Birds, The (1963)
Drama | Fantasy | Horror | Thriller
Tagline: Suspense and shock beyond anything you have seen or imagined!
Nothing equals The Birds for sheer terror when Alfred Hitchcock unleashes his foul friends in one of his most shocking and memorable masterpieces. As beautiful blonde Melanie Daniels (Tippi Hedren) rolls into Bodega Bay in pursuit of eligible bachelor
Mitch Brenner (Rod Taylor), she is inexplicably attacked by a seagull. Suddenly thousands of birds are flocking into town, preying on schoolchildren and residents in a terrifying series of attacks. Soon Mitch and Melanie are fighting for their lives
against a deadly force that can't be explained and can't be stopped in one of Hollywood's most horrific films of nature gone berserk.
Storyline: Melanie Daniels is the modern rich socialite, part of the jet-set who always gets what she wants. When lawyer Mitch Brenner sees her in a pet shop, he plays something of a practical joke on her, and she decides to
return the favor. She drives about an hour north of San Francisco to Bodega Bay, where Mitch spends the weekends with his mother Lydia and younger sister Cathy. Soon after her arrival, however, the birds in the area begin to act strangely. A seagull
attacks Melanie as she is crossing the bay in a small boat, and then, Lydia finds her neighbor dead, obviously the victim of a bird attack. Soon, birds in the hundreds and thousands are attacking anyone they find out of doors. There is no explanation as
to why this might be happening, and as the birds continue their vicious attacks, survival becomes the priority. Written by garykmcd
User Comment: Donald J. Lamb (djlamb@hotmail.com) Philadelphia, PA • Hitchcock topped himself in 1960, basically inspiring all modern horror pictures with PSYCHO, a new kind of fright flick never seen before. 3 years later, he
made a foray into the supernatural with THE BIRDS. If you have not seen the film and do not think a bunch of gulls and sparrows can hold you in suspense, think again. The great thing about a Hitchcock movie is that you always know you are about to enter a
world where all is not right. This 'world' usually involves an innocent man wrongly accused, eventually on the run. The world of THE BIRDS has none of this. Nature has run amok and the characters, paper-thin as they are, will go through a truly terrifying
ordeal.
One of the most innovative aspects here is a lack of any musical score of any kind. Hitch's long-time partner Bernard Herrman is listed as "sound consultant" and I'm sure he had something to do with the ominous sounds of the various birds, as their
building wrath is indicated by their squawks. The attack scenes are a bit dated, but considering the technology of the day was pre-historic compared to the computer generated effects of today, they come across chillingly. Some birds were props, others
hand-drawn, even others real. The film surprisingly benefits from a lack of music, heightening the suspense.
Tippi Hedren is the icy blonde and a standard of Hitch's movies, the jealous or overbearing mother, is played by Jessica Tandy (in an awkwardly distant role). Performances aside, Hitch does something he wished not to do in PSYCHO. The bloody attacks are
in bright technicolor, and one scene depicting a victim of the birds is quite shocking. Hitch was afraid of showing the bloody carnage of the 'shower scene' in color, leaving it to the viewer's imagination. It works here, showing the blood-red evil
happening in this everyday small town.
If you are claustrophobic, I would avoid THE BIRDS. Like Janet Leigh in the PSYCHO shower scene, Tippi Hedren is caught in a phone booth in one of many tight situations, shot from overhead. Otherwise, let Sir Alfred play you like a piano, like he so often
has before !
Summary: Hitchcock goes out on a limb and scares with THE BIRDS...
--- JOYA --- (In Blu-ray Collection)
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