Peeping Tom
Genre: horror thriller
With: Karlheinz
Böhm (Mark Lewis), Anna Massey (Helen Stephens), Maxine Audley (Mrs. Stephens),
Moira Shearer (Vivian), Brenda Bruce (Dora), Pamela Green (Millie), Esmond
Knight (Arthur Baden), Shirley Anne Field (Pauline Shields), Michael Goodliffe
(Jarvis), Bartlett Mullins (Peters)
Director: Michael
Powell
Screenplay:
Leo Marks
Release: 1960
Studio:
Michael Powell (Theatre) Ltd.
Rating: -
MBiS score: 8.5/10
‟Do you want me to act frightened?”
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Story-line: one
night in London, Mark approaches a prostitute while filming her with a hidden
camera. Without even looking at
him, she says, ‟It’ll be two quid” and enters a building. He follows
obediently, knowing that he will soon be rewarded with his greatest of
pleasures: seeing that woman in a state of deathly fear.
Pluses:
excellent acting by Karlheinz Böhm (EFFI BRIEST) as a bruised, conflicted and
dangerous character, fine support from Anna Massey and a magnificent Maxine
Audley, economical direction, an unusually detailed screenplay (for horror
movies) bolstered by strong dialogues and disturbing surprises, modest but
efficient production values, fine cinematography and a powerful, tormented musical score by Brian
Easdale.
Minuses: this
suspenseful film is so creepy that it caused permanent damage to Michael
Powell’s career in cinema.
Comments:
this suspense film à la Hitchcock is remarkable for its painstaking − and
successful − efforts to investigate Mark’s motivations and psychology. It all
adds up to a haunting, effective and very gutsy thriller that will astound any
movie buff. If you don’t trust me on this, trust Martin Scorsese… he’s a big
fan of PEEPING TOM.
MBiS
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