The weather is getting hotter, and photographer L.B. Jefferies (Jimmy Stewart) is stuck in his apartment with a broken leg and nothing to do--that is, nothing to do but spy on his neighbors through their open windows across the way in the apartment complex. There's an attractive and scantily clad dancer, a songwriter, a lonely woman, and the Thorwalds (Raymond Burr and Irene Winston), a bickering couple, among others. But when Mrs. Thorwald disappears, Jefferies is sure that something's wrong. Soon, despite the warnings of his girlfriend, Lisa (Grace Kelly), and his motherly nurse, Stella (Thelma Ritter), Jefferies has out his binoculars and telephoto lens and is studying his neighbor "like a bug under glass." However, looking in from the outside might not be as safe as Jefferies assumes. REAR WINDOW is not only a gripping story of murder and suspense, it is a celebrated allegory on the nature of film itself, a story in which the audience watches Jefferies watch the story unfold. The different windows represent the various different stories that are often told on film and also can be seen as representing the coming of television, as Jefferies can watch a multitude of "shows" from the comfort of his own apartment.
A photographer recovering from a broken leg enlivens his hours of convalescence by taking up voyeurism. Though it's initially Miss Torso, an attractive dancer, who gets his attention, he quickly becomes more fascinated by the Thorwalds, a bickering couple across the yard. When he thinks a murder has taken place, the suspense begins. REAR WINDOW is a true Hitchcock masterpiece.
Theatrical release: New York, August 1953.
Hitchcock cameo: Hitchcock can be seen winding a clock in the apartment of the songwriter about 30 minutes into the film.
REAR WINDOW was added to the Library of Congress National Film Registry in 1997.
Hitchcock was nominated for the Best Director Oscar but lost out to Elia Kazan for ON THE WATERFRONT
REAR WINDOW is number 42 on the American Film Institute's list of America's 100 Greatest Movies.
Snippets of other music heard in the film include Leonard Bernstein's score for the ballet FANCY FREE and the song "Mona Lisa."
The film was remade in 1998 as a TV movie starring wheelchair-bound Christopher Reeve.
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Single Side - Dual Layer
Collectors Edition
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.66
Letterbox - 1.66
Audio:
Dolby Digital Mono 2.0 - English
Additional Release Material:
Making Of
Featurette: Conversation with Screenwriter John Michael Hayes
Trailers: Rerelease Trailer
Text/Photo Galleries:
Production Notes
Biographies: Cast & Crew
Stills/Photos: Production Stills
Script
DVD-ROM Features:
Stars
James Stewart: Oscar-winning actor, THE PHILADELPHIA STORY, VERTIGO, HARVEY
Grace Kelly: Oscar winning American actress, THE COUNTRY GIRL, MOGAMBO
Wendell Corey: American Actor
Thelma Ritter: American actress, PILLOW TALK, ALL ABOUT EVE
Raymond Burr: Actor, PERRY MASON
Judith Evelyn: American Actress
Sara Berner: Actress
Frank Cady: Actor
Georgine Darcy:
Director
Alfred Hitchcock: Director/screenwriter/producer, VERTIGO, THE BIRDS, PSYCHO
Producer
Alfred Hitchcock: Director/screenwriter/producer, VERTIGO, THE BIRDS, PSYCHO
Screenwriter
John Michael Hayes: Screenwriter
Composer
Franz Waxman: Film composer
Editor
George Tomasini:
Art Director
Hal Pereira: Production Designer
Director of Photography
Robert Burks:
Story
Cornell Woolrich: Wrote short stories & novels, used by Hitchcock, Truffaut
Production Designer
Joseph MacMillan Johnson: Production Designer
Sorry, this product does not have this type of information.
Review 1:
"...Kelly is cool and elegant here....REAR WINDOW lovingly invests in suspense all through the film, banking it in our memory, so that when the final payoff arrives, the whole film has been the thriller equivalent of foreplay..."
Source: Chicago Sun-Times
p.5 02/20/2000
Review 2:
"With its voyeuristic theme, witty screenplay and romantic star chemistry, the ever-popular James Stewart-Grace Kelly masterpiece may be the most prototypical Alfred Hitchcock movie..."
Source: USA Today
p.4E 03/16/2001
Review 3:
"...Everything from the masterly opening sequence to the ambiguous final shot indicates that this is the work of a prodigiously talented director..." -- 5 out of 5 stars
Source: Total Film
p.76 03/01/2000
Review 4:
"...[New print details] give the movie a sharpness that underscores the whole subtext..." -- Rating: A
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.80 01/21/2000
Review 5:
"Hitchcock was a master of this space, his shots coordinated to the inch....Where VERTIGO sported it deviancy on the surface, the even better REAR WINDOW possesses a more wicked intent: we're all in this horrid game together."
Source: Empire
p.177 07/01/2008