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Plagued by both a reckless ego and nagging self-doubt, Hollywood legend Alfred Hitchcock (Anthony Hopkins) becomes obsessed with a grisly murder story that the studios won’t back. Determined, he risks his reputation, his home and even the love of his wife Alma (Helen Mirren), as he sets out to make the film. Ultimately, Hitch wins Alma over, and the two collaborate to create an enduring masterpiece - Psycho. Also starring Scarlett Johansson, Toni Collette and Jessica Biel. (20th Century Fox Home Entertainment)

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3DD!3 

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English I didn’t like this much. Unlike Hitchcock movies, this semi-biography has no soul. Some of the gags work, the actors seem to be enjoying themselves and the directing is high class. The period design is delightful. But we don’t get anything more than that. There isn’t one single thing that remains in one’s memory. Too bad. ()

D.Moore 

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English "...when you see the final version with Mr. Herrmann's beautiful, lyrical music..." Anthony Hopkins didn't lose himself under the layer of latex and behind the stuffed belly, and he doesn't just imitate Hitchcock, he simply is Hitchcock, and that's the way it should be. Although the film doesn't offer anything outright unfamiliar (all those stories about the making of Psycho appeared quite a few years ago), it nevertheless entertains and doesn't bore. Helen Mirren is perfect as always, Scarlett Johansson divinely beautiful... And James D'Arcy is so dangerously similar to Anthony Perkins that it's impossible. An excellent film with lots of funny and serious moments, which could have been much longer. Too bad we won't see another episode about The Birds. ()

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J*A*S*M 

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English The master of suspense Alfred Hitchcock didn’t deserve such an average film. What to say about a film that is technically good, well acted, pleasantly relaxing and brisk, when it fizzles out from your memory only a couple of days after watching it? A work lacking any ambition and ideas. I don’t need every film to be “important”, but in this particular case, it’s a pity that it isn’t. One foot inside, the other outside. ()

Malarkey 

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English Debut or not, I liked this movie. I liked that the director took a different approach than they usually do with biopics. Because we’re not talking about Hitchcock himself, but rather about the most famous moment of his life. The overall general expectation is then taken down by the fact that the director himself decided to describe it. It doesn’t really matter what kind of a life Hitchcock had, it’s important how he led it, how he behaved and the way he acted towards the people around him. And this movie shows all of that. Hitchcock himself, who is ingeniously portrayed by Anthony Hopkins, is a completely unique character who starts the entire movie as well as finishes it. In my opinion, the ending was even one of the most intense biopic endings ever. And that’s something considering it isn’t about emotions; the fact that the scene is fun to watch is simply enough. Of course, I mustn’t forget Helen Mirren and Scarlett Johansson with Jessica Biel. All three of those girls played their roles perfectly and I was able to learn something new once again. For example, the fact that Hitchcock was such aperfectionist in a way that many of the directors lack nowadays and they try to make up for it by their movie budgets. ()

POMO 

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English Hitchcock is a superbly cast little film that would have been wonderful as a part of a TV mini-series where each episode would follow Hitch making one of his great movies. This particular episode focuses on a demanding period in the director’s life, when (after the commercial failure of Vertigo) he took a risk and financed his next film out of his own pocket. An important storyline involves the support of his wife, with whom he was then having some marital troubles caused by jealousy. Just as much as the movie peeks behind the scenes of the shooting of Psycho, focusing especially on the initial ideas and preparations, it peeks into the couple’s living room. A pleasant feel-good movie, but it raises the question of whether the legendary director and his most iconic film would not be better served by a more spectacular treatment, for example by Martin Scorsese. ()

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