Screenings at 2.30PM and 7.30pm
Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Stars: Cary Grant, Ingrid Bergman, Claude Rains
Along with Casablanca, Notorious is the film that assures Ingrid Bergman’s immortality. Set in the Rio of 1946, she plays Alicia Huberman, a woman whose ‘notorious’ reputation encourages US agent Devlin (Grant) to recruit her to infiltrate the Nazi spy ring led by Sebastian (Rains).
Bergman is perfectly cast, while Hitchcock’s writing and direction are at their best. The plot is ingenious, but very much ‘of its time’ – film historians speculate whether the villains of the piece would have been communists rather than Nazis had the it been written 6 months later.
The expert direction also manages to smartly sidestep the Hays Code restriction (no kiss shall last more than 3 seconds) to get a 3 minute smooch onto the screen. And Hitchcock’s trademark, precisely choreographed visuals ratchet up the tension.
The film is now 70 years old, so any archive copies of contemporary Reviews that might be lurking on the internet are of limited relevance to the modern film-goer. But there are plenty of retrospectives. Here’s a couple from: The Guardian here; and Roger Ebert
Notoriety (or fame) is good for snippet longevity. In contrast to the dearth of material relating to The Bolshoi Ballet (screening at David Lean earlier in November), made 11 years after Notorious, youtube can still bring you the ‘theatrical’ Trailer:
[fvplayer src=”https://youtu.be/H8f4UOtLf5Q”]
David Lean Cinema, Croydon on Thursday 17th November 2016
Shows start at 2.30PM or 7.30PM, Ticket prices: £8.00 & £6.50 (concessions)
– click on the time to make a booking