where Mary should have been dropped off! She yells at the driver that she wanted to get off there - and this shows that she is not a weak woman. She stands up for herself. Even if she is not worldly, she is also not a wimp. The coach stops in front of the Governor’s Mansion and they throw her trunk down and then roar away, leaving her in the darkness.
Creepy Dudes: Part of the Gothic Melodrama genre is the innocent girl in a world of creepy dudes. Mary is an orphan - her father is dead - and she is given two father figures in the story: Sir Humphrey and her Uncle Joss.
When Sir Humphrey is called away from dinner with his cronies by his butler because there is a young woman at the door, he waddles in to meet Mary... and goes into perv mode. He does everything he can to charm and flatter her, and asks for her to remove her coat so that he can get a good look at her. Um, total perv moment. When Mary says she is on her way to Jamaica Inn, he offers to put her up in his mansion. More prevy stuff. She doesn’t seem to notice - not worldly in the ways of men at all. Sir Humphrey insists on going with her to Jamaica Inn. When they arrive, he carefully lowers her trunk and then rides off... leaving her in the darkness in front of the spooky looking building.
She knocks on the door and it’s yanked open by Joss. Now, at this time we only know Joss as the leader of the gang that killed all of the sailors. Since he’s not dressed well, she believes him to be a servant or doorman and orders him to get her Aunt or her Uncle - the owner of the Inn. She has no idea how dangerous this man is. No idea that he is a cold blooded killer. This is a *good* example of audience superiority suspense - we fear for Mary because we know this guy is a killer and she just thinks that he’s a doorman or something, and is ordering him around. Then we get a good twist - he’s not a doorman, he is her Uncle Joss. Her Uncle is the leader of the gang of killers!
Now Uncle Joss shows what a great guy he is by trying to give her a big old incestuous mouth kiss... but Aunt Patience comes downstairs and Joss quickly moves away from Mary and puts his arm around his wife, trying to look innocent and failing miserably. Joss then orders his wife to grab the girl’s trunk or he’ll punch her... see what a nice guy he is! Once Patience is guiding Mary up to her room, Joss goes into the tavern where the gang waits...
Talk about creepy guys! The gang has seen Mary and are discussing who gets to rape her first. They are fighting about their place in the gangbang line when Joss enters the room and tells them to knock it off. The second in command, Harry, always trying to turn the others against Joss; asks why he wants her all to himself when there’s enough for everyone. After a bit more discussion Joss explains that she’s his niece... and one of the gang asks why he didn’t say that in the first place. It’s obvious that Mary is not safe here... there isn’t a single nice guy for miles!
The other pervs in the room are Alfred Hitchcock and *us*. Nudity and the hint of nudity have been part of cinema since the very beginning - and JAMAICA INN has the beautiful 18 year old Maureen O’Hara and isn’t above a bit of titillation. In a scene were Mary must escape the villainous gang she is forced to strip down to her slip and dive into the ocean... and later we get a wet slip clinging to her curves when she comes out of the water. This scene is completely innocent by today’s standards, but I’m sure back in 1939 it was completely pervy.
Bumpers: One of the interesting things done in the film (and probably the screenplay) is the use of a “bumper” between scenes instead of a fade out and fade back in. When we come to the end of a “chapter” instead of a traditional fade out we get a shot of the wooden sign for the Inn blowing in the wind. This is not only a unique way to marry scenes that may not connect to each other, it keeps the story moving forward. Every FADE OUT basically kills the pacing - putting on the brakes and bringing the film to a complete stop for a moment. By using the sign as a “bumper” we do not stop the story at all, we just move to the sign for a moment between chapters and then get back to the story. Because it is *always* the Jamaica Inn sign, we understand that it is an “end chapter” device and not just some random shot of the sign. If you do something like this, find a “bumper” that you can use throughout the screenplay.
Three Act Structure: Though the first screenwriting book was written by Oscar winner Frances Marion in the silent era, many folks think the three act structure is some fiendish device invented by Syd Field to sell books and shackle creativity. But the Three Act Structure predates movies by many years, being over 2,400 years old and the observation of that Aristotle dude. It’s kind of a story basic - a tool used to make sure you actually have a story. You can use the tool consciously or subconsciously - as long as in the end your story works. Let’s hear what 6 time Oscar winning screenwriter Billy Wilder (who made his last film years before Syd Field’s book came out) has to say about the three act structure...
Act 1: Introduce the conflict - get the cat up a tree.
Act 2: Escalate the conflict - throw rocks at the cat.
Act 3: Resolve the conflict - get the cat down from the tree.
It’s just that simple. No page numbers, no crazy rules. You have a person with a problem., the problem gets worse, the person solves the problem (or in a tragedy - the problem solves the person... Hamlet dies). Basic stuff.
JAMAICA INN was made when Syd Field was still a teenager, so he obviously had nothing to do with its three act structure, it’s most likely that Aristotle dude again. Whether the writers consciously used the three act structure or just wrote the screenplays and it ends up there subconsciously doesn’t really matter. It’s there, plain as day.
Act One has Mary coming to Jamaica Inn, surrounded by danger. No shortage of creepy guys who want to rape and murder her (in whatever order works) and because the Inn is in a remote area there is no place to run. Though she is not *locked in to the conflict* yet, she is surrounded by it. The conflict has been there from the very first scene.
When the gang in the tavern begins rumbling about not getting much from their haul, Trehearne (Robert Newton - who will also play a pirate later in his career) suggests that maybe the fence isn’t giving them good value. Maybe someone isn’t good at math. This forces Joss to defend his secret boss, and we see just how volatile this group is - several members think *they* should be running it, not Joss... especially second in command Harry (Emlyn Williams) who whistles his contempt for Joss.
But Joss shows why he is the leader in a scene that shows a clever way to introduce each of the gang members. He asks each how long they have been looting with him, and each has a unique way of answering. “Salvation”, the religious member of the gang, “We’ve been lost souls together for two years and seven months.” Dandy, the tattooed member, remembers the woman he was sleeping with, finds the heart tattoo with her name on his chest (filled with heart tattoos with women’s names) and answers “Four years.” Each member has a character related way of answering the question, so we not only get all of the information, but we learn who each character is. Finally it comes to Trehearne, and Joss answers for him: “Mr. Trehearne has been with us the *enormous* time of two months. Eight weeks. Fifty-six days. How’s that for arithmetic?”
The gang focuses on the new guy Trehearne, grabs him, searches his pockets, and finds some coins - proving that he is the thief among thieves. They decide to hang him right there in the tavern!
Mary’s room is above the tavern, and she has heard all of this - now she knows just how much danger she is in. Through a gap in the boards she watches as they grab a rope, make a noose, slip it around Trehearne’s neck... and hang him! One of the basic elements in a thriller is characters who spy on others, whether it’s Jimmy Stewart looking through binoculars in REAR WINDOW or Kyle MacLachlan looking through the slatted closet door in BLUE VELVET. Mary can’t just watch a man die, so she grabs the knife from her dinner plate (when they introduced the knife, you just thought it was for the meal) and pries off a board and cuts the rope - saving Trehearne’s life. But also ending Act One, because now the gang is after *her* as well as Trehearne! This is at the 30 minute point in the film.
Act Two has Mary escaping as the gang scrambles to find her. Outside the Inn (in the darkness) she tries to find a place to hide... can’t... and can hear the gang getting closer. When an arm descends from the roof, grabs her, and hauls her up... just as the gang storms out of the Inn. Trehearne has saved her life (just as she saved his) and they are on the run together. She has gone from being someone on the fringe of danger to the target for danger - and that’s why we are in Act Two. Now Mary is *locked into the conflict*. There are a handful of nice little suspense scenes were Mary and Trehearne must be quiet on the roof while the gang is right below them, one where they hide behind a boulder with the gang on the other side, and then Mary wakes up in a sea cave with Trehearne’s arm around her. Creepy dude alert! She tries to escape, finds a boat tethered outside the cave and unties it... when Trehearne pops up behind her. He drags her back into the cave, tells her she isn’t safe out there... but she thinks she isn’t safe in here with him and goes back out to the boat... which has now floated away. And on the cliffs above, one of the gang members sees the boat and yells for the others!
This is where we get the strip-to-your-slip scene so they can swim away (hiding behind a rock while gang members row past in a boat). Act Two is filled with conflict-conflict-conflict. They go to the Sir Humphrey for help (running from one father figure into the arms of another... and Humphrey is really creepy when she shows up in just a wet slip). And Trehearne and Sir Humphrey go back to Jamaica Inn to capture the gang... but end up captured themselves and tied to chairs where they await their deaths! Mary ends up captured by Joss, who takes her away to loot another ship. This brings us to Act Three, and it’s 100 minutes into the film.
Act Three has Mary grow a pair. She has been running for most of Act Two and now she is going to turn and fight. We get a replay of the opening scene - a gang member blacks out the beacon while the rest wait on the shore to kill the sailors and loot the ship. But this time, Mary is in the wagon. While the gang gets their weapons ready, Mary escapes and races up the cliff, fights the gang member at the beacon and *throws him off a cliff!* Then pulls off the cover so that the ship can see the beacon and steer away.
At the same time, Trehearne escapes and goes to the authorities about the gang. The gang is arrested, but the mastermind has escaped... and Trehearne and Mary team up to go after him... (even though Mary *does* managed to get kidnaped one more time - she is the most kidnaped person in the world!) This leads them to a ship in the harbor that the mastermind plans to escape on. From a production standpoint this is great, because I’m sure it is the exact same ship set they used in the opening scene. They corner the mastermind and we get a conclusion that resolves the problem. Act Three is all about resolving the conflict - and Mary becomes a kick ass heroine instead of the innocent woman surrounded by creepy guys. She and Trehearne are a couple... the end.
See how that works? Introduce the conflict. Escalate the conflict. Resolve the conflict. No page numbers, no formula, just kind of the basic way a story works.
Early Reveals: One of the issues with the film that can probably be traced back to Laughton is the early reveal that he is the villain. Instead of a twist later in the story, the reveal happens at the 23:30 minute mark. It’s a great scene where Uncle Joss goes upstairs to talk to his fence/boss and we do not see the mastermind’s face for a moment... just a roll of fine silk that is being pulled out by someone off screen... who asks for a pair of scissors so that he can cut off his share. That is obviously Laughton’s voice, and he is then revealed. Though this allows Laughton more screen time in Act Two (because we know he is the villain) it also wastes a twist at the end of Act Two when Laughton is revealed to Mary and Trehearne and everyone else as the villain. Though this may create some suspense from “audience superiority” when Mary and Trehearne go to Laughton for help, that is only a couple of scenes before his reveal, which means there isn’t much room for any suspense generated by the “audience superiority” to work. Instead, it kind of makes Mary and Trehearne look stupid.
Hitchcock does the same thing in VERTIGO when he reveals that Judy is actually Madeline - and that is controversial. People (including me) think by revealing the information instead of holding it for a twist, instead of creating impact on the audience it just makes us feel quesy and weird that Jimmy Stewart is making Judy over into Madeline. It’s off-putting. And I think that’s what happens in JAMAICA INN as well - instead of a great twist (which was probably in the novel) we get an entire Act Two where Charles Laughton gets to over-act and we think our leads are morons. When you reveal the information is an artistic choice, and there are times when an early reveal might intensify the suspense... but here it doesn’t serve much purpose at all. You have to weigh the decision and figure out whether your story is better served by and early reveal (and suspense) or a later reveal (and a twist).
Compare this to the later reveal that Trehearne is a policeman - something that really works. For most of Act Two Mary believes that Trehearne is a *criminal* and that she is in danger every moment that she is with him. Though he rescues her (and she rescued him), and protects her from the other cut-throats, he is still *one of them* and she doesn’t believe that she is safe. She spends much of Act Two trying to escape him, and it is only close to the *end* of Act Two when they go to Sir Humphrey’s mansion for help that he reveals himself to be an undercover police officer. At that point she believes that she is safe - and that would be a fine time to have revealed that Sir Humphrey is the villain. But throughout most of Act Two Mary is threatened both by Uncle Joss’s gang *and* by Trehearne who has kidnaped her. She is caught between a rock and a hard place. If Trehearne had been revealed as an undercover cop at the beginning of Act Two, it would have removed the conflict from them being together. She would have been between a rock and a comfy chair. Um, I pick the comfy chair.
Sound Track: Nice big adventurous score by Eric Fenby that fits the scope of the film.
JAMAICA INN isn’t a bad film, but Charles Laughton’s character and performance overshadow everything else making it a movie about a Governor going crazy instead of a movie about an innocent young woman in a world full of criminal cut throats. Laughton just knocks the whole thing out of balance, and you can’t stop looking at those crazy obviously fake eyebrows and wonder what the hell he was thinking. Laughton would later direct his own thriller, one of the best films ever made. But that’s for some other blog called One Friday With Laughton.
- Bill
The other Fridays With Hitchcock.
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