|
Vertigo
(1958)
In director Alfred Hitchcock's mermerizing, powerful,
perplexing, and necrophiliac-tinged thriller about psychological
obsession, plus a mesmerizing and suspenseful romantic drama about
a macabre, desperate, and doomed romance
- it was arguably the director's most complex, most analyzed, deep
and compelling masterpiece, and has been regarded by most critics
as one of the greatest films ever made. One
of the film's posters featured an abstract vertigo effect - a spiraling
shape with the figures of a man and a woman falling into its center.
The film's screenplay, written by Alec Coppel and Samuel
Taylor, was based upon the 1954 mystery novel D'Entre les Morts (literally
meaning "From Among the Dead" or "Between Deaths")
by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac. Boileau and Narcejac were
also the authors of the story for French director Henri-Georges Clouzot's Les
Diaboliques (1955, Fr.) starring Simone Signoret.
Although the recipient of two
Academy Awards nominations for technical achievements, Best Art Direction-Set
Decoration, and Best Sound, it was left without a single Oscar statuette. At
the time of the film's release, it was not a box-office hit. On a
budget of $2.5 million, the domestic box-office revenue was $7.3
million. The on-location shoots included various very recognizable
areas of San Francisco, the Big Basin Redwoods State Park (in Santa
Cruz County) (a stand-in for Muir Woods), Cypress Point on the 17
Mile Drive (in Pebble Beach, CA), and Mission San Juan Bautista (in
San Benito County) (enhanced with matte paintings).
- the dazzling opening title credits sequence,
enhanced with Bernard Herrmann's score, visualized a fragmented
and shifting image of a woman's blank and expressionless face (in
sepia tone); first, an enormous close-up of the lower left portion
of her face, then her lips, then her frightened eyes darting left
and then right, and then a straight-on closeup of her right eye
as the entire screen took on a bright reddish hue [Note: The face
was of actress Audrey Lowell, not Kim Novak]
- the title of the film "Vertigo" zoomed
out slowly from the depths of the female's widening pupil; spiraling,
vertiginous, animated designs (of various configurations and shapes)
replaced the closeup of the iris, and the remainder of the credits
played over a black background after the pupil was entered and
the eye faded away
- in the opening's rooftop chase sequence, plain-clothes
SF police detective (later identified as John "Scottie" Ferguson
(James Stewart)) and a uniformed SF policeman (Fred Graham) were
pursuing a criminal-fugitive; the chase ended with Scottie hanging
from a gutter; he had become frozen by his debilitating fear of heights
(acrophobia) - he looked down many stories into the deadly abyss
below and experienced a dizzying sensation called vertigo (symbolized
by dizzying trick camerawork (a reverse zoom, dolly-out) visualizing
the vortex; Scottie watched in horror as his fellow officer tried
to assist him and fell to his death
- Scottie was forced into semi-retirement due to his
phobia, and was helped to recover with his longtime friend and
ex-fiancee, Marjorie "Midge" Wood
(Barbara Bel Geddes), an artist (and fashion illustrator) who was
in unrequited love with him
Semi-Retired SF Detective John "Scottie" Ferguson
(James Stewart)
|
Ex-Fiancee Marjorie "Midge" Wood (Barbara
Bel Geddes)
|
Scottie's Ex-College Friend Gavin Elster (Tom Helmore)
|
- Scottie's old college friend, Gavin Elster (Tom
Helmore), contacted him and privately hired him to trail his strangely-behaving,
potentially-suicidal and possessed wife Madeleine as she wandered
around San Francisco: (Elster asked: "Do
you believe that someone out of the past, someone dead, can enter
and take possession of a living being?"); Scottie experienced
his first view of her in Ernie's Restaurant - a striking half-profile
view of the face of ethereal, lovely, elegant blonde Madeleine
(Kim Novak)
Scottie's Stalking of Madeleine in San Francisco
|
In a Flower Shop to Buy a Nosegay Bouquet
|
The Headstone of Carlotta Valdes in Cemetery at Mission Dolores
|
Sitting in the Legion of Honor Art Gallery - Portrait of Carlotta Valdes
|
- the next day, Scottie continued to stalk after
Madeleine by trailing her all over San Francisco in her Jaguar
sedan after she left her high-rise apartment building on Nob Hill;
her first stop was at a flower shop where she bought a red and
white nosegay bouquet; he then followed her to Mission Dolores
(aka Mission San Francisco de Asís)
- a Spanish mission with a backyard garden cemetery where she paused
at the grave headstone of Carlotta Valdes (1831-1857)
- Madeleine was further pursued into the art gallery
at the California Palace of the Legion of Honor where he found
her hypnotized, motionless and trance-like in front of a portrait
painting of a woman named Carlotta Valdes - her ancestor's portrait;
Scottie noticed that her single lock of swirling (vertigo-like)
hair and hand-bouquet bore a striking resemblance to the bouquet
and hairstyle in the painting
Similar Swirl and Spiral Patterns
|
|
|
|
|
- Scottie next trailed Madeleine to
an old hotel on Eddy Street, the McKittrick Hotel, where she
stood in a second-floor window facing the front; the hotel manager-landlady
(Ellen Corby) identified the tenant of the room as Carlotta Valdes,
who was rarely there, and would only sit two or three times a week;
Madeleine suddenly disappeared and her car was found back where
she started her long day's journey; Madeleine's
obsession with her tragic ancestor Carlotta Valdes intrigued Scottie
[Note: The film's MacGuffin was the spirit of the deceased Carlotta
Valdes - who supposedly possessed the female character and spurred
Scottie's obsessed investigation into her.]
- the next day, Scottie (with Midge) visited with Pop
Liebel (Konstantin Shayne), the local history expert and owner of
the downtown Argosy Book Shop; he described how young 26 year-old
mistress Carlotta had borne an illegitimate
child for a wealthy SF capitalist, and then was abandoned and had
her child abducted, leading to her suicide
- afterwards, Scottie again met up with Elster at his
club, where according to him, Madeleine was possessed by Carlotta, her great-grandmother,
and had acquired her suicidal tendencies; Carlotta's story also related
to his wife's preoccupation with wearing the family jewels as she
often sat in front of a mirror; he then told Scottie a bombshell
revelation -- Madeleine was unaware of Carlotta
- during her next excursion another day, Scottie followed
Madeleine as she returned to the art gallery and then drove to Fort
Point under the Golden Gate Bridge where he had to rescue the suicidal
Madeleine; she had torn off and thrown the flower petals from her
Carlotta-like nosegay into the water, and then jumped into the cold
waters of the bay
|
|
|
|
|
|
Madeleine Recovering in Scottie's Apartment
After a Suicide Attempt Near the Golden Gate Bridge
|
- Madeleine recovered in Scottie's apartment on Lombard
Street, where she was startled to awake and find herself in a strange
man's bed - and presumably naked; he took care of her, gave her a
maroon robe to wear, and became entranced and bewitched by her beauty;
as he received a phone call from Gavin, Madeleine grabbed her clothes
hanging in the kitchen and vanished
- the next day, after he followed her twisting and turning,
circular trip through San Francisco, they both ended up at his apartment
(within view of Coit Tower) where she put a note into his
mailbox; they spoke in person and she apologized and
thanked him for saving her - the same contents as her note
- the two decided that for the remainder of the day,
they would "wander" together; they took
a car trip to the evocative, centuries-old redwood sequoias
of Muir Woods; in the dark, moody, giant redwood forest, in the filtered,
impressionistic light of the woods where they wandered, she spoke
about the ancient, towering trees over 2,000 years old - and how
they reminded her of her own smallness and mortality; he noted: "Their
true name is Sequoia sempervirens, 'always green, ever-living'";
one of the displays in the woods presented a cross-section
of the stump of one of the felled trees; the concentric,
spiraling rings of the tree's growth were given white date labels, to
illustrate thousands of years of history (historical events, wars and treaties from 909 AD
to 1930 when the tree was cut down)
- pointing toward the rings, Madeleine
indicated with a black-gloved finger the place where Carlotta's life
had spanned a short period of time - she enigmatically traced the
times of her birth and her death in one of the film's key speeches: "Somewhere
in here I was born. And there I died. It was only a moment for you,
you took no notice"
- in the next sequence, Madeleine begged him to take
her to "somewhere in the light" and they appeared on a
Monterey Bay ocean cliff next to a classic Monterey pine at Cypress
Point; after telling him about a disturbing, ambiguous, symbol-filled
dream, she became frightened and ran down the rocks to the water's
edge where waves crashed in; he chased after her and they embraced
- and he pledged to protect her forever: "I'm here. I've got you...All
the time!"
- upon his return, Scottie visited with Midge in her
studio apartment, where she expressed jealous curiosity about his
whereabouts; unwisely, she displayed a portrait she had drawn to
get his attention - a caricatured and satirized
portrait of herself as a smiling, bespectacled Carlotta Valdes (that
she copied from the Palace of the Legion of Fine Arts guidebook);
she had literally placed or substituted herself into the position
of the person he had become obsessed about; Scottie promptly left
- the next early morning, Madeleine came to Scottie's
place after another of her nightmares featuring Carlotta's
childhood home that Scottie recognized as being located at the Spanish
Mission of San Juan Bautista about 100 miles south of San Francisco;
he suggested that they drive there, Scottie hoping that by visiting
the real-world California mission, it would end her nightmares, cure
her fears, dispel the dream's power, or prompt her memories: ("It'll
finish your dream. It will destroy it.
I promise you. All right?")
Scottie's Attempt to Quell Her Fears After More Nightmares
|
|
|
Driving to the Spanish Mission at San Juan
Bautista
|
- when they arrived at the mission, they entered the
dark livery stable and she sat in a carriage; she became seemingly
possessed by Carlotta; as he tried to comfort her, they kissed and
he confessed: "I love you, Madeleine"; she glanced across the courtyard toward
the mission's church and bell tower, hurriedly confessed her own love
for him, became frantic ("There's something I must do...It's too
late!"), and suddenly ran from him
Scottie: "I love you, Madeleine"
|
Madeleine: "There's something I must do"
|
- Madeleine ignored his attempts
to comfort her with repeated kisses and promises and ran off across
the courtyard toward the mission's church and bell tower; when he
caught up to her, she again vowed to him: "Look. Let me go.
Please let me go." In her final words to him, she explained
how she had to go through with things as planned inside the church
- alone; after one more kiss, she turned, looked up, and rushed into the church
|
|
|
Madeleine's Last Words to Scottie: "You believe
I love you?...And if you lose me, then you'll know I, I loved you
and I wanted to go on loving you... Let me go into the church -
alone."
|
- Scottie glanced up at the bell tower for an instant,
and then decided to chase
after her; as he started to climb up the bell tower's crude, winding
and rickety wooden staircase, Scottie pursued, but felt acute
acrophobia and vertigo that slowed him as he
ascended the spiraling stairs
- at the top of the tower, Scottie heard a shrieking
scream as a gray-clothed body resembling Madeleine's was seen through
a side tower window falling to her death far below; Scottie looked
down through the tower opening and saw a still body lying dead on
the adjacent rooftop below - Madeleine had apparently committed suicide;
Scottie fearfully and carefully descended the bell-tower's staircase
|
|
|
Madeleine's 'Suicidal' Death, Causing a Catatonic Reaction in Scottie
|
- in the mission square's town hall,
a coroner's inquest/hearing was immediately held by police, the coroner
(Henry Jones) and other legal officials regarding the death; Gavin Elster
was in attendance; ex-detective Scottie was condemned for indirectly
causing the accident due to his unanticipated "weakness" and
his "fear of heights" that made him "powerless when he was most needed,"
although foul play on his part was discounted; the verdict of the inquest
was that Madeleine had indeed committed suicide of her own volition
|
|
|
|
|
|
Scottie Awakening After Hallucinatory Nightmares
|
- after the hearing, the disturbed, depressed
and distraught Scottie visited Madeleine's grave; he also suffered
vivid nightmares following Madeleine's death - real nightmares, flashing
lights, vivid, and shattered, exploding images, including a view of
Elster with the real Carlotta, a close-up of Carlotta's red ruby necklace,
a vision of a bottomless pit in front of Carlotta's grave, accompanied
by a frightening silhouette of his own body falling onto the mission roof
- Scottie was institutionalized
following a nervous breakdown, where Midge attempted to cheer him
up, but Scottie remained passive, catatonic, corpse-like, and 'possessed'
- she realized that he was still in love with the dead Madeleine,
and that she was utterly inadequate and helpless in reaching him;
forlorn, she walked away down the corridor and departed from him - for good
- after six months to a year, Scottie was released from
the sanitorium where he had been clinically
diagnosed as "suffering from acute melancholia, together with a guilt complex"; Scottie
continued to be haunted, and was obsessed with the dead woman by
visiting all of the places they had visited; he actually imagined
three Madeleine look-alikes
- then one day in San Francisco, outside the flower-shop
where he had observed Madeleine, Scottie experienced his view of
his fourth Madeleine look-alike on the street; in profile - a dark,
red-haired woman was wearing a tight green sweater dress and gaudy
makeup and speaking to other females; he followed her down the sidewalk
to the Empire Hotel on Post Street and observed her in a third-story
window, and soon forced his way into her apartment to speak to her;
the cheap-looking, crude and provocative female identified herself
as Judy Barton (also Kim Novak), working as a shopgirl at Magnin's,
who was originally from Salina, KS; she realized his search for a
lost love: "I remind you of someone you used to be madly in love with, but then
she ditched ya for another guy..." and
it dawned on her that his lost love was dead
- after she agreed to have dinner with him and he left
to get his car, she experienced a very unusual and revealing flashback
- she remembered the scene at the Mission, when she impersonated
Elster's wife "Madeleine Elster" in an elaborate 'murder' or suicide plot; Madeleine/Judy
was seen running up the mission stairs, and then Gavin Elster threw
his wife's already-dead body from the tower just as Madeleine/Judy
appeared at the top of the stairs and then grabbed Madeleine/Judy
to cover her mouth
- Judy sat down to write a letter to Scottie, describing
the whole deceptive plot against him (narrated in voice-over), when
she was hired by Elster to pose as his wife; Elster
knew of Scottie's vertigo and that he couldn't reach the top of the
tower to halt her lethal jump; the police were then provided with
an unimpeachable witness at the 'suicide' of Elster's wife [Note:
Hitchcock revealed the surprise solution to the mystery to all but
the hero/protagonist]
- at the end of the letter, Judy admitted
that the only mistake in the whole plan was that she fell in love
with Scottie; feeling ambivalent, she declared her own love and decided
to make Scottie love her (as she was) - although it would be a daunting
task - could Scottie fall in love with her as Judy,
and not as Madeleine?; then, she resolutely ripped up the letter,
and out of her love for Scottie, she decided not to run away, but to
stay and see him one final time
- however, for the next few days, Scottie attempted
to relive his experiences with Madeleine through Judy, in an almost
complete confusion of dream and reality, by visiting with Judy the
places where he had followed Madeleine; while spending more time
with Judy, Scottie increasingly was bound to manipulate, reshape and remake her into
the dead Madeleine's image; he spent a long time with her trying
on clothes at Ransohoffs, an expensive salon on Post Street, to design
and make her into his idealized image of his lost love
Judy and Scottie Spending More Time Together
|
An Expensive Excursion to Ransohoffs in SF
|
Judy: "You want me to be dressed like her"
|
|
|
|
Judy to Scottie: "Well, I'll
wear the darn clothes if you want me to - if-if you'll just, just like me"
|
- after their shopping excursion, in Scottie's apartment,
Judy finally gave in, allowing him to exploit her and change her
appearance through his clothing choices if he agreed to love her: ("Well,
I'll wear the darn clothes if you want me to - if-if you'll just, just
like me"); due to his persistence, she also reluctantly agreed to change her hair-color
to blonde, and to have her nails and makeup redone - to match his lost
love's features
- upon her return to her hotel room after a complete
forced make-over, where she was again judged by Scottie, he made
one final request - to change her hairstyle and wear it back
from her face and pinned at the neck; she retreated to the
bathroom, as Scottie awaited her full, transformative
arrival
- in a magnificent dream-like scene in a sickly neon
green light - Scottie's eyes were filled with wonder and emotion in
an unforgettable image, as he (and the viewer) saw the reborn reincarnation
of his lost love; Judy was transformed completely into Madeleine
as the camera swirled around them during a series of kisses, and in
Scottie's subjective imagination, he was back in the livery stable
with Madeleine
- later (after consummating their
love?), they sat together and relaxed in her hotel room, before a planned
dinner at Ernie's; Judy was dressed in her new black evening/dinner
dress; then came a striking moment when Scottie was attaching
a red ruby necklace around Judy's neck, and he realized that Judy was the
same person as Madeleine; during a momentary flashback of the
necklace in Carlotta's portrait and Madeleine gazing at it from a museum
bench, he wondered to himself how she had Carlotta's necklace; he
intuitively knew that there was no Madeleine, and that he had been
tricked by Elster, and suddenly became emotionally distant and cold
|
|
|
Startling Moment of Realization - Judy Had Carlotta's/Madeleine's
Necklace
|
- while trying to recreate the past and reenact when
he had become crazed, he pressured them to go out of town for dinner;
their drive down the peninsula duplicated their previous trip together
to Mission San Juan Bautista, as Scottie explained: "There's one
final thing I have to do and then I'll be free of the past"; after
arriving, Scottie revealed that they were at the location of Madeleine's
death - the scene of the crime: ("Madeleine died here, Judy....I
need you to be Madeleine for a while. And when it's done, we'll both
be free"); he asked agonizing questions as he dragged Judy into the
mission during their second visit; his goal was to recreate the death scene of chasing Madeleine
earlier when he had experienced his acrophobia and vertigo (and couldn't
"get to the top"), but now with his "second chance," he could cure himself
- Scottie asked agonizing questions as he dragged the
frightened and nervous Judy up the stairs of the mission tower, and
compelled her to admit her deceitfulness and trickery toward him
when she pretended to be Elster's wife - a counterfeit: "Did
he train you? Did he rehearse you?
Did he tell you exactly what to do and what to say? You
were a very apt pupil, too, weren't you? You were a very apt pupil.
Why did you pick on me? Why me?...I was the set-up. I was the
set-up, wasn't I? I was a made-to-order witness"
- there was a second final terrifying sequence in the
bell tower after they entered through the trap door, and Scottie
explained how she and Elster had committed the crime; Judy sincerely
confessed to her wrong-doing, and that she had been paid by Elster
to impersonate the "possessed" Madeleine; Judy also professed
that she still loved Scottie and asked for his forgiveness even though
he had been her victim
- in the finale after they kissed and embraced - footsteps
of a black-clad figure in the shadows startled Judy, and she backed
away from Scottie gasping: "Oh, no!"; the dark, shadowy
figure (a nun) said: "I hear voices"
|
|
|
Nun: "I hear voices... God have mercy"
|
- terrified, thinking and believing she was seeing the
ghost of the murdered Madeleine (or the reincarnation of the ghostly
doomed Carlotta Valdes), Judy recoiled, stepped and fell backwards
through the opening in the tower (off-screen) and plummeted to her
own death in an emotionally-shattering climax; the figure,
actually a nun from the mission, crossed herself and murmured the
last words of the film: "God have mercy"
- the last shot was of a stunned Scottie standing on
the belfry tower ledge as he stared down at Judy's dead body in the
shocking ending - Scottie had tragically loved and lost the same
woman twice, although he was now cured of his acrophobia and vertigo
|
|
The Second Bell-Tower Sequence and Second Fatal Fall
|
|
Title Screen
SF Detective Scottie's Fear of Heights - Acrophobia with Vertigo
Profile of Madeleine (Kim Novak) in Ernie's Restaurant
in San Francisco
Scottie Driving and Trailing After Madeleine Throughout the City
Madeleine in the Window of a 2nd Floor Rented Room in the McKittrick
Hotel, Registered with the Name Carlotta Valdes
Argosy Book Shop Owner and Historian Pop
Liebel (Konstantin Shayne)
Madeleine in Front of Scottie's Apartment to Leave Him a Note
At Muir Woods, At a Display of a Cross-Section of a Giant Sequoia Tree
Madeleine Traced the Rings
in the Tree and Pointed Out Her Lifespan
Scottie Kissing Madeleine by the Ocean on the 17
Mile Drive at Cypress Point Near Monterey
Midge's Caricatured Portrait of Herself as Carlotta Valdes
Scottie Pursuing Madeleine Up Into the San Juan Bautista Bell Tower
Scottie's Vertigo Effect in the Circular Stairway
Visiting Madeleine's Gravesite
Scottie's Nightmares Following Madeleine's Suicidal Death
Midge Vainly Attempting to Cheer Up Scottie In a
Sanitorium
Seen on the Street, Shopgirl Judy Barton (also Kim Novak)
In the Window of Her Empire Hotel Room
Scottie Speaking to Judy In Her Hotel
Mirroring (or Doubling) Effect
Judy's Crucial Flashback: The Plot to Murder Elster's Wife
Judy's Confessional Letter to Scottie - Ripped Up
With Her Hair Dyed Blonde and Worn Down
In Her Hotel Room, Judy's Full Transformation into Madeleine
Circular Swirling Around During Kisses - With a Backdrop Change
A Second Drive to the Mission
Scottie Dragging Judy Into the Mission and Up the Stairs to the
Top - To Recreate the Bell Tower Incident
|