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La finestra sul cortile
Titolo originale: Rear Window
Regia:
Alfred Hitchcock
Anno: 1954
Origine: United States of America
Generi: Thriller Mistero
Tag:
nurse
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isolation
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photographer
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suspicion of murder
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wheelchair
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girlfriend
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salesman
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neighbor
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whodunit
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convalescence
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voyeurism
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voyeur
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missing wife
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homebound
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psychotic obsessions
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suspicious behavior
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flower bed
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visiting nurse
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suspenseful
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the boy who cried wolf
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admiring
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Cast:
James Stewart
Grace Kelly
Wendell Corey
Thelma Ritter
Raymond Burr
Judith Evelyn
Ross Bagdasarian
Georgine Darcy
Sara Berner
Frank Cady
Jesslyn Fax
Rand Harper
Irene Winston
Havis Davenport
Jerry Antes
Benny Bartlett
Sue Casey
Iphigenie Castiglioni
James Cornell
Don Dunning
Marla English
Bess Flowers
Art Gilmore
Fred Graham
Kathryn Grant
Charles Harvey
Len Hendry
Alfred Hitchcock
Harry Landers
Alan Lee
Mike Mahoney
Jonnie Paris
Eddie Parker
Robert Sherman
Dick Simmons
Ralph Smiley
Jack Stoney
Anthony Warde
Gig Young
Costretto sulla sedia a rotelle da un incidente sul lavoro che gli ha procurato la frattura della gamba sinistra, un fotoreporter d'azione passa il tempo spiando col teleobiettivo i suoi vicini di casa, e con l'aiuto della fidanzata e dell'infermiera scopre che é stato commesso un omicidio...
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The original trailer for this movie apparently does not exist. Only a reissue trailer can be fo [...]
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In the film, after Grace Kelly kisses James Stewart, while he talks about what happened across [...]
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All of the sound in this movie is diegetic, meaning that all the music, speech, and other sound [...]
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One of Jeff's neighbors can be heard listening to "To See You (Is to Love You)" performed by Bi [...]
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The take-out dinner Lisa heats up and serves to Jeff is Lobster Thermidor with Pommes Frites à [...]
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Ranked #3 on the American Film Institute's list of the 10 greatest films in the genre "Mystery" [...]
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This movie was unavailable for three decades because its rights (together with four other movie [...]
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All the apartments in Thorwald's building had electricity and running water, and could be lived [...]
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Sir Alfred Hitchcock briefly considered shooting on location in Greenwich Village, but abandone [...]
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In an interview with Peter Bogdanovich, Sir Alfred Hitchcock claimed that he felt a bit of symp [...]
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This movie was shot on a specially constructed set that took fifty men two months to build, and [...]
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Jeff comments to Stella that when he gets married it will be to "somebody who thinks of life no [...]
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By most accounts, everyone was crazy about Grace Kelly. According to James Stewart, "Everybody [...]
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Based on the photo on Jeff's (James Stewart's) wall, Doyle (Wendell Corey) and Jeff flew a de H [...]
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This movie was inspired in part by the real-life murder case of Patrick Mahon. In 1924, in Suss [...]
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In addition to the song "Lisa," which was written for this film and is not sung until the very [...]
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The $1100 dress Lisa wears (black bodice, white skirt) would be $11,000 in 2021.
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When Jeff phones the police to report Lisa's attack, he gives the Thorwald address as 125 West [...]
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Director Sir Alfred Hitchcock spent a great deal of time with costume designer Edith Head on Gr [...]
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Along with Il delitto perfetto (1954) and Caccia al ladro (1955), this is one of three movies d [...]
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Grace Kelly turned down the role of Edie Doyle in Fronte del porto (1954) to make this film.
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In 2007, the American Film Institute ranked this as the 48th Greatest Movie of All Time.
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During the month-long shoot, Georgine Darcy (Miss Torso), "lived" in her apartment all day, rel [...]
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The camera work on Jefferies' fall from the window is something of an Alfred Hitchcock trademar [...]
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Sir Alfred Hitchcock and James Stewart had a friendship that was oddly intimate while being som [...]
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At one point, Jeffrey makes a joke-like comment about Finland. At the very end of his career, a [...]
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The massive indoor set, was up to that time, the largest indoor set in Paramount's history. It [...]
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Playing the part of the man who sleeps on his mattress on the fire escape is Frank Cady, also k [...]
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The cast includes three Oscar winners: James Stewart, Grace Kelly, and Gig Young; and two Oscar [...]
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Lisa asks Jeff sarcastically if he can see her apartment all the way up at 63rd St. This would [...]
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At the time, the set was the largest indoor set built at "Paramount Pictures" Studios.
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Joe Flynn was cast in the movie, but his scene was cut.
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One of the first examples to firmly establish the auteur theory. Sir Alfred Hitchcock's La fine [...]
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Alfred Hitchcock: (At around 25 minutes) Winding the clock in the songwriter's apartment. The s [...]
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James Stewart was 46 years old, and Grace Kelly was 25 when this movie was made.
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James Stewart has stated that of the four movies he made with Sir Alfred Hitchcock, this one is [...]
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The lens Jeff (James Stewart) used on his camera to spy on his neighbors is reportedly a 400mm [...]
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Although uncredited, the ballet music Miss Torso is dancing to in her apartment is Leonard Bern [...]
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L.B. Jefferies (James Stewart) broke his leg while taking a photograph of a racing accident. In [...]
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Rated #42 among the American Film Institute's 1998 list of the Top 100 Greatest American Movies [...]
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To accommodate the enormous set, a higher ceiling was required. Sir Alfred Hitchcock had the pr [...]
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Franz Waxman's final score for Sir Alfred Hitchcock.
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The set had to have four lighting set-ups always in place for various times of the day. Remote [...]
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James Stewart's character is confined to a wheelchair throughout the film. Raymond Burr, the vi [...]
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The flash that Jefferies uses is the same type of unit that would be used as the body of Luke S [...]
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The film is set in Manhattan, New York City in the Greenwich Village area. This is verified by [...]
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Grace Kelly celebrated her birthday on the set (November 12, 1953).
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The first German dubbing was created in 1955. After the rights to this movie reverted back to S [...]
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The pale green suit that Grace Kelly wears when she and James Stewart are discussing Mrs. Thorw [...]
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Rated #14 among the American Film Institute's 2001 list of the Top 100 Most Heart-Pounding Amer [...]
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Trade magazines of the time reported the world premiere was August 4, 1954 at the Rivoli Theatr [...]
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As originally scripted, Jeff speaking to his editor on the telephone was to take place in the e [...]
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There are several explanations for why Jeff is the only neighbor to notice the scream from the [...]
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Right after Stella gives Jeff a lecture on love and marriage he watches a newlywed couple enter [...]
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Sir Alfred Hitchcock gave Georgine Darcy free range to choreograph her own dance moves for her [...]
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Despite big box-office success and four Oscar nominations, the film failed to score a best pict [...]
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Grace Kelly was offered this film and "On the Waterfront" at the same time. She chose, "Rear Wi [...]
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The eighth-highest grossing film of 1954.
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To determine what special effect to employ when Jeff fends off Thorwald with the camera flashes [...]
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Sir Alfred Hitchcock deliberately shot most of the set-ups so they would appear voyeuristic.
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The 35mm camera that James Stewart holds with the huge telephoto lens attached is an early 1950 [...]
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While shooting, Sir Alfred Hitchcock worked only in Jeff's "apartment". The actors and actresse [...]
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Body count: two (Thorwald's wife and the neighbor's dog).
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One of the photographs on the wall in Jeff's (James Stewart's) apartment is a photograph of him [...]
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Cinematographer Robert Burks devised a system using a camera with a telephoto lens mounted on a [...]
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Other than a couple of shots near the end and the discovery of the dead dog, all the shots in t [...]
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The film negative was damaged considerably as a result of color dye fading as early as the 1960 [...]
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The film is included on Roger Ebert's "Great Movies" list.
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A bit of prop trickery had to be used when Stella pulls out the binoculars from their leather c [...]
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In Cornell Woolrich's short story on which this movie was based, it's not revealed until the la [...]
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The original story by Cornell Woolrich had no love story and no additional neighbors for L.B. J [...]
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The take out meal (ostensibly from "21") that's so delectably shown has one curiosity. The wine [...]
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The entire movie was shot on one set, which required months of planning and construction. The a [...]
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Lisa points to the ring on her finger in Thorwald's apartment not only to let Jeff know she got [...]
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Kathryn Grant, uncredited as Girl at Songwriter's Party, went on to marry Bing Crosby, who co-s [...]
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In addition to Patrick Mahon, Sir Alfred Hitchcock noted in the modern interview that the 1910 [...]
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The book that Lisa is reading at the end is an actual book, "Beyond the High Himalayas" by Supr [...]
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Stella remains aloof and even scolding to Jeff about peeping on his neighbors, until he mention [...]
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According to Thelma Ritter, Sir Alfred Hitchcock never told actors and actresses if he liked wh [...]
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Sir Alfred Hitchcock worked closely with Edith Head on the costume designs, being sure to give [...]
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The majority of automobiles seen from Jeff's apartment are from the Nash Motors Co. The first c [...]
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Sir Alfred Hitchcock supposedly hired Raymond Burr to play Lars Thorwald because he could be ea [...]
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During the opening of the film, (about 23 seconds in) as the camera leaves Jeff's apt. and foll [...]
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According to Georgine Darcy, the man and woman on the fire escape struggling to get out of the [...]
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Added to the National Film Registry in 1997.
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The first of nine Alfred Hitchcock movies to be edited by George Tomasini.
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This film is in the Official Top 250 Narrative Feature Films on Letterboxd.
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As discussed by François Truffaut and Alfred Hitchcock in the former's famous interviews to [...]
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James Stewart's character Jeff winds up in a cast after being injured while photographing at a [...]
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Lisa orders dinner from "21" to be delivered to Jeff's apartment. The 21 Club, often referred t [...]
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Screenwriter John Michael Hayes based Lisa on his own wife, who'd been a professional fashion m [...]
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By the time the movie went before the cameras, Sir Alfred Hitchcock had dropped more than one h [...]
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Sir Alfred Hitchcock liked working with James Stewart, especially in comparison to his other mo [...]
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The love affair between war photographer Robert Capa and Ingrid Bergman is believed to be Sir A [...]
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A major influence on other thrillers, Brian De Palma's Omicidio a luci rosse (1984) and Phillip [...]
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According to Georgine Darcy, there were four separate lighting settings for this movie, which w [...]
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One thousand arc lights were used to simulate sunlight. Thanks to extensive pre-lighting of the [...]
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With the death of Rand Harper (Newlywed) in 2016 all credited cast members are deceased.
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Kathryn Grant appears in the party scene that takes place in Ross Bagdasarian's apartment.
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Connessioni
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Domande
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Errori
The helicopter seen near the start of the film is obviously composited, as there is obvious camera [...]
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Jeff says the salesman's wife is an invalid, but earlier she gets out of bed to taunt her husband. [...]
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Jeff's leg cast is always over his clothing. In the first scene, the cast is over his tan pajamas, [...]
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It's possible the annual phone directory was published/issued during the first few months of Thorwa [...]
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(at around 1 hr 11 mins) When Tom Doyle is on the phone to a colleague and before Lisa comes out of [...]
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The detective accidentally throws his brandy over himself, soaking his shirt and jacket. Seconds la [...]
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Stella is wearing the same dress on her fourth visit as she was on her second visit, which occurred [...]
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Jeff is watching Miss Lonelyhearts through the telephoto lens of his camera. She exits the building [...]
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(at about 1 hr 13 mins) Jeff wheels himself over to the window and bumps his leg (the one in the ca [...]
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When Lisa is talking to Jeff about his photography work, at one point she holds her wine glass with [...]
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At around 1 hr 32 min: While Lisa and Stella are digging up the flowers, the pianist is shown playi [...]
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Jeff, a professional photo-journalist, doesn't bother to take any photos of the developing mystery [...]
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At the end of Jeff's first massage, Stella places the bottle with the green liquid on the side tabl [...]
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Throughout the whole movie, discontinuity is apparent: when a man is carrying something while the w [...]
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At around 1:43 in the movie, after Lisa has been taken away by the police and Stella leaves to bail [...]
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At around 52 minutes: When Jeff's nurse goes to the door saying she's going to find out the name of [...]
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When Lisa places her slippers into her overnight case (whilst sitting on Jeff's lap), they are toss [...]
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As Lisa (played by Grace Kelly) is in the kitchen preparing the brandy for Lt. Thomas Doyle and Jef [...]
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When Stella tells Jeff that Thorwald's blinds are "up now", Jeff spins around and moves back with S [...]
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When the audience is allowed to look through James Stewart's camera with the telephoto lens, the sc [...]
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When Miss Lonelyhearts and the songwriter are talking about his record in his apartment, the dubbed [...]
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At 49:19, as the camera pushes in for a closeup of Lisa (her suspicions suddenly aroused), if the v [...]
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Lisa clearly pronounces her first name as "Lee-sah", but her longtime boyfriend L.B. always pronoun [...]
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The location and angle of the shadows of the "sun" are in the same place in the morning and at nigh [...]
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When Thorwald returns home from one of his trips out in the rain lugging his suitcase, the camera ( [...]
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When Jeff phones Tom Doyle's home to tell him about Thorwald, he addresses Tom's wife as "Mrs. Doyl [...]
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The image retention effect depicted in Jeff's apartment, when he fires the flashbulbs to temporaril [...]
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At the start, when Jeff is talking to Gunnison on the phone, the sky changes from cloudy to clear b [...]
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Lisa takes the binoculars away from Jeff and wraps the neck cord around them before putting them on [...]
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The amount of brandy in the detective's glass increases between shots.
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When Jeff grabs the box of flashbulbs, all four can be seen in the box, but when he backs up more, [...]
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When Lisa lowers Jeff's window shades for the evening, all of the shades are up at first. Lisa lowe [...]
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During Stella's first visit to Jeff, she places a thermometer in his mouth. When she does that, Jef [...]
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While Raymond Burr is looking through his wife's purse, studio lights are visible in his glasses. [...]
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When the dog is taken from the basket after being killed, it is apparent that it is a kid's stuffed [...]
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The Exakta camera used in this movie is usually held in a way that would suggest that the shutter i [...]
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At the end, when Jeff is being pushed out the window and all the people run to the backyard, the co [...]
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After Lisa sees Thorwald tie up the trunk and the camera dollies forward to a close up, there are c [...]
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Traffic on 9th Street is one way, westbound; a truck is shown going eastbound (the wrong way) down [...]
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When Lisa goes to Jeff's house to celebrate his last week with his cast, she places two candles ont [...]
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Thorwald is near the end of a 6-month lease, but Jeff finds his number in a phone book, which is pr [...]
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(at around 1h 18 mins) When Lisa and Jeff are discussing "rear window ethics", Grace Kelly noticeab [...]
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When Jeff is getting back into the wheelchair after Stella has given him a massage, his pajama top [...]
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Frase
L.B. Jefferies: She wants me to marry her. Stel [...]
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Stella: When two people love each other, they co [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: Those two yellow zinnias at the [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: When am I going to see you again [...]
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[last lines] Newlywed woman: ...but if you'd to [...]
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Gunnison: It's about time you got married, befor [...]
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Lisa Fremont: I'm not much on rear window ethics [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: [Lisa wants to be part of Jeff's [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: She's too perfect, she's too tal [...]
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Lisa Fremont: According to you, people should be [...]
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Lisa Fremont: I wish I could be creative. L.B. [...]
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Stella: [when asked by Jeff if she ever takes of [...]
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Stella: We've become a race of Peeping Toms. Wha [...]
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Lisa Fremont: Oh I love funny exiting lines. [...]
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Tom Doyle: Oh, Jeff, if you need any more help, [...]
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Lisa Fremont: You can't ignore the wife dissapea [...]
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Woman on Fire Escape: [the woman's dog has just [...]
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Tom Doyle: How do you do? Lisa Fremont: We thin [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: Are you interested in solving th [...]
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Lisa Fremont: A woman never goes anywhere but th [...]
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Stella: How much do we need to bail Lisa from ja [...]
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Stella: I can hear you now: "Get out of my life, [...]
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Lisa Fremont: What's a logical explanation for a [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: [Jeff watching Lt. Doyle staring [...]
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[Thorwald forces Jeff's apartment door open and [...]
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Stella: Every man's ready to get married when th [...]
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Tom Doyle: Oh, so anything you need, Jeff? L.B. [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: You know by tomorrow morning, th [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: Why would a man leave his apartm [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: She sure is the "eat, drink and [...]
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Lisa Fremont: How's your leg? L.B. Jefferies: H [...]
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Lisa Fremont: Did Lt. Doyle think I stole this p [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: What about the knife and saw I s [...]
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Stella: You heard of that market crash in '29? I [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: I made a simple statement, a tru [...]
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Stella: The New York State sentence for a Peepin [...]
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Tom Doyle: You didn't see the killing or the bod [...]
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Stella: You'd think the rain would've cooled thi [...]
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Tom Doyle: Jeff, you've got a lot to learn about [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: All right, Doyle. I take it that [...]
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Lisa Fremont: Well, if there's one thing I know, [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: Would you fix me a sandwich, ple [...]
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Stella: Maybe one day she'll find her happiness. [...]
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[describing a dress] Lisa Fremont: A steal at $ [...]
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Lisa Fremont: Where does a man get inspiration t [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: I've seen bickering and family q [...]
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Stella: [to Lisa] You haven't spent much time ar [...]
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Tom Doyle: What do you say we all sit down and h [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: Who said they left then? Tom Do [...]
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Lisa Fremont: The last thing Mrs. Thorwald would [...]
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Stella: Intelligence. Nothing has caused the hum [...]
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Tom Doyle: Lars Thorwald... is no more a murdere [...]
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[regarding Jeff's telephoto lens] Stella: Mind [...]
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Lisa Fremont: What's he doing? Cleaning house? [...]
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Stella: He's gonna run out on her, the coward. [...]
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Detective: [referring to what was buried in Thor [...]
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Lisa Fremont: Jeff, you know if someone came in [...]
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Stella: When I married Miles, we were both a cou [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: Now wait a minute, Gunnison. You [...]
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Lisa Fremont: A murderer would never parade his [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: I just can't figure it. He went [...]
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Tom Doyle: [describing Thorwald's history] He to [...]
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[first lines] Voice on radio: Men, are you over [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: [into the phone] He killed a dog [...]
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Lisa Fremont: Why would Thorwald want to kill a [...]
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[Jeff dials the number for Thorwald's phone. Tho [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: I get myself half killed for you [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: She's like a queen bee with her [...]
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Lisa Fremont: Tell me exactly what you saw and w [...]
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L.B. Jefferies: [shivering as cold alcohol is po [...]
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Lisa Fremont: Today's a very special day. L.B. [...]
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