Nobody disputes Alfred Hitchcock's ability to spin tales of terror, but for silliness, the rotund master of the macabre needs a bit of help. Read More
Which is why it's ironic that the longest-running play on Broadway in the past seven years is a comedy that has fewer moving parts than a garage door - and it's based on a film. Read More
Alfred Hitchcock is portrayed as a paranoid history professor, unwittingly caught up in a double take on the Cold War period. Read More
Long before suspense master Alfred Hitchcock moved to the United States to make such stellar thrillers as "Vertigo," "Rear Window" and "North by Northwest," he learned how to direct films in his native England. Read More
Both Number 17 and Young and Innocent are minor Hitchcock efforts, worth looking at as curiosities. Read More
A car crash victim diagnosed as being in a coma for the past 23 years has been conscious the whole time. Read More
(1930), Sabotage (1936), The Secret Agent (1936), The 39 Steps (1935), Number 17 (1932), The Lady Vanishes (1938) and Young and Innocent (1937). Read More