Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Analysis Of The Final Scenes Of Alfred Hitchcocks Notorious :: essays research papers
 Analysis of the Final Scenes of Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious      à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  After viewing Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious for the first time, the film  did not strike me as particularly complex. Nothing specific about the film  lodged itself in my brain screaming for an answerââ¬âor, at least, an attempted  answer. Yet, upon subsequent viewings, subtle things became more noticeable.  (Perhaps Hitchcock's subtlety is what makes him so enormously popular!)  Hitchcock uses motifs and objects, shot styles and shifting points of view, and  light and dark to help explain the relationships between Alicia, Devlin,  Sebastian and Mrs. Sebastian, and an overall theme of being trapped. An  analysis of the film from the first poisoning scene to the final scene in the  film shows how the above tools lead to a better understanding of the  character's motivations.    à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The most obvious recurring object in the final scenes is the poisoned  coffee cup. In the first scene of the portion being analyzed, Sebastian  suggests to Alicia that she drink her coffee, and Hitchcock zooms onto the  object as she slowly takes a sip. In a later scene, Mrs. Sebastian pours the  coffee into the cup for Alicia, and sets it on a small table in front of her.  Here, Hitchcock not only zooms in on the small teacup, but heightens the sound  it makes connecting to the table, includes it in every shot possible, and shows  us not only the full coffee cup, but the empty cup as well after Alicia has  drank it. Again, the cup is zoomed in on after Alicia realizes she's being  poisoned. Because the coffee is poisoned, the coffee itself becomes a metaphor  for life and death, supported by the fact that the poisoner herself ours it,  and the shots of the full and empty teacup. In this way, it also suggests  Alicia's inability to escape her situationââ¬âwhenever she drinks the coffee, she  becomes trapped due to the poison in her cupââ¬âand the poison in her sham of a  marriage..    à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  A repeated object not so noticeable is Mrs. Sebastian's needlework.  Mrs. Sebastian is constantly working on her needlepoint while Alicia is being  poisoned. Hitchcock, in fact, goes out of his way to make sure that a shot of  her `toiling at her work' is included several times. One cannot help but be  reminded of Dickens classic A Tale of Two Citiesââ¬âwith Madame Defarge knitting  everyone's fate into her work. At the beginning of the film, Devlin hands  Alicia a handkerchief, and a scarf, which she keeps, but returns to him in this  segment. These pieces of cloth throughout the film help tie Alicia to the    					    
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