The Greatest Movie of all Time
Sir Alfred Hitchcock is easily one of the most influential film directors of all time. He was known throughout his life as a brilliant but curmudgeonly man; a visionary and a scoundrel. Since his death, he has, if anything, been treated with even fiercer reverence. He developed a style all of his own, which has defined entire genres of film and inspired other hugely successful films. Perhaps his most idiosyncratic, iconic work was done on Vertigo and North by Northwest.
In the 2012 British Film Institute film critic’s poll, Vertigo replaced Citizen Kane as “the best film of all time”. But it was not always such a hit. When it premiered sixty years ago at the iconic Fairmont San Francisco, it was not the hit we know it to be today. As Hitchcock academic Dr Steve Rawles explains, “It flopped badly on its initial release in 1958 and was poorly received by critics. However, once Hitchcock’s cause was championed by critics and filmmakers, largely French ones in the 1960s and academics through the 1970s, the film’s reputation as one of the most complex ever produced by classical Hollywood began to be enshrined.” It is now regarded as one of Hitchcock’s finest cinematic achievements, not least because of his technical ingenuity.
