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Closed Caption; New documentaries "Hitchcock and Dial M" and "3D: A Brief History"; Theatrical trailer; Languages: English & Français; Subtitles: English, Français, & Español
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Credits. [1:07]
2. Blackmail Note. [5:45]
3. Tony Bows Out. [1:55]
4. Calling About a Car. [2:03]
5. Schools (and Hitchcock) Photo. [3:00]
6. What Tony Saw. [4:57]
7. Your Word Against Mine. [5:33]
8. Murder Plan. [5:27]
9. Key Player Paid. [3:17]
10. Purse Snatcher. [5:55]
11. Running Late. [3:09]
12. Murder Calling. [4:28]
13. Ghastly Accident. [3:47]
14. Improvising a Frame-Up. [3:01]
15. Intermission. [:46]
16. Chief Inspector Hubbard. [5:19]
17. Reenacting the Crime. [3:29]
18. Wendice's Web of Evidence. [4:01]
19. Hubbard's Question. [4:51]
20. Guilty. [1:02]
21. Mark's Murder Scenario. [5:37]
22. Troublesome Latchkeys. [3:03]
23. Incriminating Attaché Case. [5:50]
24. Tony's Out, Hubbard's In. [5:48]
25. Key to the Case. [2:40]
26. Hubbard Explains It All. [4:56]
27. The Trap Is Sprung. [2:48]
28. Drinking in Defeat. [1:31]
Unassuming in its brilliance, Alfred Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder (1954) is an ingenious thriller too often overlooked. Released the same year that gave us Rear Window, Dial M is no less a great Hitchcock film than the Jimmy Stewart vehicle that followed it, if only for the reason that its intricate drama also plays out pitch perfectly in one room. Ray Milland is Tony Wendice, a devious and jealous (though sympathetic) sophisticate who, we learn early on, has palns for the "perfect murder" of his rich and lovely (though unfaithful) wife, Margot, played by Grace Kelly. The film's first act breaks murder mystery laws to detail precisely how the act should be played out; but Wendice's plan fails to anticipate Margot's ability to defend herself, and only the man assigned to kill her winds up dead. From there the story is a pure joy of Hitchcockian cat-and-mouse, as Margot's lover, Mark (Robert Cummings), and Chief Inspector Hubbard (John Williams) each become more and more involved in the resulting investigation, while Wendice maneuvers to frame his wife for murder. Adapted by Frederick Knott from his popular stage play, Dial M appears simple: There are some fantastic performances, particularly by Milland, and the movie feels very much like a play, devoid of Hitch's filmic flare. But great subtleties are at work. Even in the film's stagy environs, it never feels claustrophobic -- unlike Rear Window, which did and was supposed to -- and the suspense created by Hitchcock's mastery of visual language is, as usual, undeniable. Additionally, the movie succumbed to the trends of its times and was ordered to be shot in 3-D -- yes, the kind you watch with red-and-blue glasses. Nonetheless, in Dial M objects don't fly toward the audience as they do in a more kitschy flick like House of Wax. Instead, Hitchcock saves his gimmickry for a few key moments, using 3-D's shock value as, well, shock value rather than showy effect. The result serves the story in the classiest of ways, so that the movie plays equally well in its traditional 2-D. (The DVD releases here, sadly, are not offered in 3-D.) Though not as grandiose a Hitch outing as the later North by Northwest or Psycho, Dial M for Murder holds firm ground and deserves to be seen alongside the artist's other, hallowed masterpieces. Tony Nigro, Barnes & Noble
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