Rope |
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Starring: | James Stewart, John Dall, Farley Granger, Sir Cedric Hardwick, Constance Collier, Douglas Dick, Edith Evanson, Joan Chandler, Dick Hogan |
Director: | Alfred Hitchcock, H.C. Potter |
Producer: | Alfred Hitchcock, Sidney Bernstein |
Screenplay: | Patrick Hamilton (play), Hume Cronyn, Arthur Laurents, Ben Hecht (uncredited) |
Cinematographer: | William V. Skall, Joseph Valentine |
Poster |
Rope (1948), an Alfred Hitchcock film inspired by the real-life murder of a young boy in 1924 by two college students named Leopold and Loeb. Two brilliant students (John Dall and Farley Granger) plan the perfect murder after an ill-advised lecture by their headmaster (James Stewart) on the art of murder. They strangle a classmate and hide his body in a chest in their apartment, whereupon they throw a party for the victim's family and others from the school, thus, they believe, demonstrating their superiority. When Stewart realizes at the end that his two former students have indeed murdered, he is horrified -- and ashamed of his own rhetoric.
Hitchcock was both producer and director. Except for the 1932 film Lord Camber's Ladies, which was Hitchcock's only association with that film, Rope is the first movie for which Hitchcock receives a credit as producer (he was the uncredited producer on Number 13, Suspicion and Notorious.)
The film of Rope employed numerous innovations:
(This technique has been used frequently since to "hide" edits, for instance in the Eagle-Eye Cherry music video "Save Tonight," and also in Steven Soderbergh's film Erin Brockovich: Julia Roberts appears to get into a car, drive down the street, and get hit by another car, but in fact the camera lingers behind on the road after she leaves, and at that point the film cuts).
Although it is commonly believed that all the cuts in Rope are hidden, in fact, only half are. Another misconception is that all the shots last ten minutes. Actually, of the ten shots used for the film, only three approach or exceed the ten minute mark. Five of the shots range between seven and eight minutes, and the penultimate and final shots last only about four-and-a-half and five-and-a-half minutes, respectively. A description of the beginning and end of each reel follows, with the approximate duration of the shot given in parentheses.