More reviews of
Alfred Hitchcock:
'This is an accessible, fascinating and elegantly written
study which provides many insightful readings and which
sends the reader back to the films with renewed
appreciation.'
Simon Avery, Senior Lecturer in English, University of
Westminster.
'In Alfred Hitchcock, Nicholas Haeffner sets himself the
usual impossible goals for a critical study on a major
film maker, attempting to provide a comprehensive
introduction to Hitchcock's major British and Hollywood
films that is accessible to students and general readers,
sophisticated and argumentative enough to appeal to
critics and professors, and alert and responsive to the
vast realm of commentary and debate on Hitchcock, let
alone the far reaches of Hitchcock's own work - all this
in slightly more than 100 pages. Much to his credit, he
has more than a little success in each of those areas and
the read of this book will come away with much solid
information about Hitchcock's life, career and persona, a
good grounding in what Hitchcock had to say about his
approach to film making and a useful exposure to some of
the key issues in Hitchcock criticism.'
Sidney Gottlieb, Professor of English at Sacred Heart
University, editor of Hitchcock on Hitchcock, Alfred
Hitchcock Interviews and the Hitchcock Annual.
'As a a single succinct text to introduce Hitchcock and
his films, Nicholas Haeffner's Alfred Hitchcock stands
out. With admirable objectivity, it draws on the vast
literature about, and by, Hitchcock, to inform the reader
of the way the director thought and worked and how his
films are generally seen.'
Ken Mogg, author of The Alfred Hitchcock Story and editor
of The Macguffin website.
'The most obviously praiseworthy aspect of Haeffner's
Alfred Hitchcock is the often elegant way he draws upon
the extended tradition of Hitchcock criticism to
elaborate his picture of Hitchcock's place in cultural
and cinematic history without appearing overly dutiful or
weighed down by precendent...Though [readers] may not
fully appreciate the skill and thoughtfulness of
Haeffner's synthetic account of Hitchcock's career and
cultural force, they will be well served, in the main, by
Haeffner's historical and thematic approach; by the
book's end, they will have engaged with most of the
standard topics in Hitchcock study with a surprising
degree of sophistication, given the book's admirable
brevity and accessibility.'
Leland Poague, Hitchcock scholar and editor of The Alfred
Hitchcock Reader.
'A fascinating read...full of what I instinctively feel
about the business of film making.'
Tony Grisoni, screenwriter (previous credits include
films directed by Terry Gilliam and Michael
Winterbottom).