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Shadow of a Doubt

Shadow of a Doubt is a 1943 American psychological thriller film noir directed by Alfred Hitchcock, and starring Teresa Wright and Joseph Cotten. Written by Thornton Wilder, Sally Benson, and Alma Reville, the film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Story for Gordon McDonell.

Shadow of a Doubt
Theatrical release poster, Style C
Directed byAlfred Hitchcock
Screenplay by
Story byGordon McDonell
Produced byJack H. Skirball
Starring
CinematographyJoseph A. Valentine
Edited byMilton Carruth
Music byDimitri Tiomkin (original)
Franz Lehár
Production
company
Skirball Productions
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • January 12, 1943 (1943-01-12)
Running time
108 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1.2 million (U.S. rentals)[2]

Charlotte "Charlie" Newton and her parents live in very quiet Santa Rosa, California. An unexpected visit by Charles Oakley, her charming and sophisticated "Uncle Charlie", brings much excitement to her family and the small town. That excitement turns to fear as young Charlie slowly realizes her uncle is in fact a wanted serial murderer known as the "Merry Widow" killer. The fear escalates when Oakley realizes she knows his secret.

In 1991, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress, being deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[3][4] The film was also Alfred Hitchcock's favorite of all of his films.[5]

Plot edit

Charlotte "Charlie" Newton is a bored teenage girl living in the idyllic town of Santa Rosa, California. She receives wonderful news: Her mother's younger brother (her eponym), Charles Oakley, is arriving for a visit. Upon his arrival, everyone is delighted, especially young Charlie. As a gesture of affection, Uncle Charlie gives his niece an emerald ring. However, she notices that it has someone else's initials engraved inside.

Not long afterward, two men appear at the Newton home, trying to take Uncle Charlie's picture. Young Charlie guesses they are undercover police detectives. One of them explains her uncle is one of two suspects who may be the "Merry Widow Murderer". Charlie refuses to believe it at first, but learns that the initials engraved inside the ring he gave her match those of one of the murdered women. She then notices Uncle Charlie begin to act strangely.

During dinner one night, Uncle Charlie lets his guard down and reveals his hatred of rich widows. He describes them as "fat, wheezing animals". Horrified, young Charlie runs out of the room. Uncle Charlie follows and takes her into a seedy bar. He admits he is one of the two murder suspects. He begs her for help; she reluctantly agrees not to say anything, as long as he leaves soon to avoid a horrible confrontation that would destroy her mother, who idolizes her younger brother.

 
Uncle Charlie (Joseph Cotten) confronts his niece (Teresa Wright) in a seedy bar about what she knows.

News breaks that an alternative suspect was chased by police and killed by an airplane propeller; it is assumed that he was the murderer. Uncle Charlie is delighted to be exonerated, but young Charlie knows all his secrets. Not long afterward, she falls down some dangerously steep stairs, which she later discovers were deliberately cut through.

After his supposed exoneration, Uncle Charlie indicates that he wants to settle down in Santa Rosa. Young Charlie says she will kill him if he stays. Later that night, Uncle Charlie lures her into the garage, starts the car engine, and jams the door so that the garage will fill with exhaust fumes. A friend happens to come by the house, hears Charlie banging on the garage door, and rescues her.

Uncle Charlie soon announces he is leaving for San Francisco – along with Mrs. Porter, a rich widow. At the train station, young Charlie boards the train, claiming to want to see Uncle Charlie's compartment. He plans to shove his niece out of the train after it picks up speed. A struggle between them ensues, and Uncle Charlie – the "Merry Widow Murderer" – loses, falling in front of an oncoming train.

At his funeral, Uncle Charlie is sentimentally honored by the townspeople. The detective returns, and Charlie confesses that she withheld crucial information. They resolve to keep Uncle Charlie's crimes a secret.

Cast edit

 
Promotional portrait of Teresa Wright for Shadow of a Doubt, the film for which she received her first top billing
  • Teresa Wright as Charlotte "Charlie" Newton who initially idolizes her loving uncle. Wright was given the screenplay, and pursued the role of Charlie due to her adoration of Hitchcock's work.[6]
  • Joseph Cotten as Charles "Uncle Charlie" Oakley. Cotten had a previously established relationship with Hitchcock which may have helped him get the role in the film.[6]
  • Macdonald Carey as Detective Jack Graham
  • Henry Travers as Joseph Newton, Young Charlie's father, who loves to read crime stories.
  • Patricia Collinge as Emma Newton, Young Charlie's mother and Uncle Charlie's sister. Emma was named after Hitchcock's mother, who died during production of the film.[6]
  • Wallace Ford as Detective Fred Saunders
  • Hume Cronyn as Herbie Hawkins, a neighbor and crime fiction buff. He discusses ideas for the perfect murder with Charlie's father.
  • Edna May Wonacott as Ann Newton. Wonacott was chosen for the role of Ann Newton by Alfred Hitchcock while they were waiting for a bus. She had no previous acting experience, and had to be coached by Hitchcock's daughter between takes.[6] Wonacott had received a seven-year contract with a film studio, and Hitchcock believed she would have a successful acting career.[7]
  • Charles Bates as Roger Newton
  • Irving Bacon as Station Master
  • Clarence Muse as Pullman Porter
  • Janet Shaw as Louise Finch
  • Estelle Jewell as Catherine

Uncredited cast[8] edit

Hitchcock's cameo edit

Alfred Hitchcock appears about 16 minutes into the film, on the train to Santa Rosa, playing bridge with Doctor and Mrs. Harry. Charlie is traveling on the train under the assumed name of Otis, and is lying down due to a migraine. Mrs. Harry is eager to help him, but her husband is not interested and keeps playing bridge. Doctor Harry replies to Hitchcock that he doesn't look well while Hitchcock is holding a full suit of spades, the best hand for bridge.[8]

Production edit

 
Santa Rosa railroad depot in 2010
 
1905 postcard of the Santa Rosa library

The project began when the head of David Selznick's story department, Margaret McDonell, told Hitchcock that her husband Gordon had an interesting idea for a novel that she thought would make a good movie. His idea, called "Uncle Charlie", was based on the true story of Earle Nelson, a serial killer of the late 1920s known as "the Gorilla Man".

Shadow of a Doubt was both filmed and set in Santa Rosa, California, which was portrayed as a paragon of a supposedly peaceful, small, pre-War American city. Since Thornton Wilder wrote the original script, the story is set in a small American town, a popular setting of Wilder's, but with an added Hitchcock touch to it. In Patrick McGilligan's biography of Hitchcock, he said the film was perhaps the most American film that Hitchcock had made up to that time.

The opening scenes take place in the East Ward (aka the "Ironbound"/"Down Neck" section of Newark, New Jersey). The city skyline and landmarks such as the Pulaski Skyway are featured in the opening shot. The location shots were used to comply with the wartime War Production Board restrictions of a maximum cost of $5,000 for set construction.[9]

An Italianate-style house, built in 1872, was used for exterior shots of the Newton family home. As of 2023, it is still standing, located at 904 McDonald Avenue in Santa Rosa.

The stone railway station in the film was built in 1904 for the Northwestern Pacific Railroad and is one of the few commercial buildings in central Santa Rosa to survive the earthquake of April 18, 1906. The station is currently a visitor center. The library was a Carnegie Library which was demolished in 1964 due to seismic concerns.[10] Some of the buildings in the center of Santa Rosa that are seen in the film were damaged or destroyed by earthquakes in 1969; much of the area was cleared of debris and largely rebuilt.

The film was scored by Dimitri Tiomkin, his first collaboration with Hitchcock (the others being Strangers on a Train, I Confess and Dial M for Murder). In his score, Tiomkin quotes the Merry Widow Waltz of Franz Lehár, often in somewhat distorted forms, as a leitmotif for Uncle Charlie and his serial murders. During the opening credits, the waltz theme is heard along with a prolonged shot of couples dancing.

Cinematography edit

 
Theatrical advertisement from 1943

Cinematographer Joseph A. Valentine described his work on the film: "Our Santa Rosa location was chosen because it seemed to typical of the average American small city, and offered, as well, the physical facilities the script demanded. There was a public square, around which much of the city's life resolves. There was an indefinable blending of small town and city, and of old and new, which made the town a much more typical background of an average American town than anything that could have been deliberately designed. The Santa Rosans were very cooperative, and most of our problems in these scenes were the ordinary ones of rigging scrims and placing reflectors or booster lights where they were needed.

The most spectatular part of our work was naturally the making of the night exterior sequences. We had with us two generator sets, ten 150-ampere arc spotlights, and the usual assortment of incandescent lights...making a total of 3,000 ampere maximum electrical capacity. With this we lit up an expanse of four city blocks for our night-effect long shots!....Oddly enough, one of our less spectatular night scenes proved really the harder problem. This was a sequence played around the city's public library. This building is a lovely Gothic structre, almost completely clothed in ivy. I think all of us were surprised at the way those dark green ivy leaves drank up the light. Actually, on our long shots of that single building we used every unit of lighting equipment we had with us—and we could very conveniently have used more if we had had them!....Frequently people who have seen these night scenes of ours have jumped to the conclusion that with such an area to illuminate we must have filmed them by day with Infra-Red film rather than actually by night. If only they'd seen how we worked to finish our night scenes before the Pacific Coast's "dim-out" order [of WWII] went into effect, they'd change their minds. All of our night scenes were filmed actually at night—and we just got under the wire, finishing the last one scarcely a matter of hours before the dim-out became effective."[11]

Reception edit

 
Alternate "Style D" theatrical release poster

Upon release, the film received unanimously positive reviews. Bosley Crowther, critic for The New York Times, loved the film, stating that "Hitchcock could raise more goose pimples to the square inch of a customer's flesh than any other director in Hollywood".[12] Time Magazine called the film "superb",[12] while Variety stated that "Hitchcock deftly etches his small-town characters and homey surroundings".[12] The entertainment trade paper The Film Daily was yet another reviewer in 1943 that praised every aspect of the production. The publication predicted big “box office” for theaters presenting Hitchcock's latest work, although in its detailed review of Shadow of a Doubt the paper does mistakenly refer to the director's 1941 film Suspicion as "'Suspense'":

Of all the startling feature films directed by Alfred Hitchcock—superman of suspense and wizard of mystery—this one is geared most highly to thrill American audiences and to pour coin into the coffers of U.S. theaters....There are no red herrings yanked across the trail in this attraction, as was the case in his recent hit, "Suspense". The story moves inflexibly toward an ending which the onlooker more or less clearly expects, but which elicits the periodic hope that the worst fears of Teresa Wright will not be realized. ...Production values under Jack H. Skirball are first-rate, as is Joseph Valentine’s photography. There isn’t a shadow of a doubt about this picture’s success.[13]

In a 1964 interview on Telescope with host Fletcher Markle, Markle noted, "Mr. Hitchcock, most critics have always considered Shadow of a Doubt, which you made in 1943, as your finest film." Hitchcock replied immediately, "Me too." Markle then asked, "That is your opinion of it still?" Hitchcock replied, "Oh, no question." At the time, Hitchcock's most recent work was Marnie. When later interviewed by François Truffaut, Hitchcock denied the suggestion that Shadow of a Doubt was his "favourite".[14] But in the audio interview with Truffaut, Hitchcock confirmed it was his favourite film, and later reiterated that Shadow of a Doubt was his favorite film in his interview with Mike Douglas in 1969 and in his interview with Dick Cavett in 1972. Alfred Hitchcock's daughter Pat Hitchcock also said that her father's favorite film was Shadow of a Doubt in Laurent Bouzereau’s 2000 documentary Beyond Doubt: The Making of Hitchcock's Favorite Film.

Today, the film is still regarded as a major work of Hitchcock's. Contemporary critic Dave Kehr called it Hitchcock's "first indisputable masterpiece."[15] In 2005 film critic David Denby of The New Yorker called it Hitchcock's most "intimate and heart-wrenching" film.[16] Based on 48 reviews on the website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has received a 100% approval rating, with a weighted average of 9.20/10. The site's consensus reads: "Alfred Hitchcock's earliest classic — and his own personal favorite — deals its flesh-crawling thrills as deftly as its finely shaded characters".[12] On Metacritic it has a score of 94 out of 100, based on reviews from 15 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[17] When asked by critics as to an overarching theme for the film Hitchcock responded: "Love and good order is no defense against evil". In his book Bambi vs. Godzilla, David Mamet calls it Hitchcock's finest film.[18] In his 2011 review of the film, film critic Roger Ebert gave the film four stars out of four and included it in his Great Movies list.[19] In 2022, Time Out magazine ranked the film at No. 41 on their list of "The 100 best thriller films of all time".[20]

Adaptations and remakes edit

Radio edit

The film was adapted for Cecil B. DeMille's Lux Radio Theater aired on January 3, 1944, with its original leading actress Teresa Wright and William Powell as Uncle Charlie (Patrick McGilligan said Hitchcock had originally wanted Powell to play Uncle Charlie, but MGM refused to lend the actor for the film). In 1950, Shadow of a Doubt was featured as a radio-play on Screen Directors Playhouse. It starred Cary Grant as Uncle Charlie and Betsy Drake as the young Charlie.[21] It was also adapted to the Ford Theater (February 18, 1949). The Screen Guild Theater adapted the film twice with Joseph Cotten, the first with Vanessa Brown as young Charlie, and the second with Deanna Durbin in the role. The Academy Award Theater production of Shadow of a Doubt was aired on September 11, 1946.[22]

Film edit

The film has been remade twice: in 1958 as Step Down to Terror,[23] and again (under the original title) as a 1991 TV movie in which Mark Harmon portrayed Uncle Charlie.[24]

Shadow of a Doubt influenced the beginning of Park Chan-wook's 2013 film Stoker.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "SHADOW OF A DOUBT (A)". British Board of Film Classification. February 10, 1943. Retrieved December 1, 2014.
  2. ^ "Top Grossers of the Season", Variety, 5 January 1944 p 54
  3. ^ "Complete National Film Registry Listing". Library of Congress. Retrieved May 11, 2020.
  4. ^ Kehr, Dave. "U.S. FILM REGISTRY ADDS 25 'SIGNIFICANT' MOVIES". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved May 11, 2020.
  5. ^ "Why Shadow of a Doubt is Hitchcock's Favorite". Brattle Blog. Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d "The Making of Hitchcock's 'Shadow of a Doubt'". March 20, 2022. from the original on May 17, 2023.
  7. ^ "The Pittsburgh Press – Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved May 17, 2023.
  8. ^ a b "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved February 17, 2022.
  9. ^ "$5,000 Production". Life. January 25, 1943. pp. 70–78.
  10. ^ "Santa Rosa's Carnegie Library". sonomalibrary.org. Retrieved May 18, 2019.
  11. ^ Valentine, Joseph A. "Using an Actual Town Instead of Movie Sets." American Cinematographer 23:10 (October 1942), 440-41, 461-62.
  12. ^ a b c d "Shadow of a Doubt". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  13. ^ "Reviews Of New Films", Shadow of a Doubt; The Film Daily (New York, N.Y.), January 8, 1943, page 5, columns 3-4. Internet Archive, San Francisco, California. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
  14. ^ Jim McDevitt, Eric San Juan. A Year of Hitchcock: 52 Weeks With the Master of Suspense. ISBN 9780810863880. Page 158.
  15. ^ "Shadow of a Doubt". Chicago Reader. April 5, 1985. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  16. ^ Denby, David (December 4, 2005). "Master's Choice". The New Yorker.
  17. ^ "Shadow of a Doubt". Metacritic.
  18. ^ David Mamet, Bambi vs. Godzilla (Vintage, 2008).
  19. ^ Ebert, Roger (November 9, 2011). "Uncle Charlie brings excitement to a small town". Roger Ebert.
  20. ^ "The 100 best thriller films of all time". Time Out. March 23, 2022.
  21. ^ "Other Cary Grant Radio Appearances". carygrantradio.com.
  22. ^ "Old Time Radio (OTR) Drama and Adventure".
  23. ^ Stephen Vagg, Rod Taylor: An Aussie in Hollywood, Bear Manor Media 2010 p. 58
  24. ^ Vagg, Stephen (March 25, 2023). "A Brief History of Hitchcock Remakes". Filmink.
  25. ^ Radish, Christina (August 3, 2010). "SDCC 2010: Wentworth Miller Interview RESIDENT EVIL: AFTERLIFE; Plus Updates on STOKER and UNCLE CHARLIE". collider.com. Retrieved March 8, 2011.

External links edit

Streaming audio

shadow, doubt, other, uses, disambiguation, 1943, american, psychological, thriller, film, noir, directed, alfred, hitchcock, starring, teresa, wright, joseph, cotten, written, thornton, wilder, sally, benson, alma, reville, film, nominated, academy, award, be. For other uses see Shadow of a Doubt disambiguation Shadow of a Doubt is a 1943 American psychological thriller film noir directed by Alfred Hitchcock and starring Teresa Wright and Joseph Cotten Written by Thornton Wilder Sally Benson and Alma Reville the film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Story for Gordon McDonell Shadow of a DoubtTheatrical release poster Style CDirected byAlfred HitchcockScreenplay byThornton Wilder Sally Benson Alma RevilleStory byGordon McDonellProduced byJack H SkirballStarringTeresa Wright Joseph Cotten Macdonald Carey Patricia Collinge Henry Travers Wallace FordCinematographyJoseph A ValentineEdited byMilton CarruthMusic byDimitri Tiomkin original Franz LeharProductioncompanySkirball ProductionsDistributed byUniversal PicturesRelease dateJanuary 12 1943 1943 01 12 Running time108 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBox office 1 2 million U S rentals 2 Charlotte Charlie Newton and her parents live in very quiet Santa Rosa California An unexpected visit by Charles Oakley her charming and sophisticated Uncle Charlie brings much excitement to her family and the small town That excitement turns to fear as young Charlie slowly realizes her uncle is in fact a wanted serial murderer known as the Merry Widow killer The fear escalates when Oakley realizes she knows his secret In 1991 the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress being deemed culturally historically or aesthetically significant 3 4 The film was also Alfred Hitchcock s favorite of all of his films 5 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 2 1 Uncredited cast 8 2 1 1 Hitchcock s cameo 3 Production 4 Cinematography 5 Reception 6 Adaptations and remakes 6 1 Radio 6 2 Film 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksPlot editCharlotte Charlie Newton is a bored teenage girl living in the idyllic town of Santa Rosa California She receives wonderful news Her mother s younger brother her eponym Charles Oakley is arriving for a visit Upon his arrival everyone is delighted especially young Charlie As a gesture of affection Uncle Charlie gives his niece an emerald ring However she notices that it has someone else s initials engraved inside Not long afterward two men appear at the Newton home trying to take Uncle Charlie s picture Young Charlie guesses they are undercover police detectives One of them explains her uncle is one of two suspects who may be the Merry Widow Murderer Charlie refuses to believe it at first but learns that the initials engraved inside the ring he gave her match those of one of the murdered women She then notices Uncle Charlie begin to act strangely During dinner one night Uncle Charlie lets his guard down and reveals his hatred of rich widows He describes them as fat wheezing animals Horrified young Charlie runs out of the room Uncle Charlie follows and takes her into a seedy bar He admits he is one of the two murder suspects He begs her for help she reluctantly agrees not to say anything as long as he leaves soon to avoid a horrible confrontation that would destroy her mother who idolizes her younger brother nbsp Uncle Charlie Joseph Cotten confronts his niece Teresa Wright in a seedy bar about what she knows News breaks that an alternative suspect was chased by police and killed by an airplane propeller it is assumed that he was the murderer Uncle Charlie is delighted to be exonerated but young Charlie knows all his secrets Not long afterward she falls down some dangerously steep stairs which she later discovers were deliberately cut through After his supposed exoneration Uncle Charlie indicates that he wants to settle down in Santa Rosa Young Charlie says she will kill him if he stays Later that night Uncle Charlie lures her into the garage starts the car engine and jams the door so that the garage will fill with exhaust fumes A friend happens to come by the house hears Charlie banging on the garage door and rescues her Uncle Charlie soon announces he is leaving for San Francisco along with Mrs Porter a rich widow At the train station young Charlie boards the train claiming to want to see Uncle Charlie s compartment He plans to shove his niece out of the train after it picks up speed A struggle between them ensues and Uncle Charlie the Merry Widow Murderer loses falling in front of an oncoming train At his funeral Uncle Charlie is sentimentally honored by the townspeople The detective returns and Charlie confesses that she withheld crucial information They resolve to keep Uncle Charlie s crimes a secret Cast edit nbsp Promotional portrait of Teresa Wright for Shadow of a Doubt the film for which she received her first top billing Teresa Wright as Charlotte Charlie Newton who initially idolizes her loving uncle Wright was given the screenplay and pursued the role of Charlie due to her adoration of Hitchcock s work 6 Joseph Cotten as Charles Uncle Charlie Oakley Cotten had a previously established relationship with Hitchcock which may have helped him get the role in the film 6 Macdonald Carey as Detective Jack Graham Henry Travers as Joseph Newton Young Charlie s father who loves to read crime stories Patricia Collinge as Emma Newton Young Charlie s mother and Uncle Charlie s sister Emma was named after Hitchcock s mother who died during production of the film 6 Wallace Ford as Detective Fred Saunders Hume Cronyn as Herbie Hawkins a neighbor and crime fiction buff He discusses ideas for the perfect murder with Charlie s father Edna May Wonacott as Ann Newton Wonacott was chosen for the role of Ann Newton by Alfred Hitchcock while they were waiting for a bus She had no previous acting experience and had to be coached by Hitchcock s daughter between takes 6 Wonacott had received a seven year contract with a film studio and Hitchcock believed she would have a successful acting career 7 Charles Bates as Roger Newton Irving Bacon as Station Master Clarence Muse as Pullman Porter Janet Shaw as Louise Finch Estelle Jewell as Catherine Uncredited cast 8 edit Alfred Hitchcock as Man playing cards on train Minerva Urecal as Mrs Henderson Isabel Randolph as Mrs Margaret Green Earle S Dewey as Mr Norton Eily Malyon as Librarian Edward Fielding as Doctor on Train Vaughan Glaser as Dr Phillips Virginia Brissac as Mrs Phillips Sarah Edwards as Wife of Doctor on Train Ruth Lee as Mrs MacCurdy Grandon Rhoades as Reverend MacCurdy Edwin Stanley as Mr Green Frances Carson as Mrs Potter Byron Shores as Detective John McGuire as Detective Constance Purdy as Mrs Martin Shirley Mills as Young girl Hitchcock s cameo edit Alfred Hitchcock appears about 16 minutes into the film on the train to Santa Rosa playing bridge with Doctor and Mrs Harry Charlie is traveling on the train under the assumed name of Otis and is lying down due to a migraine Mrs Harry is eager to help him but her husband is not interested and keeps playing bridge Doctor Harry replies to Hitchcock that he doesn t look well while Hitchcock is holding a full suit of spades the best hand for bridge 8 Production edit nbsp Santa Rosa railroad depot in 2010 nbsp 1905 postcard of the Santa Rosa library The project began when the head of David Selznick s story department Margaret McDonell told Hitchcock that her husband Gordon had an interesting idea for a novel that she thought would make a good movie His idea called Uncle Charlie was based on the true story of Earle Nelson a serial killer of the late 1920s known as the Gorilla Man Shadow of a Doubt was both filmed and set in Santa Rosa California which was portrayed as a paragon of a supposedly peaceful small pre War American city Since Thornton Wilder wrote the original script the story is set in a small American town a popular setting of Wilder s but with an added Hitchcock touch to it In Patrick McGilligan s biography of Hitchcock he said the film was perhaps the most American film that Hitchcock had made up to that time The opening scenes take place in the East Ward aka the Ironbound Down Neck section of Newark New Jersey The city skyline and landmarks such as the Pulaski Skyway are featured in the opening shot The location shots were used to comply with the wartime War Production Board restrictions of a maximum cost of 5 000 for set construction 9 An Italianate style house built in 1872 was used for exterior shots of the Newton family home As of 2023 it is still standing located at 904 McDonald Avenue in Santa Rosa The stone railway station in the film was built in 1904 for the Northwestern Pacific Railroad and is one of the few commercial buildings in central Santa Rosa to survive the earthquake of April 18 1906 The station is currently a visitor center The library was a Carnegie Library which was demolished in 1964 due to seismic concerns 10 Some of the buildings in the center of Santa Rosa that are seen in the film were damaged or destroyed by earthquakes in 1969 much of the area was cleared of debris and largely rebuilt The film was scored by Dimitri Tiomkin his first collaboration with Hitchcock the others being Strangers on a Train I Confess and Dial M for Murder In his score Tiomkin quotes the Merry Widow Waltz of Franz Lehar often in somewhat distorted forms as a leitmotif for Uncle Charlie and his serial murders During the opening credits the waltz theme is heard along with a prolonged shot of couples dancing Cinematography edit nbsp Theatrical advertisement from 1943 Cinematographer Joseph A Valentine described his work on the film Our Santa Rosa location was chosen because it seemed to typical of the average American small city and offered as well the physical facilities the script demanded There was a public square around which much of the city s life resolves There was an indefinable blending of small town and city and of old and new which made the town a much more typical background of an average American town than anything that could have been deliberately designed The Santa Rosans were very cooperative and most of our problems in these scenes were the ordinary ones of rigging scrims and placing reflectors or booster lights where they were needed The most spectatular part of our work was naturally the making of the night exterior sequences We had with us two generator sets ten 150 ampere arc spotlights and the usual assortment of incandescent lights making a total of 3 000 ampere maximum electrical capacity With this we lit up an expanse of four city blocks for our night effect long shots Oddly enough one of our less spectatular night scenes proved really the harder problem This was a sequence played around the city s public library This building is a lovely Gothic structre almost completely clothed in ivy I think all of us were surprised at the way those dark green ivy leaves drank up the light Actually on our long shots of that single building we used every unit of lighting equipment we had with us and we could very conveniently have used more if we had had them Frequently people who have seen these night scenes of ours have jumped to the conclusion that with such an area to illuminate we must have filmed them by day with Infra Red film rather than actually by night If only they d seen how we worked to finish our night scenes before the Pacific Coast s dim out order of WWII went into effect they d change their minds All of our night scenes were filmed actually at night and we just got under the wire finishing the last one scarcely a matter of hours before the dim out became effective 11 Reception edit nbsp Alternate Style D theatrical release posterUpon release the film received unanimously positive reviews Bosley Crowther critic for The New York Times loved the film stating that Hitchcock could raise more goose pimples to the square inch of a customer s flesh than any other director in Hollywood 12 Time Magazine called the film superb 12 while Variety stated that Hitchcock deftly etches his small town characters and homey surroundings 12 The entertainment trade paper The Film Daily was yet another reviewer in 1943 that praised every aspect of the production The publication predicted big box office for theaters presenting Hitchcock s latest work although in its detailed review of Shadow of a Doubt the paper does mistakenly refer to the director s 1941 film Suspicion as Suspense Of all the startling feature films directed by Alfred Hitchcock superman of suspense and wizard of mystery this one is geared most highly to thrill American audiences and to pour coin into the coffers of U S theaters There are no red herrings yanked across the trail in this attraction as was the case in his recent hit Suspense The story moves inflexibly toward an ending which the onlooker more or less clearly expects but which elicits the periodic hope that the worst fears of Teresa Wright will not be realized Production values under Jack H Skirball are first rate as is Joseph Valentine s photography There isn t a shadow of a doubt about this picture s success 13 In a 1964 interview on Telescope with host Fletcher Markle Markle noted Mr Hitchcock most critics have always considered Shadow of a Doubt which you made in 1943 as your finest film Hitchcock replied immediately Me too Markle then asked That is your opinion of it still Hitchcock replied Oh no question At the time Hitchcock s most recent work was Marnie When later interviewed by Francois Truffaut Hitchcock denied the suggestion that Shadow of a Doubt was his favourite 14 But in the audio interview with Truffaut Hitchcock confirmed it was his favourite film and later reiterated that Shadow of a Doubt was his favorite film in his interview with Mike Douglas in 1969 and in his interview with Dick Cavett in 1972 Alfred Hitchcock s daughter Pat Hitchcock also said that her father s favorite film was Shadow of a Doubt in Laurent Bouzereau s 2000 documentary Beyond Doubt The Making of Hitchcock s Favorite Film Today the film is still regarded as a major work of Hitchcock s Contemporary critic Dave Kehr called it Hitchcock s first indisputable masterpiece 15 In 2005 film critic David Denby of The New Yorker called it Hitchcock s most intimate and heart wrenching film 16 Based on 48 reviews on the website Rotten Tomatoes the film has received a 100 approval rating with a weighted average of 9 20 10 The site s consensus reads Alfred Hitchcock s earliest classic and his own personal favorite deals its flesh crawling thrills as deftly as its finely shaded characters 12 On Metacritic it has a score of 94 out of 100 based on reviews from 15 critics indicating universal acclaim 17 When asked by critics as to an overarching theme for the film Hitchcock responded Love and good order is no defense against evil In his book Bambi vs Godzilla David Mamet calls it Hitchcock s finest film 18 In his 2011 review of the film film critic Roger Ebert gave the film four stars out of four and included it in his Great Movies list 19 In 2022 Time Out magazine ranked the film at No 41 on their list of The 100 best thriller films of all time 20 Adaptations and remakes editRadio edit The film was adapted for Cecil B DeMille s Lux Radio Theater aired on January 3 1944 with its original leading actress Teresa Wright and William Powell as Uncle Charlie Patrick McGilligan said Hitchcock had originally wanted Powell to play Uncle Charlie but MGM refused to lend the actor for the film In 1950 Shadow of a Doubt was featured as a radio play on Screen Directors Playhouse It starred Cary Grant as Uncle Charlie and Betsy Drake as the young Charlie 21 It was also adapted to the Ford Theater February 18 1949 The Screen Guild Theater adapted the film twice with Joseph Cotten the first with Vanessa Brown as young Charlie and the second with Deanna Durbin in the role The Academy Award Theater production of Shadow of a Doubt was aired on September 11 1946 22 Film edit The film has been remade twice in 1958 as Step Down to Terror 23 and again under the original title as a 1991 TV movie in which Mark Harmon portrayed Uncle Charlie 24 Shadow of a Doubt influenced the beginning of Park Chan wook s 2013 film Stoker 25 See also editList of films with a 100 rating on Rotten Tomatoes a film review aggregator websiteReferences edit SHADOW OF A DOUBT A British Board of Film Classification February 10 1943 Retrieved December 1 2014 Top Grossers of the Season Variety 5 January 1944 p 54 Complete National Film Registry Listing Library of Congress Retrieved May 11 2020 Kehr Dave U S FILM REGISTRY ADDS 25 SIGNIFICANT MOVIES chicagotribune com Retrieved May 11 2020 Why Shadow of a Doubt is Hitchcock s Favorite Brattle Blog Retrieved March 16 2020 a b c d The Making of Hitchcock s Shadow of a Doubt March 20 2022 Archived from the original on May 17 2023 The Pittsburgh Press Google News Archive Search news google com Retrieved May 17 2023 a b AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved February 17 2022 5 000 Production Life January 25 1943 pp 70 78 Santa Rosa s Carnegie Library sonomalibrary org Retrieved May 18 2019 Valentine Joseph A Using an Actual Town Instead of Movie Sets American Cinematographer 23 10 October 1942 440 41 461 62 a b c d Shadow of a Doubt Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved December 21 2021 Reviews Of New Films Shadow of a Doubt The Film Daily New York N Y January 8 1943 page 5 columns 3 4 Internet Archive San Francisco California Retrieved August 27 2018 Jim McDevitt Eric San Juan A Year of Hitchcock 52 Weeks With the Master of Suspense ISBN 9780810863880 Page 158 Shadow of a Doubt Chicago Reader April 5 1985 Retrieved April 19 2016 Denby David December 4 2005 Master s Choice The New Yorker Shadow of a Doubt Metacritic David Mamet Bambi vs Godzilla Vintage 2008 Ebert Roger November 9 2011 Uncle Charlie brings excitement to a small town Roger Ebert The 100 best thriller films of all time Time Out March 23 2022 Other Cary Grant Radio Appearances carygrantradio com Old Time Radio OTR Drama and Adventure Stephen Vagg Rod Taylor An Aussie in Hollywood Bear Manor Media 2010 p 58 Vagg Stephen March 25 2023 A Brief History of Hitchcock Remakes Filmink Radish Christina August 3 2010 SDCC 2010 Wentworth Miller Interview RESIDENT EVIL AFTERLIFE Plus Updates on STOKER and UNCLE CHARLIE collider com Retrieved March 8 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Shadow of a Doubt nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shadow of a Doubt film Shadow of a Doubt essay by Thomas Leitch at National Film Registry Shadow of a Doubt at IMDb nbsp Shadow of a Doubt at AllMovie nbsp Shadow of a Doubt at the TCM Movie Database nbsp Shadow of a Doubt at the American Film Institute Catalog nbsp Shadow of a Doubt at Rotten Tomatoes nbsp Shadow of a Doubt at Box Office Mojo nbsp Shadow of a Doubt essay by Daniel Eagan in America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry A amp C Black 2010 ISBN 0826429777 pages 360 361 Streaming audio Shadow of a Doubt on Screen Guild Theater May 24 1943 Shadow of a Doubt on Lux Radio Theater January 3 1944 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shadow of a Doubt amp oldid 1218104935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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