Castleton, Derbyshire and Vertigo (film): Difference between pages

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: ''ThisFor articleother isuses aboutof the Englishword village. For other uses''Vertigo'', see [[Castleton (disambiguation)Vertigo]].''
 
{{Infobox_Movie |
'''Castleton''' is a [[village]] in the [[Derbyshire]] [[Peak District]], in [[England]]. The village lies at the western end of the [[Hope Valley, Derbyshire|Hope Valley]], on the [[Peakshole Water]] stream.
movie_name = Vertigo|
image = [[Image:Vertigomovie.jpg|222px]] |
imdb_id = 0052357|
writer = [[Alec Coppel]],<br>[[Samuel A. Taylor]] |
starring = [[James Stewart (actor)|James Stewart]],<br>[[Kim Novak]],<br>[[Barbara Bel Geddes]],<br>[[Tom Helmore]],<br>[[Henry Jones]] |
director = [[Alfred Hitchcock]] |
producer = [[Alfred Hitchcock]] (uncredited) |
distributor = [[Paramount Pictures]] |
release_date = [[May 9]], [[1958]] |
runtime = 128 min. |
music = |
awards = |
movie_language = English |
budget = $2,479,000 (est.)
}}
 
'''''Vertigo''''' is a [[1958]] [[suspense]] film directed by [[Alfred Hitchcock]]. The film is usually taken as a classic of the genre and is considered by many [[Film criticism|critics]] to be Hitchcock's [[masterpiece]].
Castleton originally grew around the Norman [[Peveril Castle]] at around 1198, and later prospered from [[lead]] [[mining]] (''see [[Derbyshire lead mining history]]''). This created and enlarged local caverns, four of which are now open to the public as The Devil's Arse or [[Peak Cavern]], [[Blue John Cavern]], [[Speedwell Cavern]] and [[Treak Cliff Cavern]]. A limited supply of [[Blue John]] is now mined locally.
 
==The plot==
The village is surrounded on three sides by hills. Most prominent are [[Lose Hill]] and [[Hollins Cross]] to the north, and [[Mam Tor]] to the west. The road leading west, to Chapel-en-le-Frith and [[Manchester]], used to be over Mam Tor, until a landslide swept the road away. Now, all westbound traffic from Castleton must travel up the narrow ''Winnats Pass''. Since the road is very narrow and steep most traffic enters and leaves the village from the East. This can lead to severe congestion problems, especially on hot summer sundays.
{{spoiler}}
''Vertigo'' tells the story of a retired [[San Francisco]] detective, Scottie ([[James Stewart (actor)|James Stewart]]), who suffers from [[balance disorder]] and is hired to follow Madeleine Elster ([[Kim Novak]]), the wife of an old friend. Scottie was once romantically entangled with motherly, intellectual Midge Wood, his roommate. Madeline appears to have a mental illness in which she acts like she is possessed by Carlotta Valdes, a woman who killed herself years ago. She visits a large potrait of Carlotta in an art musem, and dresses like Carlotta, right down to the hair and jewlery. Despite her trancelike, sometimes obsessive behavior and her suicidal tendencies, the detective falls in love with her and resolves to save her from herself. After Madeline suffers a fainting spell and falls into [[San Francisco Bay]], Scottie saves her and the two get together. Midge becomes increasingly jealous. Madeline tells Scottie she dreamed of [[Mission San Juan Bautista]], and Scottie takes her there, in an effort to destroy her disturbing dreams and possibly her mental illness. However, Madeline is again possessed, and she runs up the mission's bell tower. However, Scottie's [[balance disorder]] renders him unable to help her when he is most needed, and Madeline hurls herself from the tower.
 
Scottie suffers a nervous breakdown and is hospitalized, but recovers. About a year later, Scottie, still brooding about Madeleine, encounters a woman, Judy Barton, who reminds him strongly of his dead love. Scottie becomes obsessed with Judy, and begins dressing her in Carlotta Valdes's clothes and even having her hair done in Carlotta's style, to remind him of Madeline, who dressed the same. However, Judy makes a crucial mistake when she begins wearing a pendant that apparently was once Carlotta's--and Madeline's. He takes her to Mission San Juan Batista and forces her to go up the tower, first telling her that he wanted to re-enact the scene in which he failed to save Madeline. He raves about Madeline, saying he'll "bring her back". However, it becomes clear his real goal is to force a confession from Judy: She was hired my Madeline's husband to look and act like Madeline, right down to her mannerisms. She feigned illness in order to convince Scottie that Madeline was ill, then ran up the bell tower, knowing Scottie would never make it, whereupon the real Madeline was hurled from the tower by her husband. With no witnesses and Scottie's testimony that Madeline was insane, her husband got away with the murder. As Scottie forces Judy to confess, they inch up the stairs until they make it to the top, whereupon Scottie declares, "I made it!" Scottie rages at her and Judy confesses that she loved him all along. Suddenly a shadowy figure steps out: "I heard voices." And Judy, frightened, backs away--but she steps too far back and falls from the tower. The shadowy figure steps into the light and is revealed to be a nun. Scottie can only stare down at Judy's fallen body, and the movie fades to black.
Castleton attracts large numbers of tourists, some of whom walk the [[Limestone Way]], which runs south from the village. Others gather to watch the ceremony held on [[Oak Apple Day]], when a ''garland king'' is paraded around the streets wearing a large garland of flowers.
 
==The screenplay and its sources==
Facilities in Castleton include a [[YHA|youth hostel]], and several [[hotel]]s and [[pub]]s.
 
The movie was adapted by [[Samuel A. Taylor]] and [[Alec Coppel]] from the novel ''d'Entre les Morts'' by [[Pierre Boileau]] and [[Thomas Narcejac]]. [[François Truffaut]] suggested that the novel ''d'Entre les Morts'' was specifically written for Hitchcock by Boileau and Narcejac after Hitchcock was unable to buy the rights to their previous novel, ''Celle qui n'était plus'', which was made into the movie ''[[Les Diaboliques]]''. However, Narcejac has subsequently denied that this was their intention.
[[Category:Villages in Derbyshire]]
 
The film also alludes to the story of [[Orpheus]] and [[Eurydice]]. Although the source novel's explicit references to the myth do not appear in the film, certain themes do, including the return of a dead beloved to life, and discovering the fatal consequences of "looking back."
 
The final script was written by Samuel Taylor from notes by Hitchcock. However, a number of elements survive from an earlier script by Alec Coppel, including the opening rooftop sequence, the [[Cypress Point]] kiss, the two visits to [[Mission San Juan Bautista|San Juan Bautista]], and the famous nightmare sequence. When Taylor attempted to take sole credit for the screenplay, Coppel protested to the Writers Guild, who determined that both writers were entitled to credit. It is believed by many that Hitchcock himself was primarily responsible for the character, structure, tone, and thematic richness of this, his most personal film.
 
==Cinematic qualities==
 
''Vertigo'' is notable for the "[[Hitchcock zoom]]," an in-camera [[perspective distortion]] [[special effect]] created by Hitchcock that suggests the dizzying effect that gives the film its title.
 
The film's famous score was composed by [[Bernard Herrmann]]. In many of the key scenes Hitchcock essentially gave the film over to Herrmann, whose melodies, echoing [[Richard Wagner]]'s ''Liebestod'' from ''[[Tristan and Isolde]]'', dramatically convey Scotty's obsessive love for the woman he imagines to be Madeleine.
 
''Vertigo'' was one of several [[1950s]] Paramount films shot in the [[VistaVision]] [[widescreen]] format, a [[70 mm film]] processes developed to compete with several similar processes from other studios (such as [[20th Century Fox]]'s [[CinemaScope]]).
 
==''Vertigo'' as a Hitchcock film==
 
Those interested in Hitchcock's biography have often noted the similarities between Scottie Ferguson's attitude toward Judy and Hitchcock's own attitude toward his leading actresses; Hitchcock took an active interest in moulding the on-screen appearance of his actresses to fit his vision of the perfect blonde, and the sequence in which Scottie orders Judy to gradually transform herself into Madeleine is often cited as an example of Hitchcock dramatizing his own obsessions.
 
Hitchcock used falling, and the threat of falling, in many of his films, for example ''[[Blackmail]]'', ''[[Foreign Correspondent]]'', ''[[Suspicion]]'', ''[[Saboteur]]'', ''[[Rear Window]]'', ''[[To Catch a Thief]]'', and ''[[North by Northwest]]''. Critics have suggested that ''Vertigo'' uses this recurring motif as a metaphor for sexual obsession, existential [[angst]], [[liebestod]], or [[original sin]].
 
==Awards==
 
''Vertigo'' was nominated for [[Academy Awards]] for [[Academy Award for Best Art Direction|Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White or Color]] and [[Academy Award for Sound|Best Sound]].
 
''Vertigo'' was not a commercial success when first released, and its critical reputation built slowly, due in part to its lack of availability: it was one of five films owned by the Hitchcock estate removed from circulation in [[1973]]. When ''Vertigo'' was re-released on film and home video in [[1983]], its critical fortunes soared. Finally, after a year-long restoration effort by Robert Harris and James Katz, the film was re-released to theaters in its former glory in [[1996]]. The new print featured restored color and an enhanced soundtrack with digital sound. It was also exhibited for the first time in [[70_mm_film|70mm]], a format similar in size to [[VistaVision]], in which it had been originally filmed. Many cineastes consider the 1996 restoration substandard, introducing color values not seen in the original as well as significantly altering the soundtrack in a mistaken effort for "clarity."
 
In [[1998]], the [[American Film Institute]] ranked it #61 on its "[[AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies|100 Greatest Movies]]" list. The film has been deemed "culturally significant" by the United States [[Library of Congress]] and selected for preservation in the [[National Film Registry]].
 
In [[2002]], ''Vertigo'' was chosen the second greatest film of all time (behind ''[[Citizen Kane]]'') by the ''[[Sight and Sound]]'' critics' poll.
 
== San Francisco Bay Area locations in ''Vertigo'' ==
''Vertigo'' is notable for its extensive ___location footage of the [[San Francisco]] [[San Francisco Bay Area|Bay Area]], leading some to claim the city itself as an important character in the script; San Francisco is famous for its steep hills, expansive views, and tall, arching bridges. Some have noted that in the numerous driving scenes shot in the city, the main characters' cars are almost always pictured heading ''down'' the city's steeply inclined streets.
 
Visiting the San Francisco film locations (perhaps most famously in a subsection of [[Chris Marker]]'s documentary montage [[Sans Soleil]]) has something of a cult following as well as modest tourist appeal.
 
Areas that were shot on ___location (not recreated in a studio), and that still exist:
* [[Mission San Juan Bautista]], although the all-important tower had to be matted in with a painting using studio effects. Hitchcock had first visited the Mission before the tower was torn down due to dry rot, and was reportedly very displeased to find it missing when he returned to film his scenes. The original tower was much smaller and less dramatic than the special effects version however, so in the end the change could be considered fortuitous.
* [[Mission Dolores]], where for many years tourists could see the actual Carlotta Valdez headstone featured in the film. Eventually, the headstone was removed as the Mission considered it disrespectful to the dead to house a tourist attraction grave for a fictional person.
* [[Fort Point National Historic Site]] and the [[Golden Gate Bridge]]
* [[Big Basin Redwoods State Park]], although the film claims these scenes are from [[Muir Woods National Monument]].
* Cypress Point, a well known ___location along the [[17 Mile Drive]] near [[Pebble Beach]].
* [[California Palace of the Legion of Honor]]: the Carlotta Valdez portrait was lost after being removed from the gallery, but many of the other paintings in the background of the portrait scenes are still on view.
* [[Coit Tower]] (appears in many background shots but is not featured). Hitchcock once said that he included it as a [[phallic symbol]].
* "The Brocklebank" (1000 Mason Street): Gavin and Madeleine's apartment building still looks essentially the same. Across the street from the Fairmont Hotel, where Hitchcock usually stayed when he visited and where many of the cast and crew stayed during filming.
* 351 Buena Vista East: the sanitarium where Scottie recovers. Now apartments but looks the same from the outside. Across the street from the southern (most elevated) end of [[Buena Vista Park]]. Excellent views of the back of the building, dramatically situated on Buena Vista heights, are available from the Corona Heights neighborhood park.
 
* The York Hotel [http://yorkhotel.com/] 940 Sutter Street: When Scottie first catches a glimpse of Judy Barton, he follows her back to her hotel and invites her to dinner at Ernie's. Judy's room is located on the third floor of the hotel, whose interiors were all created back in Hollywood. The flashing green neon of the "Hotel Empire" sign creates a ghostly effect for Judy's transformation into Scottie's make-believe vision of Madeleine, although the neon sign was replaced when the Hotel was re-named The York Hotel.
 
==Remake==
*Director [[Brian DePalma]] remade ''Vertigo'' in 1976 as ''[[Obsession (movie)|Obsession]]'' with [[Cliff Robertson]] and [[Genevieve Bujold]]. [[Bernard Herrmann]], who scored ''Vertigo'', also scored ''Obsession''.
 
*DePalma's 1984 movie ''[[Body Double (movie)|Body Double]]'' also featured many plot elements from ''Vertigo''.
 
==External links==
*{{imdb title|id=0052357|title=Vertigo}}
*[http://www.basichip.com/vertigo/main.htm Vertigo:Then and Now] - before and after images of San Francisco locations seen in the film
* [http://www.thegoldenyears.org/vertigo.html Classic Movies: Vertigo (1958)]
* [http://www.filmsite.org/vert.html Filmsite.org in-depth review and analysis]
 
[[Category:1958 films]]
[[Category:Cult films]]
[[Category:Films based on novels]]
[[Category:Films directed by Alfred Hitchcock]]
[[Category:Mystery films]]
[[Category:Romance films]]
[[Category:Thriller films]]
[[Category:United States National Film Registry]]
 
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