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  1. Feb 20, 2000 · A classic Hitchcock thriller about a photographer who spies on his neighbors and suspects a murder. Ebert analyzes the film's themes, techniques and performances, and praises its visual style and suspense.

    • Rope

      Alfred Hitchcock called “Rope” an “experiment that didn’t...

    • Vertigo

      There is another element, rarely commented on, that makes...

    • Raymond Burr

      Rear Window (1954) Roger Ebert. Lars Thorwald. Blog Posts....

    • Eva Marie Saint

      Buster Keaton standing perfectly still while the wall of a...

    • Tippi Hedren

      Marie writes: Intrepid club member Sandy Khan has sent us...

    • Grace Kelly

      Rear Window (1954) Roger Ebert. Lisa Fremont. Blog Posts....

  2. Alfred Hitchcock's "Rear Window" develops such a clean, uncluttered line from beginning to end that we're drawn through it (and into it) effortlessly. The experience is not so much like watching a movie, as like ... well, like spying on your neighbors.

  3. Aug 3, 2022 · In Rear Window, Jimmy Stewart has the role of a news photographer confined by a broken leg to a wheelchair. The situation anchors him in one small room and, almost throughout the film, the...

  4. Apr 3, 2018 · A film review that praises Rear Window as a visual and auditory masterpiece of Hitchcock's craft. It analyzes the film's use of soundtrack, cinematography, plot, and themes of love and suspense.

  5. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › 1017289-rear_windowRear Window | Rotten Tomatoes

    A newspaper photographer with a broken leg passes time recuperating by observing his neighbors through his window. He sees what he believes to be a murder, and decides to solve the crime himself...

  6. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › 1084791-rear_windowRear Window | Rotten Tomatoes

    46% Tomatometer 13 Reviews. 26% Audience Score 2,500+ Ratings. Jason Kemp (Christopher Reeve) is a quadriplegic who passes the time spying on his neighbors from his window. By chance he catches...

  7. 'Rear Window' and Powell's 'Peeping Tom' are some of the best movies that aren't afraid to admit this human trait. We are all voyeurs. When watching 'Rear Window,' it is better to imagine Alfred Hitchcock sitting in that wheelchair rather than Jimmy Stewart.