See also film blog for poncy celebration of nuns without clothes.

25th May 2012

Photo reblogged from Old Hollywood with 1,216 notes

oldhollywood:


Alfred Hitchcock on the set of Frenzy (1972) (via)
Relatedly

oldhollywood:

Alfred Hitchcock on the set of Frenzy (1972) (via)

Relatedly

Tagged: frenzyalfred hitchcockdummyphotographyon setproduction stills1970sfilmmannequins

14th February 2011

Photo reblogged from Old Hollywood with 1,044 notes

oldhollywood:

“The body of a rotund man floating along the Thames looked familiar, the face and the portly figure recognisable from the movies.
But nothing nasty had happened to Alfred Hitchcock. The East End-born  son of a London greengrocer was merely exercising his macabre sense of  humour and marketing skills.
The director was announcing his return home to make Frenzy, a  typically gruesome thriller and the first film he’d made entirely in his  home country for more than 20 years.
Floating a lifelike dummy of himself on the river was the type of  gimmick, mischievous and macabre, that he loved. In a business where  those in front of the cameras expect to be the stars, Hitchcock proved bigger than his movies.”
(via)

oldhollywood:

“The body of a rotund man floating along the Thames looked familiar, the face and the portly figure recognisable from the movies.

But nothing nasty had happened to Alfred Hitchcock. The East End-born son of a London greengrocer was merely exercising his macabre sense of humour and marketing skills.

The director was announcing his return home to make Frenzy, a typically gruesome thriller and the first film he’d made entirely in his home country for more than 20 years.

Floating a lifelike dummy of himself on the river was the type of gimmick, mischievous and macabre, that he loved. In a business where those in front of the cameras expect to be the stars, Hitchcock proved bigger than his movies.”

(via)

Tagged: 1970salfred hitchcockdirectorsfilmfrenzypublicity stillsthamesdummy