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Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light (Reprint ed.). New York, NY: ReganBooks. p. 864. ISBN 978-0060988272. Sloan, Jane (1995). Alfred Hitchcock: A Filmography and Bibliography. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-08904-4. Spoto, Donald (January 1999). The Dark Side of Genius: The Life of Alfred Hitchcock. Perseus Books ...
RH1 Case of the Weeping Coffin (1985, by Megan Stine and H. William Stine); RH2 Case of the Dancing Dinosaur (by Rose Estes); RH3 Case of the House of Horrors (by Megan Stine and H. William Stine)
Books number 1 to 9 and 11 were written by the creator, Robert Arthur, who also specified ideas for a few of the other stories. Arthur had been an editor for several book collections attributed to Alfred Hitchcock. The other authors were William Arden (Dennis Lynds), Nick West (Kin Platt), Mary Virginia Carey and Marc Brandel (born Marcus ...
Hitchcock/Truffaut is a 1966 book by François Truffaut about Alfred Hitchcock, originally released in French as Le Cinéma selon Alfred Hitchcock. [1]First published by Éditions Robert Laffont, it is based on a 1962 dialogue between Hitchcock and Truffaut, [2] in which the two directors spent a week in a room at Universal Studios talking about movies.
Alfred Hitchcock's Anthology (AHA) was a seasonally printed collection of suspenseful and thrilling short stories reprinted from Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine.Produced from 1977 to 1989, the anthology contains stories from authors such as: Patricia Highsmith, Robert Bloch, Bill Pronzini, Isaac Asimov, and Lawrence Block.
The best known of the theatrical film adaptations is the Academy Award–winning 1940 Alfred Hitchcock film version Rebecca, [26] the first film Hitchcock made under his contract with David O. Selznick. The film, which starred Laurence Olivier as Maxim, Joan Fontaine as his wife, and Dame Judith Anderson as Mrs Danvers, was based on the novel.
Bloch's novel was adapted in 1960 into the feature film by director Alfred Hitchcock. It was written by Joseph Stefano and starred Anthony Perkins as Bates and Janet Leigh in an Academy Award-nominated performance as Marion Crane (changed from "Mary" for the film, as there was a Mary Crane in Phoenix at that time).
Since then the book has been largely overshadowed by Hitchcock’s film adaptation. Robin Wood commented: "The drab, willful pessimism of D’entre les morts is an essentially different world from the intense traffic sense of Vertigo , which derives from a simultaneous awareness of the immense value of human relationships and their inherent ...