Presentation: Strangers on a train
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Transcript of Presentation: Strangers on a train
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STRANGERS ON A TRAINAlfred Hitchcock (1951) –
Film Noir
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Characteristics•Adaptation: Strangers on a
Train by Patricia Highsmith
•Muderer: appears the most.•Music: The Band Played On
by Dimitri Tiomkin•Cameo•McGuffin (increases suspense).
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Editing•Fade•Dissolve
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Mise-en-scene
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Acting style •Anthony Bruno: spontaneous, extravagant,
rich, obsessive, deeply disturbed, manipulative.
•Guy Haines: sensible, decent, accomplished, and respectable.-Bruno gives direct eye contact when talking, creating a sincere message. He is a wickedly strange villain, a sexually frustrated lunatic. -Guy is sensible, ambitious, decent, accomplished, and respectable. Guy’s transformation during the film.
Both main characters reinforces the duality of human nature
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Costume•Black and white clothes
(virtue and villain).•Bruno : tie pin, two tone
wingtips…
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Lighting•Night shots• Use of shadows in order to enhance
the psychology of the character. •Strong light/dark contrasts and
dramatic shadow patterning. Lighting definitely changes between scenes focused on Bruno, and scenes focused on Guy.
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Props•Glasses. Murder shown as
reflection in a pair of eyeglasses.•Lighter. The proof, becomes a
means of blackmail. Hitchcock sets up a dual system with the lighter as the centre and Guy and Bruno as polar opposites
•The railroad. The theme of the double crossing (the "criss-cross"-theme).
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Setting
•Washington D.C. (Federal Government)
•Park (which turns from fun to fear in just a few moments).
•City (labyrinth, maze) bars etc.
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Composition
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Adaptation•Patricia Highsmith’s Strangers
on a train (1950)
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• Characters• A different story• Important props • A different ending: Guy
commits the crime