The film commentary track by screenwriter Ernest Lehman, is less impressive than the documentary. Lehman says little of interest or import and long pauses infect the track. Even when speaking, the man seems half asleep. Since they tracked down Saint for the documentary it would have been nice to have heard her thoughts on the film, especially if paired up with Lehman. Two theatrical trailers are included: one that is a standard 1950s trailer and the other one of Hitchcock’s little non sequitur skit trailers. There’s also a black and white television commercial for the film. Bizarrely, there is a stand-alone music only track of Herrmann’s wan score. There is also a stills gallery and cast bios page. For aficionados, Hitchcock’s cameo comes a few minutes into the movie, when a bus door slams shut in his face, as he tries to board it.
North By Northwest, whose title is both manifest - given the film’s final setting - and obscure and of unknown provenance, although oddly linked to a supposed quote from William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, is not a great film, but it is a terrific movie, and because it is such utter and unrepentant fluff it holds up much better than many other 1950s vintage films, including many of Hitchcock’s own overrated ‘masterpieces’, such as Rear Window and Vertigo. Yes, if you are the type who must go over everything with even a coarse-tooth comb, the film simply will not work, but if you trust that the fun will leave your mind as unmussed as Cary Grant’s coiffure, then watch it. After all, the perfect hair of Cary Grant is never something to be diminished.







Article comments
1 - Jonathan Little
I can't say I agree with your assessment of Herrmann's score. The music is classic Herrmann from the Overture to the Finale. How is that opening fandango anything but memorable? It had me hooked immediately the first time I heard it. Then there's the love theme with various different renditions, the Mt. Rushmore suspense music, etc. If you want to hear scores from Herrmann that could honestly be considered "least memorable," you need to check out wonderful films like JOY IN THE MORNING, BLUE DENIM, THE NAKED AND THE DEAD, or TENDER IS THE NIGHT.
2 - Rodney Welch
And what in the hell does this mean: "While the cinematography by Robert Burks is solid, there are no eye-popping moments..."
Excuse me? Are you blind? You don't call the crop-duster scene eye-popping? What about the ending on Mount Rushmore? You don't think that's masterful cinematography? What does cinematography mean to you, if anything?
3 - Dan Schneider
Jon- compared to Psycho, or even The 7th Voyage of Sinbad, this score is rather serviceable, at best. Hear a few bars of the Psycho theeme and you know it instantly. Not so here.
Eye popping as in the great landscape cinematography of an Antonioni, the nature shots of a Herzog, the penetrating visuals of an Ozu. No, the crop duster and Rushmore secenes are standard thriller pieces. Do you consider True Lies a great work of cinematography? The difference is the visuals having a meaning aside from the script, and engaging a lasting memory. The sort of chase scenes you describe have been done before and since, and better. Watch a Buster Keaton or Harold Lloyd silent and you'll see.
The film is a good popcorn movie, but nothing deep- i.e.- Hitchcock at his finest.
4 - Rodney Welch
There isn't a shot in anything by Antonioni or Ozu that is as memorable as the crop-duster sequence. It is a classic movie moment, sealed in every viewer's brain forever, which in my book means it is eye-popping.
5 - El Bicho
"pre-James Bondian Cold War thriller"
James Bond predates NxNW by six years. C*sino Royale was published in 1953.
6 - Dan Schneider
Rod- gimme a break. There's nothing in NXNW that comes close to the cinematography in L'Eclisse or L'Avventura, much less the bravura ending of The Passenger.
And the end shots at a beach in Late Spring is far deeper and more touching than the plane sequence in NXNW- which was bettered even in It's A Mad Mad Mad Mad World.
El- the first Bond film was after NXNW. We're talking film, not books.
7 - Rodney Welch
Dan -- No one remembers any of that shit but geeks. It's impressive, sure, but EVERYONE remembers being gripped by the sequence in North By Northwest. No one whoever sees it will forget it. You cannot say this about the cinematography of Antonioni and Ozu, and I think there are fans of both men who won't recall everything you refer to. I saw Late Spring twice a few months ago, and I don't remember anything about a beach. I trust you that it was in there, but what really stuck with me were the scenes between the father and daughter.
I wouldn't normally admit this lapse, but Colin McGinn's new book The Power of Film gave me permission, since he pointed out how easily viewers tend to forget a movie within days if not hours after it's over.
But I contend no one has ever forgotten the crop-duster sequence. This may not make it on par with the greatest cinematography ever, but it certainly indicates that your refusal to see it as "eye-popping" is just mere disingenuousness.
8 - Dan Schneider
Rod-
Your average movie goer remembers no films earlier than a decade ago. To ask them of Hitchcock is like asking them of Fatty Arbuckle. C'mon, be serious.
Technically, 50% or more of the crop duster sequence was filmed on rear screen projection, so similar scenes in, say, a True Lies are far better.
Given the reality of public forgetfulness, yr points re: Ozu and Antonioni, and Hitchcock have to be taken in context of true cineastes, and no one there will argue that that or any Hitch scene will stick as long as some of the classic Ozu shots- i.e.- the bottle and lighthouse from Floating Weeds, or the end of The Passenger, or the last ten minutes of L'Eclisse.
It's comparing cotton candy to a steak. I recently phoned a friend, and we talked nearly 20 minutes on the end of The Passenger alone. Hitchcock- and some of his films, got a shrug.
So, if you're saying Hitch and his medium were more LCD and pedestrian- I accede, but yr avr viewer today wwill not recall that sequence any more than an Ozu scene.
9 - Dave
I have a question - in the last scene, vanDamme is shown along with the Professor and other policemen. He was not handcuffed and his tone gave the impression that he was on CIA's side. I didn't quite understand what happened. So was he really the villain?
10 - Robert Keller
No, vanDamme is not in handcuffs, but, yes, he's certainly the bad guy.
And Herrmann's score is far from wan; it's among the best ear candy in cinama history. The opening fandango is repeated three times (drunk car ride and Mount Rushmore) with terrific effect.
11 - JJ
Boy, where to start?
Eva Marie Saint was quite good in this.
Young women do like older men (see Harrison Ford), so it didn't seem unusual.
What is highly unusual is finding the word "boner" in a film review... eeks!
Also, wouldn't Eva Marie Saint be a little lower in the "Hitchcockian blond goddess pantheon"???
Well behind Kim Novack and Tippy at least.
The ending shot where Cary pulls Eva Marie Saint up and cuts to the train cabin was a great shot, brilliantly done,
and definitely not "atrocious". Now you're not just nit picking, but getting a little silly.
I agree with other comments about Herrmann's score. The music is truly great work and one of his best.
At this point,
I had to stop reading any further.
12 - xyz
I fully agree with the review. I saw the film because I read somewhere it was one of the best Hitchcock's films. What a mistake. Eve Marie Saint's performance is awfull, the plot is a pandemonium and the cut between the last two scenes is indeed atrocious.