Q&A: Dial M for Murder returns in eye-popping original 3D
Painstaking restoration of Hitchcock classic hits select theatres before Blu-ray release
By Thorstan Gerlach, CBC News
Posted: Sep 28, 2012 4:24 PM ET
Last Updated: Oct 1, 2012 8:23 AM ET
A new 3D digital restoration of master filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder is hitting select theatres, including Toronto's TIFF Bell Lightbox, ahead of its Blu-ray release. (AFP/Getty Images)
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The films of Alfred Hitchcock, dubbed the Master of Suspense, have thrilled viewers as far back as the silent era. Now, Hitchcock fans have a fresh reason to be excited.
Audiences can experience Dial M for Murder as originally intended — in 3D, but with digitally restored colour and sound — after painstaking work by experts at Warner Brothers Studios. Hitch’s 1954 classic — restored from print versions long faded and marked — is to be released in a new 3D Blu-ray version. But first, the film is heading back to theatres.
The restoration got the star treatment at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival. The screening sold out in just 10 minutes and received rave reviews. It returns to the TIFF Bell Lightbox beginning Oct. 5.
Jesse Wente, head of film programs at TIFF Bell Lightbox, talked to the CBC News about the new restoration, Hitchcock’s minimalist use of 3D and that infamous scissors scene.
This interview has been edited and condensed.
In Dial M for Murder, Hitchcock used 3D 'as a tool used to enrich the themes and experience of the film,' according to TIFF programmer Jesse Wente. (Warner Bros./Photofest)Q: Probably the most iconic scene from Dial M involved Grace Kelly and a pair of scissors. Hitchcock devoted a lot of time to that scene. How is it showcased in the restoration?
A: Hitch shows that he could make things jump out of the screen at the audience and upon occasion shifts the convergence point – most notably in the opening credit sequence, where the titles seem to hang in the air over the seats or in the infamous scissors scene, where the end of the scissors suddenly and violently protrude into the audience’s personal space. This scene is certainly the most eye-popping in the restoration.
Q: Hitchcock was calculated and reserved with Dial M, even minimalist. How does that type of film fit with our perception of 3D films today, when the technology is usually used in large-scale blockbusters or for shock value?
For TIFF programmer Jesse Wente, Hitchcock's Dial M shows how the commercial technology of 3D can be put to artistic use. (TIFF)A: It’s true, 3D films of today tend to populate the screen with imagery in order to fully display the technology involved. For Hitchcock, 3D is a tool used to enrich the themes and experience of the film. The increased depth allows character relationships to be represented spatially: the husband in the foreground, the wife in the centre and the lover in the background – a line-up that is subsequently reversed later in the film.
3D only adds to the emotions Hitchcock is trying to stir, while in many modern films, 3D is the emotion. It’s the 3D itself you’re reacting to, not how it alters the image on screen. Perhaps this is why Hitchcock’s use is so effective: when the detective unveils the hidden key at the end, it looms large, poking out at the audience, wrapping us into the murder. It’s a subtle use of a not-so-subtle technology.
Q: Did Hitchcock make any other films in 3D? Has there been demand or plans for other Hitchcock films to be re-released or transferred to 3D, for instance a title like North by Northwest, with its exciting scenes?
A: Dial M for Murder is Hitchcock’s only 3D movie and I hope it stays that way. His films require no further embellishment than playing them in a cinema, as they were meant to be seen. One should not tamper with the work of a master.
Following a current engagement at New York's Film Forum (ending Oct. 4), the new 3D restoration of Dial M for Murder returns to TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto beginning Oct. 5.
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