Influenced by Hitchcock:
To Hitchcock's tribute, there are a number of Hitchcock-like
thrillers from other notable directors. All of these films serve up thrilling
tales of terror, intrigue, menace, revenge, obsession, and insanity:
- the
film-noirish and intriguing Niagara (1953) by Henry Hathaway, with
Marilyn Monroe as the voluptuous and trashy femme fatale who schemes
to kill her unstable husband (Joseph Cotten)
- director Robert Aldrich's violent and fast-paced film noirish
thriller Kiss Me Deadly (1955) featured Ralph
Meeker as a hard-nosed detective amidst fears of nuclear apocalypse
- The Night of the Hunter (1955), director Charles Laughton's sole
film, brilliantly-played with Robert Mitchum as a Bible-thumping, homicidal
preacher victimizing two young children with a secret about the location
of stolen money
- director Orson Welles' unique crime thriller, Touch Of Evil (1958), with a pre-Psycho Janet Leigh as a
terrorized wife, Charlton Heston as a Mexican-American narcotics agent,
and the director himself as an evil border-town cop
- director Michael Powell's perverse, tense and reviled Peeping
Tom (1960), with Carl Boehm as a psychopathic, reclusive cameraman -
the film was released prior to Hitchcock's Psycho (1960), and helped pave its way
- J. Lee Thompson's Cape Fear (1962) with Robert Mitchum
as an angry, menacing ex-con seeking revenge at an attorney (Gregory Peck)
and his family; much superior to the 1991 remake by Martin Scorsese with
Robert DeNiro and Nick Nolte
- director
Stanley Donen's stylish, romantic thriller Charade
(1963) with numerous plot twists, identity-changes, and a search
for hidden loot, and starring the charming pair of Cary Grant and Audrey
Hepburn on location in Paris
- Roman Polanski's first film in English, the frighteningly-surrealistic Repulsion (1965) - with Catherine Deneuve as a young woman who goes
increasingly mad
- Wait Until Dark (1967) by director Terence Young
(known for Dr. No (1962) and From Russia
With Love (1963)), with Audrey Hepburn as a victimized blind woman in
her Manhattan apartment and Alan Arkin as the evil and sadistic con man
searching for drugs (hidden in a doll) - with a tremendous, lights-out finale
- Steven Spielberg's low-budget early TV movie Duel (1971),
about road rage between a hapless traveling salesman (Dennis Weaver) and
the unseen, relentless driver of a truck
- Clint Eastwood's directorial debut film, Play
Misty for Me (1971), about a California disc jockey pursued by a
disturbed female listener (Jessica Walter)
- director Nicolas Roeg's edgy, puzzling and macabre Don't
Look Now (1973), a tale of despair in Venice, with Donald Sutherland
and Julie Christie as a couple grieving the drowning death of their daughter
- Irvin Kershner's The Eyes of Laura Mars (1978),
with Faye Dunaway as the title character - a stalked photographer
- Phillip
Noyce's Dead Calm (1989), with a riveting Nicole Kidman who must
fight for her life on a yacht against a crazed castaway (Billy Zane)
- director Rob Reiner's excruciatingly frightening Misery
(1990), based on the best-seller by horror writer Stephen King, with
Kathy Bates as an unbalanced fan named Annie who terrorizes, in her care,
an incapacitated author named Paul (James Caan) of romance novels; in one
horrifying scene, she 'hobbles' his ankles so that he can't escape
- Curtis Hanson's The Hand That Rocks the Cradle (1992),
with Rebecca De Mornay as a nanny intent on seeking revenge against her
dead obstetrician husband's patient (Annabella Sciorra)
- Barbet Schroeder's suspenseful Single White Female (1992),
with Bridget Fonda and her obsessed roommate-from-hell Jennifer Jason Leigh
- The Fugitive (1993), with Harrison Ford as the wrongfully-accused
physician who is pursued by US Marshal Tommy Lee Jones - adapted from the
popular 60's TV series
- Sydney Pollack's The Firm (1993) with Tom Cruise,
based on John Grisham's best-selling novel about a corrupt, crime-ridden
law-firm
- Harold Becker's Malice (1993), with Alec Baldwin
and Nicole Kidman
- and writer/director Anthony Minghella's psychological
thriller The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999)
Brian De Palma:
Director Brian De Palma's earliest, heavily-stylistic films
(often with reconstructed scenes from other films) are particularly reminiscent
of Hitchcock's tense horror thrillers, with themes of guilt, voyeurism, paranoia
and obsession. Similar plot elements include killing off a main character
early on, switching points of view, and dream-like sequences, in the following:
- the
innovative, visually-striking psycho-thriller Sisters (1973) - a
tale of murderous Siamese twins, with music from Hitchcock's frequent and
favorite collaborator, composer Bernard Herrmann
- the horrific telekinetic classic Carrie (1976),
an adaptation of a Stephen King novel, about a tormented high-schooler
(Sissy Spacek) who ultimately found revenge after being humiliated
at a school prom
- the under-rated Obsession (1976), somewhat inspired
by Vertigo, with another Herrmann score
- Dressed to Kill (1980), inspired by Psycho and Vertigo,
with Angie Dickinson as a frustrated patient who shared her sexual
fantasies with a therapist (Michael Caine) before being brutally
murdered by a blonde razor-slasher
- the assassination thriller Blow Out (1981),
similar to Coppola's The
Conversation (1974) and Antonioni's Blow-up
(1966), told about a sound-effects man who witnessed
the 'accidental' killing of the governor - a promising presidential
candidate, and found evidence of a conspiracy
- the daringly-erotic Body Double (1984) was
about a struggling B-movie actor who became involved in a tale
of intrigue and mystery involving his erotic next-door 'body double'
neighbor
Other Great Thrillers:
The acclaimed police thriller The
French Connection (1971) was based on the true story
of two New York City narcotics officers (Gene Hackman as Popeye
Doyle, and Roy Scheider as Buddy) who pursue the largest heroin
smuggling group in history. The film that brought Steven Spielberg
to prominence was his terrifying summer blockbuster hit Jaws
(1975), a frighteningly tense and shocking thriller inspired
by real life East Coast shark attacks in 1916. John Boorman's Deliverance
(1972) followed the perilous fate of four Southern
businessmen during a weekend's shoot-the-rapids trip. Two
nail-biting films, both adult shockers, Play
Misty for Me (1971) and Fatal Attraction
(1987), involved the nightmarish, dangerous consequences of a
philandering one-night stand - one with a psychotic girlfriend,
the other a spurned lover. In Francis Ford Coppola's tense character
study/thriller The
Conversation (1974), a bugging-device expert (Gene Hackman)
systematically uncovered a covert murder while he himself was being
spied upon. A battered wife who left her sadistic husband to find
a better life was vengefully pursued in Sleeping
with the Enemy (1991).
Jonathan Demme's highly-acclaimed Best Picture-winning horror/thriller Silence of the Lambs (1991) pitted young FBI
agent/trainee Jodie Foster in psychological warfare against a cannibalistic
psychiatrist named Dr. Hannibal "the Cannibal" Lecter (Anthony Hopkins),
while tracking down transgender serial killer Buffalo Bill. And Jan De Bont's
combination action/thriller Speed (1994) perfectly captured the heart-stopping
suspense aboard a Los Angeles city bus threatened by a mad bomber (Dennis
Hopper). In Michael Mann's and DreamWorks' gritty Collateral (2004),
Tom Cruise plays a taxi-riding hit man and Jamie Foxx as the cabbie.
Costa-Gavras' Z (1969) told of the assassination
of a Greek, left-wing nationalist in the 1960s. Joseph
Sargent's Colossus: The Forbin Project (1970) was a cautionary
thriller about technology running amok, while Sidney Lumet's The
Anderson Tapes (1971) was a crime-caper thriller. Robert
Wise's The Andromeda Strain (1971), adapted from Michael
Crichton's best-seller, was about the threat of an alien virus.
Alan Pakula's All
the President's Men (1976), starred Dustin Hoffman and Robert
Redford as two Washington Post reporters investigating
the Watergate scandal which ultimately led to President Nixon's
resignation. John Schlesinger's spy-thriller Marathon
Man (1976) contained
a memorable torture scene performed by Laurence Olivier (as a former
concentration camp dentist) upon hapless college student-victim
Dustin Hoffman. Both Richard Fleischer's Soylent
Green (1973) and Michael Anderson's Logan's
Run (1976) told about futuristic societies where secrets
were withheld from the victimized populace: euthanasia at age
30, and the production of 'soylent green' food from the people.
John Frankenheimer's Black Sunday (1977) was an unbelievable
film (at the time) about terrorists plotting to use a Goodyear blimp to crash
into the Super Bowl. James Bridges' The China Syndrome (1979) was a
thrilling drama about a possible nuclear accident and cover-up near Los Angeles,
with Jane Fonda as a television news reporter and Jack Lemmon as the nuclear
power plant's whistle-blower, after discovering that the X-rays used to check
key welds at the plant have been falsified. The film's title referred to the
idea that a massive nuclear accident would cause enough thermonuclear heat
to conceivably melt down into the ground under the plant and all the way to
China. The film's popularity was considerably enhanced when a 'real' nuclear
power plant accident occurred at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania about two
weeks after the film's release. The film was also noted for not having a traditional
music soundtrack, except for the song "Somewhere In Between" played
during the opening credits.
Thrillers With Convoluted Plot Twists:
See this site's extensive description of Films with Plot Twists, Surprise Endings
Recently,
various thrillers have used twisting plots and surprise endings to capture
audiences, notably:
- Bryan Singer's clever and hip The Usual Suspects (1995),
with Kevin Spacey as a club-footed con man and a central mystery surrounding
the character of Hungarian mobster Keyser Soze
- director David Fincher's compelling crime thriller Se7en
(1995), about the search for a serial killer who re-enacts the seven
deadly sins
- M. Night Shyamalan's effective The Sixth Sense (1999),
about a young boy (Haley Joel Osment) who sees "dead people" -
this was Shyamalan's signature film with clever clues sprinkled throughout
the film; also Shyamalan's spooky Signs (2002), about a disillusioned
minister (Mel Gibson) who encounters gigantic, eerie crop circles on his
farm
- writer/director Christopher Nolan's Memento (2000),
a tale told backwards, with Guy Pearce as a tattooed man without
short-term memory, who hunts down the alleged rapist-killer of
his wife
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