Peeping Tom - Criterion Collection

Peeping Tom - Criterion Collection


Starring:Maxine Audley, John Barrard, Brenda Bruce, Karlheinz Böhm, John Dunbar, Paddy Edwardes, Shirley Anne Field, Michael Goodliffe, Pamela Green, Esmond Knight, Miles Malleson, Anna Massey, Martin Miller, Margaret Neale, Alan Rolfe, Moira Shearer, Susan Travers, Jack Watson, Brian Worth
Studio: Criterion
Product Type: DVD

Editorial Review:
Amazon.com
Michael Powell lays bare the cinema's dark voyeuristic underside in this disturbing 1960 psychodrama thriller. Handsome young Carl Boehm is Mark Lewis, a shy, socially clumsy young man shaped by the psychic scars of an emotionally abusive parent, in this case a psychologist father (Michael Powell in a perverse cameo) who subjected his son to nightmarish experiments in fear and recorded every interaction with a movie camera. Now Mark continues his father's work, sadistically killing young women with a phallic-like blade attached to his movie camera and filming their final, terrified moments for his definitive documentary on fear. Set in contemporary London, which Powell evokes in a lush, colorful seediness, this film presents Mark as much victim as villain and implicates the audience in his scopophilic activities as we become the spectators to his snuff film screenings. Comparisons to Hitchcock's Psycho, released the same year, are inevitable. Powell's film was reviled upon release, and it practically destroyed his career, ironic in light of the acclaim and success that greeted Psycho, but Powell's picture hit a little too close to home with its urban setting, full color photography, documentary techniques, and especially its uneasy connections between sex, violence, and the cinema. We can thank Martin Scorsese for sponsoring its 1979 rerelease, which presented the complete, uncut version to appreciative American audiences for the first time. This powerfully perverse film was years ahead of its time and remains one of the most disturbing and psychologically complex horror films ever made. --Sean Axmaker
Description
A frank exploration of voyeurism and violence, Michael Powell's extraordinary film is the story of a psychopathic cameraman-his childhood traumas, sexual crises, and murderous revenge as an adult. Reviled by critics upon its initial release for its deeply unsettling subject matter, the film has since been hailed as a masterpiece.
Peeping Tom - Criterion Collection
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Peeping Tom
  • Not Worthy of It's Reputation
  • "I'm photographing you photographing me..."
  • One Of The Best Films About Film Spectatorship
  • "Do you know what the most frightening thing in the world is? It's fear. " - Mark Lewis
Peeping Tom - Criterion Collection
Starring: Maxine Audley , John Barrard , Brenda Bruce , Karlheinz Böhm , and John Dunbar
Manufacturer: Criterion
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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ASIN: 0780022629
Release Date: 1999-11-16

Amazon.com

Michael Powell lays bare the cinema's dark voyeuristic underside in this disturbing 1960 psychodrama thriller. Handsome young Carl Boehm is Mark Lewis, a shy, socially clumsy young man shaped by the psychic scars of an emotionally abusive parent, in this case a psychologist father (Michael Powell in a perverse cameo) who subjected his son to nightmarish experiments in fear and recorded every interaction with a movie camera. Now Mark continues his father's work, sadistically killing young women with a phallic-like blade attached to his movie camera and filming their final, terrified moments for his definitive documentary on fear. Set in contemporary London, which Powell evokes in a lush, colorful seediness, this film presents Mark as much victim as villain and implicates the audience in his scopophilic activities as we become the spectators to his snuff film screenings. Comparisons to Hitchcock's Psycho, released the same year, are inevitable. Powell's film was reviled upon release, and it practically destroyed his career, ironic in light of the acclaim and success that greeted Psycho, but Powell's picture hit a little too close to home with its urban setting, full color photography, documentary techniques, and especially its uneasy connections between sex, violence, and the cinema. We can thank Martin Scorsese for sponsoring its 1979 rerelease, which presented the complete, uncut version to appreciative American audiences for the first time. This powerfully perverse film was years ahead of its time and remains one of the most disturbing and psychologically complex horror films ever made. --Sean Axmaker

Description

A frank exploration of voyeurism and violence, Michael Powell's extraordinary film is the story of a psychopathic cameraman-his childhood traumas, sexual crises, and murderous revenge as an adult. Reviled by critics upon its initial release for its deeply unsettling subject matter, the film has since been hailed as a masterpiece.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Peeping Tom.......2007-06-28

Released the same year as "Psycho" and offering many parallels, it's mystifying that Hitchcock's film was a hit, Powell's a fiasco. There is a claustrophobic immediacy to "Tom" that "Psycho" lacks- the film's in color and has a documentary feel, which may have hit 1960 viewers too close to home. Also, critics expected murder and mayhem from Hitchcock, not from the fabled director of "The Red Shoes". That aside, director Powell lived long enough to see his film vindicated with audiences and critics twenty years later, when friend Martin Scorsese oversaw its re-issue. "Tom" stands up as a virtual masterpiece of psychological horror, with Boehm bloodless and creepy in the title role, and Powell's inspired camera-work putting the viewer uncomfortably close to the wrong side of Mark's camera. A subtly perverse treat for horror and thriller devotees.

3 out of 5 stars Not Worthy of It's Reputation.......2007-05-12

As a fan of Michael Powell's work "Peeping Tom" was a big disappointment. Not because of it's squeamish subject matter, rather, it just doesn't deliver the goods. There's alot of rhetoric here about voyeurism and cinephilia but it doesn't amount to much. The best I can say here is that Powell is still a master of color. Whereas other director's use black-and-white to ratchet a suspenseful mood Powell uses the full spectrum of colors to suggest horror. His use of the color red is interesting, particularly in a horror film where not a drop of blood is spilled. It was also nice to see Moira Shearer in an extended cameo doing an interesting Latin dance. Essential for Powell fans but I would recommend "Peeping Tom" to others with reservations.

5 out of 5 stars "I'm photographing you photographing me...".......2007-04-29

"Peeping Tom" is one of the Criterion Collection's best kept secrets, it seems--I can't remember the last time I saw a psychological study as refined, beautiful, and disturbing as this one.

I'm not sure Michael Powell wanted to be "subversive" as one reviewer seems to think. Instead he created a groundbreaking study in voyeurism that doesn't allow any flimsy experimental ideas about what's going on: he implicates the whole of society and the viewer in this tragic tale of personal ruin, using the camera as a symbiotic vehicle of our ultimate culpability.

Outwardly it is the tale of a youthful killer, Mark Lewis, an unnaturally intense "photographer" in his spare time and assistant director/cameraman
in his daily life. A pathetic neurotic to everyday appearances, Mark is a shy young man who practically lives in a screening room he has meticulously constructed in the backroom of his apartment. The paradox of this bizarre character is so well done that we can't help but sympathize with him even while he claims victim after victim, recording their facial expressions as they die and adding each one to his "documentary".

What sets Mark apart from other night prowling monsters is the obvious reason for his state of emotional derangement--his father, a pathological scientist who wanted to learn about the nerve reactions of little children to fear, taped him his entire childhood while putting him in the most frightening situations imaginable for someone of that age. Dropping lizards on him as he slept, forcing him to view quite adult situations, etc. The brief sequences in which Mark reveals these reels to a young woman who lives in his apartment are more disturbing than anything else in the movie.

Mark takes his father's work one step farther. Not only does he want to know about fear, he wants to film other human beings in the state in which they are most afraid: when they are just about to die.

Powell doesn't let us off the hook here, however. Mark is a man who wants help, a way out of the demented darkness his life has become, but his desire for redemption comes far too late. Helen, a young woman with a worldly wise alcoholic mother, tries to pry Mark from the coffin of his apartment with some success; he enjoys a night out with her as any young man would, and she even manages to separate him from his camera. The whole night, though, he can't stop gazing at people through windows and the brush of night. The paradox of his character is absolutely believable and all the more heartwrenching for it. The actor is fantastic.

Helen is the only pure thing in his life and he refuses to go near her with his camera. The whole thing happens relatively fast. As Mark knows, "they can only hang you once", and refuses to slow down the pace of his crimes even when the police end up profiling people on the set of his studio. The ending is a tragedy and comes off that way perfectly.

Martin Scorsese once remarked that all you need to know about directing a movie is contained in two films: Fellini's "8 1/2" and "Peeping Tom". I wouldn't be surprised if he was right, at least about this one. Great movie.

5 out of 5 stars One Of The Best Films About Film Spectatorship.......2007-03-22

Peeping Tom's impact remains resolutely undiminished in the 47 years that has seen it go from reviled and despised horror film, to a classic of British cinema. Those 47 years have seen the rise and fall of many extreme examples of the horror genre (Italian giallo, slasher films, video nasties, Manga inspired mayhem and much more), but Peeping Tom remains persistently one of the most disturbing and disconcerting screen experiences, that puts a great deal of more visceral horror to shame. Michael Powell's film explores voyeurism, scopophilia, child abuse and the rise of psychology to damning effect. But perhaps most damning is Mr. Powell's assessment of the impact of cinema on spectators. Throughout Powell connects the act of spectatorship with the psychotic Mark Lewis, the camera becomes a phallic object to stroke and kiss the devices of cinema a fetish. As a result we are drawn into an uncomfortable association with the screen psychopath, as we vicariously join him in his personal screening room. The only person immune to this is a blind woman, simply because her ability to look has been removed. The look of the camera is associated with violence and perversity, and the only remedy against it is to close ones eyes or look away. That we continually open our eyes and eagerly follow Mark's descent into insanity, illustrates perfectly the power of Michael Powell's film. Furthermore Powell de-eroticises almost every aspect of the film; grim, seamy, dirty streets, crone like hookers, and perverted old men buying porn. This makes the conventional interpretation of the film as enforcing patriarchy and masculinity something that is disputable. An indispensable addition to every horror fans collection.

4 out of 5 stars "Do you know what the most frightening thing in the world is? It's fear. " - Mark Lewis.......2007-02-25


It is hard to believe that the movie was a total fiasco when it was released 46 years ago. It was hated with the passion by both critics and the audiences alike. It was pulled out of the theaters only after one week. Why? It is a masterpiece. It is breathtaking combination of voyeurism, eroticism, and horror. The main character is a serial killer who films his victims as he literally kills them with his camera achieving the level of genuine fear and horror that no other filmmaker would be able to achieve. We watch the women as they die being filmed for a movie and paying with their lives for its grim realism. Maybe, that was the reason for hatred? "Peeping Tom" is provocative and very unsettling. The serial killer, a young, shy, attractive and sympathetic man is a victim himself. He was raised by a scientist father who filmed him under intensely emotional conditions studying how the fear affects the children. Powell himself played the father and his young son played young Mark Lewis. I think it also added to the initial shock when the movie was released. "Peeping Tom" is also the movie about making movies. Mark works as a camera assistant for a film director and dreams about becoming a famous director one day. He is ready to pay an ultimate price for finishing his own documentary.

"Peeping Tom" has been called a "Very British "Psycho" and it was released two months before Hitchcock's film. The similarities are plenty but Powell's film is much darker and it does not have a psychiatrist in the end to explain Mark Lewis. Ironically, "Peeping Tom's" unavailability for many viewers for many years has preserved its power and impact better than the initial universal approval and praise would ever have done. I can understand the controversy of the subject but how could the sheer brilliance of film-making - the choice of music, the work of camera, the acting, the dark humor (the guy who looked like Hitchcock was darkly-hilarious) not have been noticed is beyond me. Was it THAT much ahead of its time?

Great move and I wish I'd seen it in the theater.

9.5/10

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