Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980)'s Suspense + Mystery In Modern Pop Culture -- Clue (1985), Family Guy (2010), Knives Out (2019) - a podcast by SBJ

from 2020-12-22T04:14:56

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FYI: I HAVE THIS AIR FRESHNER THAT GOES OFF EVERY 45 MINUTES, and I got a new mic from my boyfriend sooooo you can hear it lmao. Although I got rid of background noise while editing. I love this podcast more than I love redoing those small moments. This is a good one. 


The first episode to last over an hour deals with Alfred Hitchcock, who is widely regarded to be one of the greatest directors of all time -- including to me. Enjoy, anddddd Merry Christmas. I pronounce mise-en-scene like a Californian. Also… Did you get my Grammarly joke? Because everyone uses Grammarly, lmao. I am back, “sometimes.” As I edited this back, I was like, “wow, I am so excited about Knives Out.” This is the most exciting podcast to date, and I am very pumped... that's why I talk so much. :)


Covered



  1. Alfred Hitchcock (1899 - 1980);

  2. Clue (Lynn 1985);

  3. "And Then There Were Fewer" (Family Guy, 2010; S9, E1);

  4. Knives Out (Johnson 2019)


Works Cited



  • Bernstein, Adam. “Filmmaker Billy Wilder Dies.” 2002. Washington Post. The Washington Post. March 29, 2002.

  • Frayne, John P. "North by Northwest." Journal of Aesthetic Education 9, no. 2 (1975): 77-95.

  • Hall, Sheldon. "Dial M for Murder." Film History 16, no. 3 (2004): 243-55.

  • Moura, Gabe. “Mise-En-Scène.” 2014. elementsofcinema. July 2014.



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