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  1. 30 titles. Sort by List order. 1. Rear Window. 1954 1h 52m PG. 8.5 (529K) Rate. 100 Metascore. A house and wheelchair-bound photographer, his fashion model girlfriend and his visiting Nurse spy on neighbors from his courtyard window. Despite skepticism by his PD Detective friend, they're convinced one of his neighbors is a murderer.

  2. Sep 7, 2020 · Find out why Hitchcock remains the undisputed Master of Supsense as we look at his films by Tomatometer!

    • Rear Window (1954) Hitchcock's greatest film is a perfect thriller that interrogates our obsession with observing the lives of others. It follows Jeff (Jimmy Stewart), a photographer in a wheelchair recovering from a broken leg, who snoops on his apartment complex's neighbors through the lens of his camera, and soon uncovers a confounding mystery.
    • Psycho (1960) Hitchcock's back-to-the-basics, infamous thriller essentially invented the horror slasher subgenre, and it playfully upends our expectations about cinematic perspectives, points of view, and just how far a film's narrative can go to pull the rug out from under audience expectations.
    • Notorious (1946) You can find some of Hitchcock's tensest sequences and most creative shots in this espionage drama, which follows a German American woman (Ingrid Bergman) as she infiltrates a group of Nazis in Brazil.
    • Vertigo (1958) Is Vertigo a film primarily concerned with unquenchable desire? Doomed romance? Sins of the past? Mental illness? There are so many different ways to read Hitchcock's dizzying noir.
    • Psycho (1960) Starring Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh, Vera Miles and John Gavin.
    • Rear Window (1954) Starring James Stewart and Grace Kelly. Hitchcock asks uncomfortable questions about the human desire to watch and consume. Hitchcock's tale of obsession and voyeurism is meticulously detailed, both in the choreographed actions of the characters, and also in the wonderfully constructed sets.
    • Vertigo (1958) Starring James Stewart and Kim Novak. Vertigo would hold a special place in film history if all it had to its credit was its pioneering use of the dolly zoom, which creates a disorienting, dizzying effect.
    • North By Northwest (1959) Starring Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint and James Mason. Three years before the James Bond franchise took off, Hitchcock made a classic spy thriller, about an advertising executive caught up in a ludicrous case of mistaken identity.
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    • 'Shadow of a Doubt' (1943) Starring: Teresa Wright, Joseph Cotten, Macdonald Carey. Shadow of a Doubt was the movie that Hitchcock viewed most favorably out of all the movies he directed.
    • 'Dial M for Murder' (1954) Starring: Ray Milland, Grace Kelly, Robert Cummings. There were two very good Alfred Hitchcock thrillers starring Grace Kelly released in 1954, with Dial M for Murder inevitably placing second.
    • 'The Lady Vanishes' (1938) Starring: Margaret Lockwood, Michael Redgrave, Paul Lukas. Naturally, Alfred Hitchcock's American movies tend to get a little more recognition than his British films.
    • 'Lifeboat' (1944) Starring: Tallulah Bankhead, William Bendix, Walter Slezak. There's always something thrilling about movies with limited locations, and within this sub-genre of thrillers, Lifeboat stands out.
  3. Alfred Hitchcock, the Master of Suspense, made some of cinema's best films during his celebrated career. We ranked the 15 best Alfred Hitchcock movies.

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  5. Jul 23, 2024 · When putting together a list of the 25 Best Alfred Hitchcock Movies, it’s like plunging into a spectacular alternate universe of wit, verve, and style.

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