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Select media
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Stills must not be reproduced, copied or downloaded in any way.
Film details
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Featuring
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Director
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Country
United Kingdom
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Year
1926
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Genre
Crime
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Type
Film
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Category
Fiction
Alternative titles
- The Lodger Alternative
- The Case of Jonathan Drew Alternative
Introduction
“Hitchcock’s trick is to make a moody expressionist film in a specifically English context”
Geoffrey Macnab, Sight & Sound, December 1999
“It is possible that this film is the finest British production ever made”. So claimed the review in the trade journal Bioscope of Hitchcock’s first thriller. A serial killer is terrorising fog-shrouded London, and a mysterious lodger soon becomes a suspect.
As with Cary Grant in Suspicion (1941), Alfred Hitchcock cannily cast matinee idol Ivor Novello in the title role and challenged his audience to think the worst of him. Visually, it was extraordinarily imaginative for the time, most notably in the scene in which Hitchcock installed a glass floor so that he could show the lodger pacing up and down in his room from below, as though overheard by his landlady. Tellingly, the killer’s victims have ‘golden curls’, a predilection mirrored by the director’s often troubling relationship with his beautiful blonde leading ladies later in his career.
As seen in Stage Fright (1949), The Wrong Man (1956), Frenzy (1972) and many others, innocent – and sometimes guilty – men under suspicion would be a popular motif in Hitchcock’s work.
Cast & Credits
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Cast
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Mrs Bunting, the landlady
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Mr Bunting, the landlady's husband
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Daisy Bunting
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Joe Betts, police detective
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the lodger
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[man in newsroom/on-looker at arrest?]
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[woman listening to wireless]
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Credits
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Direction:
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Director
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Assistant Director
Production:
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Production Company
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Presented by
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Presented by
Writing:
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Scenario
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[Scenario]
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Titling
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From the novel by
Photography:
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Photography
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[Director of Photography]
Editing:
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Editing
Design:
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Art Director
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Art Director
Titles:
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Title Design
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