| Karl Heinz Böhm, Moira Shearer, Anna
Massey, Maxine Audley, Shirley Ann Field, Esmond Knight
Michael Powell's controversial meditation on violence and voyeurism
effectively destroyed his career when it was first released, but
later generations have come to regard it as a masterpiece. Karl
Heinz Boehm stars as Mark, the son of a psychologist who kept a
video journal of the boy's upbringing for research purposes. The
constant intrusions profoundly affected the boy, who grew up to
be a photographer himself; but his principal subject matter consists
of women whom he murders before the camera. He then runs the films
of his victims in their final throes so that he can study their
reactions to death--a perverse extension of his father's experiments,
which tormented Mark to analyze his reactions to raw fear. The British
press had long been hostile to the unorthodox films of Powell and
his partner Emeric Pressburger; when Peeping Tom came around, they
used the film to castigate him as "sick" and tawdry. The
passage of time has proven Peeping Tom as profound and accomplished
as any of Powell's earlier films, and it ranks with Alfred Hitchcock's
Rear Window (1954) and Vertigo (1958) as a landmark exploration
of the links among voyeurism, violence, and male sexual desire.
Powell himself plays the evil father in the flashback sequences,
and his son Colomba plays Mark as a child. |