Director
Alfred Hitchcock
Leading Actors/Actresses
James Stewart, Kim Novak
Supporting Actors/Actresses
Barbara Bel Geddes, Tom Helmore, Henry Jones
Genre
Mystery, Romance, Noir, Psychological Thriller
Language
English
Awards
None
Date of Release
May 9, 1958
Producer
Paramount Pictures, Alfred J. Hitchcock Productions
Setting and Context
1957, San Francisco
Narrator and Point of View
Tone and Mood
Dark, suspenseful, unsettling.
Protagonist and Antagonist
Scottie is the protagonist and Gavin Elster is the antagonist
Major Conflict
There are two conflicts. Scottie's first major conflict lies in keeping the woman whom he was tasked to follow, Madeleine Elster, alive. When she dies, a second conflict arises for Scottie, which is trying to heal from this error and also understand the mystery of Madeleine's death, which turns out to have been a complete deception.
Climax
The climax occurs when Scottie takes Judy to the bell tower and reveals that he knows he was deceived. In the midst of this, Judy falls from the bell tower to her death.
Foreshadowing
When Midge tells Scottie that he can cure his vertigo by re-traumatizing himself, this foreshadows his eventual conquest of his fears. Gavin Elster's discussion of Madeleine's obsession with the past foreshadows Scottie's obsession with the past.
Understatement
Innovations in Filming or Lighting or Camera Techniques
The shots from Scottie's perspective when he is suffering from vertigo are innovative, as well as the nightmare sequence and Hitchcock's use of color and light to tell his story.
Allusions
Allusions to San Francisco history
Paradox
Scottie is in love with Madeleine, who is actually Judy, but he cannot love Judy as herself, and must reconstruct the woman he once loved. Paradoxically, Madeleine was always a performance, never a real person. Thus, Scottie is trying to fall in love with a character as well as a ghost.
Parallelism
The second half of the film is something of a reconstruction of the first half, with Scottie turning Judy back into Madeleine. Many places and people are revisited in disorienting and mysterious ways throughout the film.