Laid
up with a broken leg, photojournalist L.B. Jeffries (James Stewart)
is confined to his tiny, sweltering courtyard apartment. To pass the
time between visits from his nurse (Thelma Ritter) and his fashion model
girlfriend Lisa (Grace Kelly), the binocular-wielding Jeffries stares
through the rear window of his apartment at the goings-on in the other
apartments around his courtyard. As he watches his neighbors, he assigns
them such roles and character names as "Miss Torso" (Georgine Darcy),
a professional dancer with a healthy social life or "Miss Lonelyhearts"
(Judith Evelyn), a middle-aged woman who entertains nonexistent gentlemen
callers. Of particular interest is seemingly mild-mannered travelling
salesman Lars Thorwald (Raymond Burr), who is saddled with a nagging,
invalid wife. One afternoon, Thorwald pulls down his window shade, and
his wife's incessant bray comes to a sudden halt. Out of boredom, Jeffries
casually concocts a scenario in which Thorwald has murdered his wife
and disposed of the body in gruesome fashion. Trouble is, Jeffries'
musings just might happen to be the truth. One of Alfred Hitchcock's
very best efforts, Rear Window
is a crackling suspense film that also ranks with Michael Powell's Peeping
Tom (1960) as one of the movies' most trenchant dissections
of voyeurism. As in most Hitchcock films, the protagonist is a seemingly
ordinary man who gets himself in trouble for his secret desires.
|
|
Watch Free
Movies Online
Search
Movies
Genres
Stars
Home

Order
My Account
Shipping Info

Live Radio
Free E-Mail
MP3
DVD
Buy CDs

Hot Picks
Bowfinger
Entrapment
American Pie
Mystery Men
Runaway Bride
Summer of Sam
The General's Daughter
Thomas Crown
Ideal Husband
Mickey Blue Eyes
13th Warrior
Lake Placid
|