AndrewBloom
CONTAINS SPOILERS9/10 5 months ago
[9.0/10] I often think about the transportive quality of cinema. With a trick of color and light, it can take you to the shores of distant lands or push you through dreams and nightmares. There’s a breadth to the form, a way in which it makes the immense accessible, in a way that's practically unrivaled.
The greatest achievement of *Rear Window* is how Alfred Hitchock and company buck against that idea, and instead present us with an entire bustling world, captured within the confines of one self-contained little Greenwich Village tenement building.
The movie almost feels like a dare. Could you produce a compelling murder mystery where all the action is afar and your main characters barely leave a single room? It would be daunting. And yet, somehow, Hitchcock and company not only craft a thrilling potboiler within those limitations, but make it feel that much more tense given the distance, and that much more vivid a story for being built as a cinematic ship in a bottle.
Part of that comes from the vividness of the character. Jimmy Stewart’s hobbled photographer is, frankly, more of a prick than you typically see from an actor whose legacy is defined by his ability to embody the wholesome everyman. You immediately get the restlessness, the prickliness, the sense of someone used to going where the action is, forced to subsist in his simple apartment for eight weeks, and it bringing out the worst in him.
Thankfully, he has a tremendous collection of foils. Thelma Ritter nearly steals the show as Jeffries’ nurse, Stella. In a film where Jeffries’ sad sack routine vacillates between sympathetic pathos and self-entitled pity parties, Stella talks back to him as both the voice of reason and the chiding nudge he needs.
Grace Kelly likewise holds the frame as Lisa, who’s both a caring partner to Jeffries and a defiant, self-possessed counterpart to his perspective on life and, well, her. Equal parts radiant in cinematic splendor (and legendary costumer Edith Head’s designs) and subtly steely in her disposition and responses to Jeffires, Kelly is an essential part of the film’s milieu.
Each of them has shading, little quirks and suggestions of their life beyond this room, and bursts with personality in the film’s back-and-forth. Wendell Corey isn’t quite as electric as Jeffries’ old war buddy turned NYPD detective, Doyle. But even there, the droll witticisms between them buoy the movie. Even if you didn’t give a damn about the murder mystery, the repartee amongst the characters in the film is worth the price of admission on its own, and helps add a sense of authenticity to a movie that walks the line between the natural and the fantastical.
In the same way, even if you weren’t bothered by whether the man who lives across the way from Jeffries murdered his wife, you might want to stick around simply for the marvelous little ecosystem Hitchock and the production team conjure up at 125 West 9th street. One of the best elements of the picture is the sense that Jeffries’ is not the only story taking place here. There are scores of little narratives -- a lonely woman looking for companionship, a young artist struggling to create, a pair of newlyweds settling into their new lives -- that we only get glimpses of.
That too adds to the realism of the piece. Many Hitchcock films have a sense of being fit-for-purpose. That's a good thing. He and his collaborators build worlds that feel real but exist solely for the story at hand, with almost every noteworthy element feeding back into the establishing the tone or the context or the narrative momentum needed. But in *Rear Window*, there is an abiding sense of how little pieces of other stories, other lives, other trials no less significant or meaningful, bleed through in ways we only witness at the margins. That is a feature, not a bug, and it adds to the film’s themes.
So does the remarkable sense of place that Hitchcock and cinematographer Robert Burks create. The courtyard of the tenement building is an isolated but bustling place. Everyone is separated into their own little corners, but their worlds intersect. Burks and his team put together some brilliant long takes that drift across the window frames, capturing miniature vignettes, before retreating back into Jeffries’ apartment. Editor George Tomasini has the discipline to use a number of longer takes, letting the action unfold organically and breaking down the artifice of the form.
The result is a small but bustling ecosystem that comes through as almost effortlessly authentic. The choices draw the connections, big and small, between the people going about their lives through those frames. The ambient noise from children playing in the street, or diegetic music, add to the tone and tension of the picture. Some interactions are timed a little too perfectly, but even that sense of this tiny community as an unwitting ballet, each dancer performing their steps, albeit occasionally bumping into one another, adds to the vividness of this world.
And it makes the perfect canvas for L.B. Jeffries to project his restlessness and imagination onto. One of the great tricks of the script, penned by John Michael Hayes, is that evokes an intriguing ambiguity about what exactly Jeffries, and the audience, has witnessed.
There is certainly something fishy about Jeffries’ neighbor, Lars Thorwald, leaving with a large case multiple times in the twilight hours after recurring arguments with his wife. Snippets of phone calls, precious jewelry in odd places, the simple expressions of the man, all prompt the enterprising voyeur to raise an eyebrow and wonder if something horrible has happened.
But as Doyle points out, there’s reasonable explanations for all of this, and little in the way of hard evidence of anything nefarious. Hitchcock and company make it deliciously murky whether something awful is afoot or if this is all a grand misunderstanding. Psychologically, a photographer used to sniffing out the story, who’s been cooped up for weeks, could be forgiven for inventing one out of bare inputs when he’s starved for the real thing. And the audience, primed to anticipate the macabre in an Alfred Hitchcock movie, could be forgiven (or tricked!) for expecting the same.
That is the other grand bit of masterfulness in the framing of the story -- it deftly situates the audiences right next to L.B. Jeffires, practically and emotionally. Part of the movie’s genius is the way it capitalizes on Jeffries’ helplessness. Temporarily Immobilized from an injury on the job, there is a sense of frustration in Jeffires, how he’s reliant on others to follow-up on his suspicions, to gather clues, to justify his suspicions. And at the same time, it adds to the tension when he bears witness to crimes or threats or impending violence, and is unable to do much of anything but watch.
We, the audience, are in the same position. Any film fan who’s watched a horror movie and thought to themselves “No! Get out of the house!” when things get hairy can understand the terror of seeing some impending horror through the screen. And it’s easy to empathize with Jeffries, watching a person or a character you care about, in grave danger, with no option but to sit there and hope it all works out. For once, Hitchcock drags an audience surrogate to the other side of the silver screen and makes them the center of his picture.
As always in the director’s films, the use of light and shadow only adds to the subtle and not so subtle menace. Jeffries’ inevitable struggle with Thorwald shouldn't be much. A local salesman and an injured chump shouldn't be much of a fight. And yet, the dark room, lit only by the ambient light from outside; the way the shadows frame the quiet fury in Thorwald’s eyes, a dizzying flashes from Jeffries’ photographic defense mechanism, all turn this small scale skirmish into a life-and-death struggle, as befits the magnifying aims of the film.
Of course, in the end, the day is saved, the bad guy is defeated, and all it costs Jeffires is another date with a broken leg -- two this time. There is an irony to Jeffires' discovery that he can find danger and excitement right here, and it causes the wanderlust-riddled man to stay in one place for a while longer.
And there’s a subtle but potent counterpoint to that idea as well, in Lisa’s arc over the course of the film. Jeffires is ready to end their relationship over the idea that Lisa couldn't hang in his world, that her well-heeled Upper West Side perfection is a poor match for his rough-and-tumble adventurism. And yet, she becomes his partner in the investigation, showing a guile, a bravery, and fortitude that his imagination was too feeble to suspect. Their domestic relationship is one of the most fascinating elements of the a film with a lot going on, and the fact that rather than bending to Jeffires’ (frankly rude) presuppositions, Lisa proves her mettle and then some, feels remarkable for a film from 1954.
And yet, in a way, it’s unsurprising because, despite being decades old, *Rear Window* feels strikingly modern. Despite some stylization in the crackling dialogue, there’s a real naturalism to the film. The way the events play out from simple glances across the courtyard give it an almost cinema verite feel in places. Even the way the dialogue is allowed to breathe, simply spilling out between the characters over long conversations, confer a certain observational quality.
But *Rear Window* is also a movie that is profoundly modern in its anxieties. In the subtext of the film is fear that we are becoming more isolated from one another, that people are lonely and facing unseen struggles, in a way that represents a breakdown of the community.
Stella waxes on about couples’ inability to let connection between people bridge the divide over intellectual contemplation and bare practicality. Jeffires talks about the tools of modernity, taking away the old rhythms of life. He doesn’t know the name of the people whose lives he turns into a spectator sport; he just watches their mutual isolated trials and travails. It’s the moments when those invisible barriers are broken -- when someone might be gazing at *him*, when Thorwald makes eye contact with the camera -- that are the most frightening.
When a poor couple’s dog turns up dead in front of their stoop, the wife rebukes every neighbor within earshot. She declares that if they were real neighbors, if they were connected to one another, this never would have happened. It tracks with a modern sense of mistrust and alienation, that we get small visions of one another’s lives, but that we’ve become increasingly separated into our own little boxes, in a way that leads to sad speculation and disillusionment.
Not for nothing, there’s a certain resonance between the motifs of *Rear Window* in 1954, and the rise of television in the 1950s. More and more, L.B. Jeffires is consuming the world through little windows, witnessing these events, but at more and more of a remove from them, with a distance both literal and emotional.
Hitchock and company seem, at best, ambivalent at that prospect. At a time when more and more of our world is consumed through our endless carousel of screens, that idea is, if anything, more potent now than it was all those years ago. By bringing the viewer into the movie, Hitchcock seems to be flipping the usual arrangement on its head, challenging us for just sitting there, and simply reflecting our messy world back at us rather than taking us into one of his elegant cinematic music boxes.
That is the trick, and why *Rear Window* remains one of the most fascinating movies in Hitchcock’s filmography. The final message of the film seems to be that there are certainly grand, dizzying worlds that can be witnessed through that little screen -- Hitchcock himself has conjured more than a few -- but that there’s worlds no less rich, no less frightening, no less wonderful, waiting right next door.