Perfect Ending


I never believed that story that has been circulated for years. Largely because I can't believe Hitchcock would cast and make a film while being blocked at every turn, only to have to comply with an incoherent ending. More importantly,, I can't believe that Hitchcock would make an obvious murder movie with an obvious murderer. The book sounds trite and the concept already dominated the book and film industry of that era. Cads who married for money and murder. Femme fatales who married and murdered for money. Film Noir was riddled with that overdone story.
No Hitchcock made exactly the movie he intended to make, infinitely more interesting than the book he borrowed from. The ending was just perfect and a reminder not to completely judge a book by its cover. Johnny Aysgarth was many things, but he loved his wife and was not a murderer.

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Agreed.

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Absolutely terrible ending.

"I can't believe that Hitchcock would make an obvious murder movie with an obvious murderer."

Actually, it's never obvious he's a murderer in the original ending, it's just never resolved. But even if it was obvious, the question would be if he'll get away with it.

An ambiguous ending would've been great, but even if one insists on Johnnie being innocent, a far better ending must've been possible.

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Johnny's a cad, a gambler, a gigolo, interested in murder mysteries, trying to borrow on his wife's life insurance, etc., we nauseam. Of course he is being portrayed as a murderer; it's boring. Of course he won't get away with it; they never do, and the idea that he might is equally boring. The genre is flooded with those kinds of movies. If Hitchcock really did want to make a cliched murder for money movie, then my opinion of him just plummeted. The ending a bit too expository. Maybe less words and fewer explanations allowing the viewers to explain the apparently happy ending for themselves. As I think about it Hitchcock did tend towards those expositions in the end. I wonder why.

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"The genre is flooded with those kinds of movies."

Not in 1941, it would've been a bold move. The original ending was actually quite intriguing.

With the ending as it is, you're left to wonder why either of them would even want to stay with the other. Both of them acted mentally ill if absolutely nothing was going on. It's actually quite boring how everything is suddenly honky-dory at the end.

I hate the exposition scene in Psycho, but at least it made some sense.

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Murder mystery novels and films were huge in the 30s and 40s. There was absolutely nothing unique about it. The only thing slightly different about this novel is that she chooses to let her husband kill her. Otherwise, I can't imagine anything more boring than yet another murder mystery.
I wouldn't call Johnny facing prison all honky-dory. The movie is designed to show the critical moments. Clearly weeks, or even months passed that we weren't privy to that certainly suggests that they had a loving relationship. In any case, they loved and needed each other. Both grew up, in the end. The psychology and love between the two is far more interesting than gigolo murders wife. There was quite enough of that with Erle Stanley Gardner flooding the market, especially with Perry Mason, or Agatha Christie and countless others.

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Nah, the ending spoiled an otherwise good film. It needed to be something surprising but inevitable. It felt arbitrary and thrown in, not an ending that grew out of everything that had gone before.

The heart of the movie was Lina’s mounting suspicion about Johnnie, she needed to do something, like turn the tables on him - get him to drink some maybe-poisoned water, or make him suspicious somehow.

All kinds of hints were dropped. Was he going to shag the maid? Was the novelist in on his murder plans? Was Beaky? Did he murder her father? Seeds were being sown and some kind of gobsmacking revelation that brought all of these suspicions we the audience had together in a final twist would have been epic.

The original ending of her choosing to die would have been too tragic. She was so adorable and innocent, it was already like torturing a puppy for 90mins and to kill it would be too depressing. The happy ending felt unearned and tacked on. This needed a rewrite to really embed a deeper theme and have it expressed in a knockout ending.

Perhaps Hitch was too green at this point. I’d like to have seen older Hitch remake it without the studio and star constraints, and when he had matured into the master that gave us Psycho and Vertigo. That Hitch would have given us the wallop of an ending this film deserved.

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