Rich And Strange (2024)
Hitchcock uses subjective camera angles and swaying sets to make the audience feel Fred’s physical and social nausea.
The opening scenes use rhythmic editing and expressive sets to convey the soul-crushing monotony of Fred’s work life, reminiscent of German Expressionism. Rich and Strange
Unlike the romanticized travelogues of the era, Hitchcock’s view of the world is bitingly bleak. The "exotic" locations are often depicted as sites of danger or deception. Even the ending is notably un-Hollywood; after surviving a shipwreck and a near-death encounter on a Chinese junk, the couple returns to their mundane London flat. They haven't necessarily grown or found a new appreciation for each other; they have simply survived, returning to their old bickering as if nothing had happened. Why It Matters Today Hitchcock uses subjective camera angles and swaying sets
The story follows Fred and Hannah Hill (played by Henry Kendall and Joan Barry), a quintessential middle-class suburban couple living a life of "quiet desperation" in London. Fred is a miserable office drone, obsessed with the idea that life is passing them by. When a sudden inheritance from a wealthy uncle arrives, they immediately set off on a world cruise to find the excitement they’ve been craving. The "exotic" locations are often depicted as sites
The final act features a harrowing shipwreck that shifts the tone from a cynical comedy of manners to a survival horror. The sequence where the couple is trapped in a sinking cabin remains genuinely claustrophobic. Themes of Cynicism and Survival