A while ago I watched Hitchcock’s film VERTIGO again. The more I watch
his movies the more I love Kim Novak, more than other Hitchcock female
leads such as Grace Kelly and probably right up there with the
extraordinary Tippi Hedren. And the more I marvel at the way Hitchcock
movies combines excellence with popular appeal...
Sometimes the
director cleverly mined novels of the day when making his movies. I
think most people know that THE BIRDS was based on a Daphne duMaurier
novella. Fewer would know that he used Winston Graham’s book by that
name as the basis of the script of MARNIE. And I bet almost no one
knows that VERTIGO is based on a French novel called D’ENTRE LES MORTS
(1954), by the highly successful French crime novel duo of Boileau and
Narcejac (although the book is still knocking around—I saw a translated
copy in a bookstore last week.)
This writing duo thought of
themselves as anti-Golden Age crime writers, melding victim and
perpetrator to the deliberate frustration of the reader. Their story is
set in France during that strange period at the beginning of WW2 called
the Phony War. They integrate the strangeness (real/unreal) of the
time into their narrative of things and people not being what they seem.
It’s an unsettling read. Hitchcock captures the sickly aspect of it
in Jimmy Stewart’s romantic obsession, but it
’s Kim Novak’s louche and
layered portrayal of Judy/Madeleine that stays with me when I watch
VERTIGO nowadays.
Judy and Marnie? Don’t we really want these flawed
enigmas to get away? I mean, really get away, not fessing up to Jimmy
Stewart or forced into marriage with Sean Connery.
While I was
writing AFTER THE WINTER, I had such a clear mental picture of the
conniving and secretive “confidential secretary,” Janine Douglas,
including every last lovely physical detail. It was only afterwards
that I realized I’d based it on the Kim Novak character in VERTIGO, with
some Marnie thrown in.
Remember those iconic scenes near the
beginning of MARNIE, when we see her systematically disposing of her old
identity and dressing for her new part, right down to the Albert’s
“custom fit hosiery?” And then, a paragon of sixties fashion, walking
away from us at the railway station, carrying her snazzy new suitcase
light with embezzled cash? I don’t want to give away the ending of
AFTER THE WINTER, so I’ll just leave you with this... What if the movie
had ended there?
Anna Dowdall
www.annadowdall.com
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