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    The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog [Criterion Collection] [Blu-ray]

    Director: Alfred Hitchcock Cast: Ivor Novello

    Ivor Novello
    , June
    June
    , Marie Ault
    Marie Ault
    , Arthur Chesney
    Arthur Chesney
    , Malcolm Keene
    Malcolm Keene


    Blu-ray

    (Special Edition / Wide Screen / Restored)

    $39.99
    $39.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • Release Date: 06/27/2017
    • UPC: 0715515198813
    • Original Release: 1927
    • Rating: NR
    • Source: THE CRITERION COLLECTION, INC
    • Region Code: A
    • Presentation: [B&W]
    • Sound: [silent]
    • Language: English
    • Runtime: 5400
    • Sales rank: 11,112

    Special Features

    New score by composer Neil Brand, performed by the Orchestra of Saint Paul's; Downhill, another 1927 feature directed by Alfred Hitchcock and starring Ivor Novello, with a new piano score by Brand; New interview with film scholar William Rothman on Hitchcock's visual signatures; New video essay by art historian Steven Jacobs about Hitchcock's use of architecture; Excerpts from audio interviews with Hitchcock by filmmakers Fran?ois Truffaut (1962) and Peter Bogdanovich (1963 and 1972); Radio adaptation of The Lodger from 1940, directed by Hitchcock; New interview with Brand on composing for silent film

    Cast & Crew

    Performance Credits
    Ivor Novello The Lodger
    June Daisy Bunting
    Marie Ault Mrs. Bunting
    Arthur Chesney Mr. Bunting
    Malcolm Keene Joe Betts
    Alfred Hitchcock Actor

    Technical Credits
    Eliot Stannard Screenwriter
    Michael Balcon Producer

    While the silent The Lodger was not director Alfred Hitchcock's first film, it was the first to truly deserve the designation "A Hitchcock Picture". British matinee idol Ivor Novello plays Jonathan Drew, a quiet, secretive young man who rents a room in a London boarding house. Drew's arrival coincides with the reign of Terror orchestrated by Jack the Ripper. As the film progresses, circumstantial evidence begins to mount, pointing to Drew as the selfsame Ripper. In addition to Novello's 1932 remake, The Lodger was remade in 1944 with Laird Cregar, then again in 1953 as Man in the Attic, with Jack Palance as Jonathan Drew.

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    Described by Alfred Hitchcock himself as the "first true Hitchcock film," The Lodger is a suspenseful Jack-the-Ripper tale that features one of the master's most familiar themes: an innocent man who is blamed for a crime. In the case of this 1926 silent about a killer who targets blondes, that man is a mysterious lodger in a London apartment house played by British screen star Ivor Novello. The actor does a terrific job of casting suspicion on himself by alternating between being sinister and sincere. The plot is similar to that of 1941's Suspicion, but unlike the weak ending of that Hitchcock classic, The Lodger's conclusion is stunning: Novello being chased across town by an angry lynch mob that believes he is the killer. In only his third film, Hitchcock's creative style and willingness to innovate are already apparent. The story is carried entirely by its images, with only a minimal number of title cards used for dialogue. The director shot the opening scene as a combination of images that set up the entire plot and convey the terror of the situation, all with only a few words. In another chilling scene that shows the fright of the building's owners as they see a chandelier shaking, Hitchcock used a see-through Plexiglas ceiling to show that the movement is caused by the lodger, who nervously paces above them. The Lodger marked the first of Hitchcock's famed onscreen appearances, due to the fact that he was needed as an extra. He is seen in two spots, first as a man in a mailroom during the opening sequence, then again at the end as an onlooker to the mob scene.
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