Calendar: May 9

A Year: Day to Day Men: 9th of May

The Stag Tattoo

May 9, 1959 was the release date of Alfred Hitchcock’s psychological thriller “Vertigo”.

The film noir “Vettigo”, produced and directed by Hitchcock, was based on the 1954 novel “From Among the Dead” by Boileau-Narcejac. The star of the film James Stewart plays Scottie, a detective forced into early retirement, because an incident in the line of duty, causing him to develop a fear of heights, resulted in the death of a policeman. He is hired as a private investigator to follow an acquaintance’s wife, played by Kim Novack, who is behaving strangely.

“Vertigo” was filmed from September to December 1957, with the principal photography beginning on location in San Francisco. The film uses extensive location footage of the Bay Area, with its steep hills and tall, arching bridges. In the driving scenes shot in the city, the main characters’ cars are almost always pictured heading down the city’s steeply inclined streets.

The scene in which Madeleine falls from the tower was filmed at Mission San Juan Bautista. A steeple, added sometime after the mission’s original construction and secularization, had been demolished following a fire. So Hitchcock added a bell tower using scale models, matte paintings, and trick photography at the Paramount studio in Los Angeles.The original tower was much smaller and less dramatic than the film’s version. The tower’s staircase was later assembled inside a studio.

Hitchcock popularized the dolly zoom in this film, leading to the technique’s nickname “the Vertigo effect”. This “dolly-out/zoom-in” method involves the camera physically moving away from a subject whilst simultaneously zooming in, so that the subject retains its size in the frame, but the background’s perspective changes. Hitchcock used the effect to look down the tower shaft to emphasize its height and Scottie’s disorientation. Following difficulties filming the shot on a full-sized set, a model of the tower shaft was constructed, and the dolly zoom was filmed horizontally.

“Vertigo” premiered in San Francisco on May 9, 1958 at the Stage Door Theater. While the film did break even upon its original release, it earned less than other Hitchcock productions. Tghe film was nominated for two Academy Awards in the technical categories: Best Art Direction and Best Sound. Upon Hitchcock’s death in 1973, “Vertigo” was one of five Hitchcock films taken out of circulation. It wasn’t until ten years later that it was re-released  after restoration and reprinting on 35mm stock.

Yuko Shimizu

Cover Illustrations by Yuko Shimizu for “The Unwritten” Series

Yuko Shimizu is an award winning Japanese illustrator based in New York City. Among comic fans, she is best known for her ongoing monthly covers for “The Unwritten” and her cover art for P. Craig Russell’s comic book adaptions of Neil Gaiman’s “The Sandman: The Dream Hunters”, published by Vertigo / DC Comics.

Shimizu began getting editorial illustration work soon after she completed her master’s degree, at first occasional assignments from The Village Voice and the New York Times, and soon after semi-regular ones for The New Yorker  and Financial Times magazine. Now, she counts numerous well-known publications, publishing houses, and brands as clients.

Scott Snyder and Sean Murphy

Scott Snyder and Sean Murphy, “The Wake”, Graphic Novel

“The Wake” is a 10 issue series penned by Scott Snyder of “American Vampire” fame.  Marine biologist Lee Archer is recruited by Agent Astor Cruz of the Department of Homeland Security, to travel to a secret underwater base. There he joins an eclectic group of individuals gathered together to make sense of a horrific find; a captured merman. The creature has clawed, webbed arms, and a mouth full of sharp, predatory teeth.

In the second issue it appears that, in addition to these terrifying physical capabilities, it has other powers as well. “The Wake” floods the reader with wave after wave of terror, and will fully sate any horror genre lover.  The artwork and atmosphere of the story are impressive; the undersea station has a claustrophobic feel , and the creature looks deadly.