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The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog

The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog is a 1927 British silent thriller film directed by Alfred Hitchcock and starring Marie Ault, Arthur Chesney, June Tripp, Malcolm Keen and Ivor Novello. Hitchcock's third feature film, it was released on 14 February 1927 in London and on 10 June 1928 in New York City. The film is based on the 1913 novel The Lodger by Marie Belloc Lowndes and the play Who Is He? co-written by Belloc Lowndes. Its plot concerns the hunt for a Jack the Ripper-like serial killer in London.[1]

The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog
US bootleg DVD pairing the film with Hitchcock's Murder! (1930)
Directed byAlfred Hitchcock
Screenplay byEliot Stannard
Based onThe Lodger
1913 novel
by Marie Belloc Lowndes
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyGaetano di Ventimiglia
Edited byIvor Montagu
Production
company
Distributed byWoolf & Freedman Film Service
Release date
  • 14 February 1927 (1927-02-14) (UK)
Running time
90 minutes (2012 restoration)[1]
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageSilent film with English intertitles
BudgetUK £12,000

Hitchcock's first thriller, the film established him as a name director.[2] Upon its release the trade journal Bioscope wrote: "It is possible that this film is the finest British production ever made".[2]

Plot

A young blonde woman screams. She is the seventh victim of a serial killer known as the Avenger, who targets young blonde women on Tuesday evenings.

That night, blonde model Daisy Bunting is at a fashion show when she and the other showgirls hear the news. The blonde girls are horrified, hiding their hair with dark wigs or hats. Daisy returns home to her parents and her policeman sweetheart Joe, who have been reading about the crime in the newspaper.

A handsome but secretive young man bearing a strong resemblance to the description of the murderer arrives at the Bunting house and asks about their room for rent. Mrs. Bunting shows him the room, which is decorated with portraits of beautiful young blonde women. He pays her a month's rent in advance. The lodger turns all the portraits around to face the wall and requests that they be removed. Daisy enters to remove the portraits and is attracted to the lodger. The women return downstairs, where they hear the lodger's heavy footsteps as he paces the floor.

The relationship between Daisy and the reclusive lodger gradually becomes serious, making Joe, who is newly assigned to the Avenger case, unhappy. Mrs. Bunting is awoken late at night by the lodger leaving the house. She attempts to search his room, but a small cabinet is locked tight. In the morning, another blonde girl is found dead, just around the corner.

The police observe that the murders are moving towards the Buntings' neighbourhood. The Buntings believe that the lodger is the Avenger, and they try to prevent Daisy spending time with him. The next Tuesday night, Daisy and the lodger sneak away for a late-night date. Joe tracks them down and confronts them, and Daisy breaks up with him. Joe begins to piece together the events of the previous weeks and convinces himself that the lodger is indeed the Avenger.

With a warrant and two fellow officers, Joe returns to search the lodger's room. They find a leather bag containing a gun, a map plotting the location of the murders, newspaper clippings about the attacks and a photograph of a beautiful blonde woman, whom Joe recognizes as the Avenger's first victim. The lodger is arrested despite Daisy's protests, but he manages to run off into the night. Daisy finds him handcuffed, coatless and shivering. He explains that the woman in the photograph was his sister, a beautiful debutante murdered by the Avenger at a dance, and that he had vowed to his dying mother that he would bring the killer to justice.

Daisy takes the lodger to a pub and gives him brandy to warm him, hiding his handcuffs with a cloak. The suspicious locals pursue them, quickly becoming a mob. The lodger is surrounded and beaten, while Daisy and Joe, who have just heard that the real Avenger has been caught, try in vain to defend him. When all seems lost, a paperboy interrupts with the news that the real Avenger has been arrested. The mob releases the lodger, who falls into Daisy's waiting arms. Some time later, the lodger is shown to have fully recovered from his injuries and he and Daisy are happily living together.

Hitchcock's common themes

The Lodger continues the themes of Hitchcock's previous and future works;[1] according to Phillip French, writing in The Guardian, Hitchcock borders themes of "the fascination with technique and problem-solving, the obsession with blondes, the fear of authority, the ambivalence towards homosexuality"[3] in The Lodger.

Cast

Alfred Hitchcock's cameo occurs when he is sitting at a desk in the newsroom with his back to the camera and operating a telephone (5:33 minutes into the film). This is Hitchcock's first recognisable film cameo, and it became a standard practice for the remainder of his films.[4] Hitchcock said that his cameo came about because the actor who was supposed to play the part of the telephone operator failed to appear, so Hitchcock filled in for him. Film scholar William Rothman notes that Hitchcock's cameo from behind is shot in a very similar manner to that of the titular lodger.[5][6] According to some sources, including François Truffaut, Hitchcock makes another cameo at the very end of the film in the angry mob, but this has been disputed.[1][6][7]

Pre-production

The Lodger is based on a novel of the same name by Marie Belloc Lowndes about the Jack the Ripper murders, as well as the play Who Is He?, a comic stage adaptation of the novel by Horace Annesley Vachell that Hitchcock saw in 1915.[1][8]

News of the film was announced by the British press at the start of 1926 and Ivor Novello was announced as the lead in February.

Originally, the film was to end with ambiguity as to the lodger's innocence. However, when Novello was cast, the studio demanded alterations to the script. Hitchcock recalled:[9][10]

They wouldn't let Novello even be considered as a villain. The publicity angle carried the day, and we had to change the script to show that without a doubt he was innocent.[10]

In recollections such as these, Hitchcock presented himself as having been dissatisfied, but in fact Who is He? has a similarly happy ending.[11]

 
Still from the film

Principal photography

Filming began on 25 February 1926 and principal photography was completed within six weeks. Because Hitchcock practised film methods that mirrored those of German expressionism, scenes would not run for much longer than three minutes each. According to actress June Tripp: "Fresh from Berlin, Hitch was so imbued with the value of unusual camera angles and lighting effects with which to create and sustain dramatic suspense that often a scene which would not run for more than three minutes on the screen would take a morning to shoot."[12]

June had recently undergone an operation at the start of the shoot. She wrote in her autobiography that as a result of Hitchcock making her perform repeated takes of one scene, she felt a "sickening pain somewhere in the region of my appendix scar", and had to return to hospital.[13]

Directorial style and cinematography

In framing the shots, Hitchcock was heavily influenced by post-war horror, social unrest and the emotional fear of abnormality and madness. The film is entirely silent, but words were not necessary given the visual method of storytelling.

A memorable scene occurs when the Buntings look up at their kitchen ceiling, listening to the lodger pacing above. The ceiling then becomes transparent and the lodger is then seen walking on it (a thick sheet of toughened glass was used).[14] According to the Criterion Collection review by Phillip Kemp, this scene was composed of "sixty-five shots in just over six minutes, with no title cards to interrupt. Some disconcerting camera angles, including one straight down the staircase as we see the lodger’s disembodied hand sliding down the banister."[15]

Early in the film, the lodger's room is shown filled with paintings by Edward Burne-Jones of nude blonde women who resemble the Avenger's victims, but among them is a painting of Saint George freeing a woman from being sacrificed; this may be Hitchcock's use of foreshadowing to suggest that the lodger is not the actual killer.[6]

 
Publicity still of Ivor Novello

Post-production

Upon viewing Hitchcock's finished film, producer Michael Balcon was reportedly furious and nearly shelved it. After considerable argument, a compromise was reached and film critic Ivor Montagu was hired to salvage the film. Hitchcock was initially resentful of the intrusion, but Montagu recognised the director's technical skill and artistry and made only minor suggestions, mostly concerning the title cards and the reshooting of a few minor scenes.[16]

Hitchcock scholar Donald Spoto, who had not viewed the director's earlier two films, described The Lodger as "the first time Hitchcock has revealed his psychological attraction to the association between sex and murder, between ecstasy and death."[17] Spoto also stated: "Montagu's claim that Hitchcock's edit contained up to 500 intertitles seems likely an exaggeration, but he worked with the director during the summer months to tighten up the film. One of the other improvements was to hire American poster artist Edward McKnight Kauffer to design the animated triangular title cards."

A successful trade screening of the reedited film overcame Woolf's prior objections and its theatrical success allowed for the British release of Hitchcock's prior film, The Mountain Eagle.[1]

Significance and legacy

Upon release, the film was a critical and commercial success. In a review of the film in the British trade journal Bioscope, it was called "the finest British production ever made."[18] On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 96% based on 25 reviews, with an average rating of 7.70/10.[19]

The Lodger continued themes that would run through much of Hitchcock's later work, such as that of an innocent man on the run for a crime that he did not commit. Hitchcock had reportedly studied contemporary films by Murnau and Lang,[4][20] whose influence may be seen in the ominous camera angles and claustrophobic lighting. While Hitchcock had made two previous films, in later years the director would refer to The Lodger as the first true "Hitchcock film."[21] Beginning with The Lodger, Hitchcock helped shape the modern-day thriller genre in film.[22]

After arriving in the United States in 1940, Hitchcock was involved with a radio adaptation of the film with Herbert Marshall, Edmund Gwenn and Lurene Tuttle.[1] In its review of the adaptation, Variety wrote: "Hitchcock is a director with an exceptionally acute ear. He achieves his results by a Ravel-like rhythmic pummelling of the nervous system. Music, sound effects, the various equivalents of squeaking shoes, deep breathing, disembodied voices are mingled in the telling of the tale with a mounting accumulation of small descriptive touches that pyramid the tension."[23] The adaptation preserves the original novel's ending rather than that of the film and does not resolve the question of the lodger's identity as the killer.

In early 1942, the Los Angeles Times reported that Hitchcock was considering a colour remake of The Lodger following the completion of Saboteur (1942), but he was unable to obtain the film rights.[24]

Many consider The Lodger to be Hitchcock's greatest silent film.[25][26][27][28]

Preservation and home video status

In commemoration of the 100th anniversary of Hitchcock's birth, an orchestral soundtrack was composed by Ashley Irwin. The recording with the Deutsches Filmorchester Babelsberg was broadcast over the ARTE TV network in Europe on 13 August 1999. Its first live performance occurred on 29 September 2000 in the Nikolaisaal in Potsdam by the Deutsches Filmorchester Babelsberg under the direction of Scott Lawton.

Following several previous restorations, a newly tinted digital restoration of The Lodger was completed in 2012 as part of the BFI's £2 million "Save the Hitchcock 9" project to restore Hitchcock's surviving silent films.[1]

Like Hitchcock's other British films, all of which are copyrighted worldwide,[29][30] The Lodger has been heavily bootlegged on home video.[31] However, various licensed, restored releases have appeared on DVD, Blu-ray and video-on-demand services worldwide from Network Distributing in the UK, MGM and Criterion in the U.S., and others.[1]

At the end of 2022, The Lodger entered the public domain in the United States but only in its non-restored, scoreless form.[1] It will remain copyrighted in the rest of the world until the end of 2050.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Alfred Hitchcock Collectors' Guide: The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1926)". Brenton Film.
  2. ^ a b "Lodger, The: A Story of the London Fog (1926)". BFI. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
  3. ^ The Guardian: "The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog – review"
  4. ^ a b Lodger, The: A Story of the London Fog (1926) at the British Film Institute's Screenonline
  5. ^ "The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog".
  6. ^ a b c William Rothman on 'Lodger' (2017)
  7. ^ "The Lodger (1927) - Hitchcock's cameo - The Alfred Hitchcock Wiki".
  8. ^ Spoto, Donald (1999). The Dark Side of Genius: The Life of Alfred Hitchcock. Da Capo. p. 84. ISBN 0-306-80932-X.
  9. ^ IMDB trivia
  10. ^ a b Spoto, Donald pg. 85
  11. ^ Henry K. Miller, The First True Hitchcock (University of California Press, 2022)
  12. ^ Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light (2003) by Patrick McGilligan
  13. ^ '‘I felt a sickening pain’', by Henry K. Miller, Guardian, 12 January 2022
  14. ^ The Hitchcock Zone: The Lodger
  15. ^ Criterion Collection essay
  16. ^ Spoto, Donald pgs. 88–89
  17. ^ Spoto, Donald pg. 91
  18. ^ "The Lodger A story of The London Fog". bfi.
  19. ^ "The Lodger (1927)". Rotten tomatoes.
  20. ^ Spoto, Donald pg. 86
  21. ^ Richard Allen and Sam Ishii-Gonzales Alfred Hitchcock Centenary Essays pg. iv
  22. ^ Steve Bennett. "Thriller Fiction Genre definition". Findmeanauthor.com. Retrieved 22 June 2010.
  23. ^ Variety: "Radio Reviews: The Lodger (1940)"
  24. ^ "News Clips From Studio Town" in Los Angeles Times (19/Jan/1942)
  25. ^ Andrew Pulver (30 July 2012). "My favourite Hitchcock: The Lodger". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  26. ^ Phillip Kemp. "The Lodger: The First True Hitchcock". Criterion. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  27. ^ Donald Liebenson. "Quiet Mastery: Hitchcock's Early Films". Roger Ebert.com. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  28. ^ Samuel Wigley. "Then and Now: The Lodger Reviewed". BFI. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  29. ^ "Alfred Hitchcock Collectors' Guide". Brenton Film.
  30. ^ "Alfred Hitchcock: Dial © for Copyright". Brenton Film.
  31. ^ "Bootlegs Galore: The Great Alfred Hitchcock Rip-off". Brenton Film.

External links

  • The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog at IMDb
  • The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog at AllMovie
  • The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog at Rotten Tomatoes
  • The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog at the TCM Movie Database
  • at Cinema de Merde (archived)
  • Alfred Hitchcock Collectors’ Guide: The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog at Brenton Film
  • The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog: The First True Hitchcock Movie at Criterion Collection

lodger, story, london, 1927, british, silent, thriller, film, directed, alfred, hitchcock, starring, marie, ault, arthur, chesney, june, tripp, malcolm, keen, ivor, novello, hitchcock, third, feature, film, released, february, 1927, london, june, 1928, york, c. The Lodger A Story of the London Fog is a 1927 British silent thriller film directed by Alfred Hitchcock and starring Marie Ault Arthur Chesney June Tripp Malcolm Keen and Ivor Novello Hitchcock s third feature film it was released on 14 February 1927 in London and on 10 June 1928 in New York City The film is based on the 1913 novel The Lodger by Marie Belloc Lowndes and the play Who Is He co written by Belloc Lowndes Its plot concerns the hunt for a Jack the Ripper like serial killer in London 1 The Lodger A Story of the London FogUS bootleg DVD pairing the film with Hitchcock s Murder 1930 Directed byAlfred HitchcockScreenplay byEliot StannardBased onThe Lodger1913 novelby Marie Belloc LowndesProduced byMichael Balcon Carlyle Blackwell C M WoolfStarringMarie Ault Arthur Chesney June Tripp Malcolm Keen Ivor NovelloCinematographyGaetano di VentimigliaEdited byIvor MontaguProductioncompanyGainsborough PicturesDistributed byWoolf amp Freedman Film ServiceRelease date14 February 1927 1927 02 14 UK Running time90 minutes 2012 restoration 1 CountryUnited KingdomLanguageSilent film with English intertitlesBudgetUK 12 000Hitchcock s first thriller the film established him as a name director 2 Upon its release the trade journal Bioscope wrote It is possible that this film is the finest British production ever made 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Hitchcock s common themes 3 Cast 4 Pre production 5 Principal photography 5 1 Directorial style and cinematography 6 Post production 7 Significance and legacy 8 Preservation and home video status 9 References 10 External linksPlot EditA young blonde woman screams She is the seventh victim of a serial killer known as the Avenger who targets young blonde women on Tuesday evenings That night blonde model Daisy Bunting is at a fashion show when she and the other showgirls hear the news The blonde girls are horrified hiding their hair with dark wigs or hats Daisy returns home to her parents and her policeman sweetheart Joe who have been reading about the crime in the newspaper A handsome but secretive young man bearing a strong resemblance to the description of the murderer arrives at the Bunting house and asks about their room for rent Mrs Bunting shows him the room which is decorated with portraits of beautiful young blonde women He pays her a month s rent in advance The lodger turns all the portraits around to face the wall and requests that they be removed Daisy enters to remove the portraits and is attracted to the lodger The women return downstairs where they hear the lodger s heavy footsteps as he paces the floor The relationship between Daisy and the reclusive lodger gradually becomes serious making Joe who is newly assigned to the Avenger case unhappy Mrs Bunting is awoken late at night by the lodger leaving the house She attempts to search his room but a small cabinet is locked tight In the morning another blonde girl is found dead just around the corner The police observe that the murders are moving towards the Buntings neighbourhood The Buntings believe that the lodger is the Avenger and they try to prevent Daisy spending time with him The next Tuesday night Daisy and the lodger sneak away for a late night date Joe tracks them down and confronts them and Daisy breaks up with him Joe begins to piece together the events of the previous weeks and convinces himself that the lodger is indeed the Avenger With a warrant and two fellow officers Joe returns to search the lodger s room They find a leather bag containing a gun a map plotting the location of the murders newspaper clippings about the attacks and a photograph of a beautiful blonde woman whom Joe recognizes as the Avenger s first victim The lodger is arrested despite Daisy s protests but he manages to run off into the night Daisy finds him handcuffed coatless and shivering He explains that the woman in the photograph was his sister a beautiful debutante murdered by the Avenger at a dance and that he had vowed to his dying mother that he would bring the killer to justice Daisy takes the lodger to a pub and gives him brandy to warm him hiding his handcuffs with a cloak The suspicious locals pursue them quickly becoming a mob The lodger is surrounded and beaten while Daisy and Joe who have just heard that the real Avenger has been caught try in vain to defend him When all seems lost a paperboy interrupts with the news that the real Avenger has been arrested The mob releases the lodger who falls into Daisy s waiting arms Some time later the lodger is shown to have fully recovered from his injuries and he and Daisy are happily living together Hitchcock s common themes EditThe Lodger continues the themes of Hitchcock s previous and future works 1 according to Phillip French writing in The Guardian Hitchcock borders themes of the fascination with technique and problem solving the obsession with blondes the fear of authority the ambivalence towards homosexuality 3 in The Lodger Cast EditMarie Ault as The Landlady Mrs Bunting Arthur Chesney as Her Husband Mr Bunting June Tripp as Daisy Bunting a Model Malcolm Keen as Joe Chandler Ivor Novello as Jonathan Drew The Lodger Eve Gray as Showgirl Victim uncredited Alfred Hitchcock as Extra in newspaper office man in angry mob uncredited Reginald Gardiner as Dancer at Ball uncredited Alma Reville as Woman Listening to Wireless uncredited Alfred Hitchcock s cameo occurs when he is sitting at a desk in the newsroom with his back to the camera and operating a telephone 5 33 minutes into the film This is Hitchcock s first recognisable film cameo and it became a standard practice for the remainder of his films 4 Hitchcock said that his cameo came about because the actor who was supposed to play the part of the telephone operator failed to appear so Hitchcock filled in for him Film scholar William Rothman notes that Hitchcock s cameo from behind is shot in a very similar manner to that of the titular lodger 5 6 According to some sources including Francois Truffaut Hitchcock makes another cameo at the very end of the film in the angry mob but this has been disputed 1 6 7 Pre production EditThe Lodger is based on a novel of the same name by Marie Belloc Lowndes about the Jack the Ripper murders as well as the play Who Is He a comic stage adaptation of the novel by Horace Annesley Vachell that Hitchcock saw in 1915 1 8 News of the film was announced by the British press at the start of 1926 and Ivor Novello was announced as the lead in February Originally the film was to end with ambiguity as to the lodger s innocence However when Novello was cast the studio demanded alterations to the script Hitchcock recalled 9 10 They wouldn t let Novello even be considered as a villain The publicity angle carried the day and we had to change the script to show that without a doubt he was innocent 10 In recollections such as these Hitchcock presented himself as having been dissatisfied but in fact Who is He has a similarly happy ending 11 Still from the filmPrincipal photography EditFilming began on 25 February 1926 and principal photography was completed within six weeks Because Hitchcock practised film methods that mirrored those of German expressionism scenes would not run for much longer than three minutes each According to actress June Tripp Fresh from Berlin Hitch was so imbued with the value of unusual camera angles and lighting effects with which to create and sustain dramatic suspense that often a scene which would not run for more than three minutes on the screen would take a morning to shoot 12 June had recently undergone an operation at the start of the shoot She wrote in her autobiography that as a result of Hitchcock making her perform repeated takes of one scene she felt a sickening pain somewhere in the region of my appendix scar and had to return to hospital 13 Directorial style and cinematography Edit In framing the shots Hitchcock was heavily influenced by post war horror social unrest and the emotional fear of abnormality and madness The film is entirely silent but words were not necessary given the visual method of storytelling A memorable scene occurs when the Buntings look up at their kitchen ceiling listening to the lodger pacing above The ceiling then becomes transparent and the lodger is then seen walking on it a thick sheet of toughened glass was used 14 According to the Criterion Collection review by Phillip Kemp this scene was composed of sixty five shots in just over six minutes with no title cards to interrupt Some disconcerting camera angles including one straight down the staircase as we see the lodger s disembodied hand sliding down the banister 15 Early in the film the lodger s room is shown filled with paintings by Edward Burne Jones of nude blonde women who resemble the Avenger s victims but among them is a painting of Saint George freeing a woman from being sacrificed this may be Hitchcock s use of foreshadowing to suggest that the lodger is not the actual killer 6 Publicity still of Ivor NovelloPost production EditUpon viewing Hitchcock s finished film producer Michael Balcon was reportedly furious and nearly shelved it After considerable argument a compromise was reached and film critic Ivor Montagu was hired to salvage the film Hitchcock was initially resentful of the intrusion but Montagu recognised the director s technical skill and artistry and made only minor suggestions mostly concerning the title cards and the reshooting of a few minor scenes 16 Hitchcock scholar Donald Spoto who had not viewed the director s earlier two films described The Lodger as the first time Hitchcock has revealed his psychological attraction to the association between sex and murder between ecstasy and death 17 Spoto also stated Montagu s claim that Hitchcock s edit contained up to 500 intertitles seems likely an exaggeration but he worked with the director during the summer months to tighten up the film One of the other improvements was to hire American poster artist Edward McKnight Kauffer to design the animated triangular title cards A successful trade screening of the reedited film overcame Woolf s prior objections and its theatrical success allowed for the British release of Hitchcock s prior film The Mountain Eagle 1 Significance and legacy EditUpon release the film was a critical and commercial success In a review of the film in the British trade journal Bioscope it was called the finest British production ever made 18 On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 96 based on 25 reviews with an average rating of 7 70 10 19 The Lodger continued themes that would run through much of Hitchcock s later work such as that of an innocent man on the run for a crime that he did not commit Hitchcock had reportedly studied contemporary films by Murnau and Lang 4 20 whose influence may be seen in the ominous camera angles and claustrophobic lighting While Hitchcock had made two previous films in later years the director would refer to The Lodger as the first true Hitchcock film 21 Beginning with The Lodger Hitchcock helped shape the modern day thriller genre in film 22 After arriving in the United States in 1940 Hitchcock was involved with a radio adaptation of the film with Herbert Marshall Edmund Gwenn and Lurene Tuttle 1 In its review of the adaptation Variety wrote Hitchcock is a director with an exceptionally acute ear He achieves his results by a Ravel like rhythmic pummelling of the nervous system Music sound effects the various equivalents of squeaking shoes deep breathing disembodied voices are mingled in the telling of the tale with a mounting accumulation of small descriptive touches that pyramid the tension 23 The adaptation preserves the original novel s ending rather than that of the film and does not resolve the question of the lodger s identity as the killer In early 1942 the Los Angeles Times reported that Hitchcock was considering a colour remake of The Lodger following the completion of Saboteur 1942 but he was unable to obtain the film rights 24 Many consider The Lodger to be Hitchcock s greatest silent film 25 26 27 28 Preservation and home video status EditIn commemoration of the 100th anniversary of Hitchcock s birth an orchestral soundtrack was composed by Ashley Irwin The recording with the Deutsches Filmorchester Babelsberg was broadcast over the ARTE TV network in Europe on 13 August 1999 Its first live performance occurred on 29 September 2000 in the Nikolaisaal in Potsdam by the Deutsches Filmorchester Babelsberg under the direction of Scott Lawton Following several previous restorations a newly tinted digital restoration of The Lodger was completed in 2012 as part of the BFI s 2 million Save the Hitchcock 9 project to restore Hitchcock s surviving silent films 1 Like Hitchcock s other British films all of which are copyrighted worldwide 29 30 The Lodger has been heavily bootlegged on home video 31 However various licensed restored releases have appeared on DVD Blu ray and video on demand services worldwide from Network Distributing in the UK MGM and Criterion in the U S and others 1 At the end of 2022 The Lodger entered the public domain in the United States but only in its non restored scoreless form 1 It will remain copyrighted in the rest of the world until the end of 2050 1 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k Alfred Hitchcock Collectors Guide The Lodger A Story of the London Fog 1926 Brenton Film a b Lodger The A Story of the London Fog 1926 BFI Retrieved 13 July 2022 The Guardian The Lodger A Story of the London Fog review a b Lodger The A Story of the London Fog 1926 at the British Film Institute s Screenonline The Lodger A Story of the London Fog a b c William Rothman on Lodger 2017 The Lodger 1927 Hitchcock s cameo The Alfred Hitchcock Wiki Spoto Donald 1999 The Dark Side of Genius The Life of Alfred Hitchcock Da Capo p 84 ISBN 0 306 80932 X IMDB trivia a b Spoto Donald pg 85 Henry K Miller The First True Hitchcock University of California Press 2022 Alfred Hitchcock A Life in Darkness and Light 2003 by Patrick McGilligan I felt a sickening pain by Henry K Miller Guardian 12 January 2022 The Hitchcock Zone The Lodger Criterion Collection essay Spoto Donald pgs 88 89 Spoto Donald pg 91 The Lodger A story of The London Fog bfi The Lodger 1927 Rotten tomatoes Spoto Donald pg 86 Richard Allen and Sam Ishii Gonzales Alfred Hitchcock Centenary Essays pg iv Steve Bennett Thriller Fiction Genre definition Findmeanauthor com Retrieved 22 June 2010 Variety Radio Reviews The Lodger 1940 News Clips From Studio Town in Los Angeles Times 19 Jan 1942 Andrew Pulver 30 July 2012 My favourite Hitchcock The Lodger The Guardian Retrieved 2 April 2021 Phillip Kemp The Lodger The First True Hitchcock Criterion Retrieved 2 April 2021 Donald Liebenson Quiet Mastery Hitchcock s Early Films Roger Ebert com Retrieved 2 April 2021 Samuel Wigley Then and Now The Lodger Reviewed BFI Retrieved 2 April 2021 Alfred Hitchcock Collectors Guide Brenton Film Alfred Hitchcock Dial c for Copyright Brenton Film Bootlegs Galore The Great Alfred Hitchcock Rip off Brenton Film External links EditThe Lodger A Story of the London Fog at IMDb The Lodger A Story of the London Fog at AllMovie The Lodger A Story of the London Fog at Rotten Tomatoes The Lodger A Story of the London Fog at the TCM Movie Database The Lodger The First Hitchcock Film at Cinema de Merde archived Alfred Hitchcock Collectors Guide The Lodger A Story of the London Fog at Brenton Film The Lodger A Story of the London Fog The First True Hitchcock Movie at Criterion Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Lodger A Story of the London Fog amp oldid 1134427724, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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