The Movie Waffler Hitchcock: The Beginning Review - BLACKMAIL | The Movie Waffler

Hitchcock: The Beginning Review - BLACKMAIL

After killing a would-be rapist, a young woman finds herself blackmailed by a witness.

Review by Eric Hillis

Directed by: Alfred Hitchcock

Starring: Anny Ondra, John Longden, Sara Allgood, Donald Calthrop, Cyril Ritchard, Charles Paton, Hannah Jones, Harvey Braban, Percy Parsons, Phyllis Monkman


Hitchcock: The Beginning is a new 11-disc bluray boxset from Studiocanal featuring 10 of Alfred Hitchcock's early films and a new documentary, Becoming Hitchcock, which explores the legacy of Hitchcock's first sound film, 1929's Blackmail.

In the sixth part of our 11-part review of the boxset, we look at Blackmail.


By 1929 Alfred Hitchcock had fully mastered the art of silent cinema, and with Blackmail he was presented with the challenge of transferring his talents to the new "talkie" format without trading his flair for visual storytelling. Like many of the early talkies, Blackmail was adapted from a play (by Charles Bennett), but Hitchcock refused to simply "film the play," instead opening the story out across multiple London locations and adding the sort of suspense sequences with which his name is now synonymous.


Hitchcock actually began filming Blackmail as a silent. However, he had a hunch that he might be asked to deliver a talkie version, and so he purposely staged several scenes in a manner that would allow for dialogue to later be added by obscuring the mouths of his characters. Much of the silent version (which is included in Studiocanal's boxset) is present in the talkie version, so Blackmail is technically a "semi-talkie." But Hitchcock would likely have filmed these sequences sans dialogue regardless, such as the opening six-minute sequence that details police detective Frank (John Longden) arresting and charging a suspect, and the climactic chase through the British Museum.


Anny Ondra, who had played the female lead in Hitchcock's final silent The Manxman, was cast in the lead role of Frank's girlfriend Alice, but her Czech accent meant her mouthed lines were recorded by actress Joan Barry, standing offscreen. Alice is secretly seeing the bohemian Crewe (Cyril Ritchard) behind Frank's back, and she ends up in his apartment one night after a row with Frank. When Crewe attempts to sexually assault Alice, she reaches for a knife and plunges it into his groin. The murder happens offscreen behind a bustling curtain, but in a subsequent scene Hitchcock has the dazed Alice walk through central London. There she gazes at an animated neon billboard which morphs into a knife thrusting towards the first four letters of the word "cocktail," leaving us in no doubt as to how Crewe met his grisly end.


Wouldn't you know it, Frank finds himself assigned to the case. When he discovers a glove at the scene he recognises it as belonging to Alice. Frank sets out to protect his lover, but he and Alice are forced to contend with Tracy (Donald Calthrop), a conniving criminal who saw Alice leave Crewe's flat and wants a payoff to keep quiet.


While many directors struggled with the transition from silents to talkies, Hitchcock embraced the opportunities it provided. In his first talkie, Hitchcock immediately begins experimenting with sound, most notably in a breakfast scene where he muddies the dialogue of a gossiping neighbour to highlight the repeated word "knife." At the same breakfast table the scraping of Tracy's knife on his plate similarly unnerves the distraught Alice. Ironically, it's the opportunity for silence offered by the talkies that Hitchcock takes most advantage of here. Due to their incessant piano accompaniment, the silents never quite lived up to their name, but here Hitchcock is able to drop the sound completely at key moments, such as Alice's dazed reaction to taking Crewe's life. For an audience in 1929, long accustomed to the tinkling of ivories throughout a film, this scene must have been positively unnerving, and the lack of sound is still unsettling today. Ondra's performance is this scene is fantastic, which makes it all the more of a shame that her dialogue scenes are dogged by crude lip-synching.


The not always smooth mix of silent and talkie techniques sometimes leaves Blackmail a little creaky. There's no doubt the end result would have been a lot more polished if Hitchcock had initially set out to make a talkie rather than rejigging a silent halfway through production. But in its mix of two storytelling forms, Blackmail provides a fascinating look at how a top director negotiated what might have been a disastrous transition. Hitchcock had previously made a thriller with 1927's The Lodger, but Blackmail is really the first example of what we now recognise as a Hitchcock movie. In Ondra's Alice we have the first of his iconic blonde heroines and one of his classic morally flawed protagonists. The film's obsession with the knife as murder weapon hints at more explicit killings to come in his filmography. And the British Museum climax is the first of his set-pieces at iconic locations, to be followed by the likes of the Statue of Liberty, the Royal Albert Hall and Mount Rushmore. Blackmail sees Hitchcock combine sound and image to create a thrilling experience for the first, but by no means the last time in his unrivalled career.

Blackmail is part of Studiocanal's 'Hitchcock: The Beginning' bluray boxset, available now.