Abstract
one of these periods alone would have established him as a major figure in film history. Unfortunately, the most comprehensive current biography of this fascinating character (Spoto 1983) is marred by an unpleasant (and unfulfilled) agenda. 2. Alfred Hitchcock Dies, Los Angeles Times, April 29, 1980, p. 1. The second headline, in type half the size, is Carter Picks Muskie to Be Secretary of State. 3. The most casual computer search will yield scores of recent papers and books on Hitchcock's films. 4. Hitchcock's 1936 classic Sabotage, adapted from Joseph Conrad's The Secret Agent, should not be confused with two other Hitchcock films, The Secret Agent, or 1942's Saboteur. 5. Hitchcock's technique also made it difficult for producers to reedit his work by using extra footage and master shots routinely called for in the studio system (Leff 1987, 215). References
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