The deliciously red poster for Alfred Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder |
QUICK REVIEW:
Tony (Ray Milland (The Lost Weekend (1945)) and Margot (Grace Kelly (Rear Window (1954)) are, on the outside, a happily married couple. But below the surface, SPOILER he contracts a stranger to do her off, because her infidelity is threatening his future. But, alas, everything goes all wrong ...
Dial M for Murder was a British hit-play by Frederick Knots (A Perfect Murder (1998), based on the same play), which English master filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock (North by Northwest (1959)) decided to do when his partnership with Sidney Bernstein (Rope (1948), uncredited producer) fell through. It marks the last film in what I see as a minor down period in his long, illustrious career; from Under Capricorn (1949) to Dial M, Hitch made no truly great films, as he'd done both before and would do again after. In fact already later in 1954, he would release Rear Window, one of his all-time masterpieces.
Dial M was presented in 3D, but in the problematic fad's last stages of popularity in the 50's, which meant that it was screened in 2D in most theaters. Its main problem is that it is very theatrical, (Knots also adapted his own play, which he probably shouldn't have), and I miss some of Hitchcock's visual ingenuity and panache in the film.
Milland is sly as a fox in Dial M, but aside from him, I find it an uphill challenge to remain interested in the movie because of its many details, dense dialog and general, dramatic passivity.
Related reviews:
Alfred Hitchcock: The Birds (1963) - Hitchcock spearheads horror sub-genreand innovative special effects in great, odd film
The 39 Steps (1935) or, Murder and High Jinx!
A downright lying poster for Alfred Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder erroneously calls it 'the most famous Alfred Hitchcock movie of all time!' |
You can't take from Alfred Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder that it has Grace Kelly, and that she is some asset for any film |
Watch the original trailer for the film here
Cost: 1.4 mil. $
Box office: 6 mil. $
= Big hit
[Although Dial M came out in the last stages of 3D, it still was a popular film, both in the US (where it made 2.7 mil. $ (45 % of its total gross)) and abroad. The film and Knots' play has inspired several other adaptations, and Dial M is generally higher rated than it is here. - It currently sits on #160 on IMDb's Top 250!]
What do you think of Dial M for Murder?
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