Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Cameo: tutte le apparizioni di Hitch. La prima apparizione fu casuale, solo perché si doveva riempire lo schermo: di spalle, nella redazione di un giornale, in The Logder (1926), il suo terzo film. Ma col tempo, l’apparizione di Hitchcock diventa una superstizione e poi un obbligo. E da Rebecca appare su ogni suo film. Il regista ha detto a ...

  2. 30 de may. de 2015 · Now a YouTuber has put together a full compilation of all of Hitchcock's classic cameos, available for your perusal below. User Will Erickson went through the entire Hitchcock catalog, which ...

  3. Hitchcock's cameo appearance in Family Plot (1976) occurs about 40 minutes into the film. The famous silhouette is seen for one last time, behind the door of the "Registrar of Births & Death". He appears to be reprimanding the woman stood next to him.

  4. 13 de jul. de 2017 · Cameo: Es el hombre perdiendo el autobús. • Psycho (1960) Minuto: 6. Cameo: A través del ventanal de la oficina de Janet Leigh, llevando un sombrero de cowboy. • The Birds (1963) Minuto: 2. Cameo: Saliendo de la tienda de mascotas, paseando a dos perros blancos, mientras Tippi Hedren entra. • Topaz (1969) Minuto: 32.

  5. Frenzy (1972) - Hitchcock's cameo. Hitchcock's cameo in Frenzy (1972) occurs about 3 minutes into the film, shortly after the opening credits. As Sir George ( John Boxer) espouses the virtues of a clean river, Hitchcock can be seen in the crowd wearing a bowler hat. Unlike the majority of the crowd, Hitchcock does not applaud the speaker.

  6. Speaking to François Truffaut in the 1960s, Hitchcock said: [the first cameo in The Lodger] was strictly utilitarian; we had to fill the screen. Later on it became a superstition and eventually a gag. But by now it's a rather troublesome gag, and I'm very careful to show up in the first five minutes so as to let the people look at the rest of ...

  7. Hitchcock's cameo appearance in Rear Window (1954) occurs about 26 minutes into the film, where he is seen winding a clock in the appartment of the songwriter (played by Ross Bagdasarian ). In January 1954, the New York Times had reported that Hitchcock was planning to appear as a "tailor measuring a customer for a suit" in one of the appartments.