Impressive mise-en-scène for Hitchcock’s Rear
WindowIn Rear Window, director Alfred Hitchcock literally
sets the stage by raising three bamboo window blinds one by
one as the credits roll [1]. The principal mise-en-scène of the
movie looks very much like a stage set; in fact, the single set
was built to actual size——rising five stories——and filled
one of the biggest soundstages on the studio lot. When
completed, it included thirty-one individual apartments,
twelve of them fully furnished, around a central courtyard
[2], creating a memorable likeness of Greenwich Village in
the early 1950s. The scope of this wonderful set permits the
main character——Jeff Jefferies (James Stewart), who is
temporarily immobilized in a wheelchair——to observe the
activities of most of his neighbors. Indeed, there is little else
he can do with his time. What we see is what he sees. Jeff
becomes particularly interested in a married couple, seen
here in their large apartment [3]. Lars Thorwald is in the
kitchen (left) preparing a meal for his wife, a nagging invalid,
who is in the bedroom (right). Over the next few days, Jeff
will become preoccupied with Thorwald’s behavior. His
suspicions eventually lead to the police arresting Thorwald
for the murder of his wife. There are also less suspenseful
things to occupy Jeff’s voyeurism. Part of this courtyard
complex is a small house with a terrace [4], where Jeff sees
a young woman——Miss Torso, a dancer——entertaining several
male friends. At the same time, the expansive set enables
him to look through a passageway (far left) at people walking
on a street. The street lamp and the human activity not only
add the illusion of spatial depth, but also confirm that there
is a world outside the courtyard.
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of quadrilles, mazurkas, and waltzes. Visconti’s care
with the minute details of the decor, costumes, and
characters’ relationship to this environment is true
to the time, space, and rhythm of life in the period.
The prince wanders from room to room, greeting
old friends, reflecting on change. His only moment
of real engagement in this sweepingly romantic
ball is the powerful moment when he dances a waltz
with Angelica (Claudia Cardinale), the fiancée of
Tancredi (Alain Delon), the prince’s nephew. The
daughter of a crude but wealthy bourgeois, Angelica
is unquestionably the most beautiful woman in the
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