MovieChat Forums > Strangers on a Train (1951) Discussion > Best climax in a Hitchcock film?

Best climax in a Hitchcock film?


I've seen 18 Hitchcock films so far, and in my opinion, this is definitely his best climax. I was completely on the edge of my seat watching it for the first time towards the end. Just waiting for Guy to finish the tennis match, watching Bruno get the cigarette lighter under the drain, Guy rushing to the fairground, then the carousel scene. It was one heck of an ending, especially for a Hitchcock film. I think I would consider it one of my favourite climaxes to a film.

Do you agree or disagree?

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It was very good, but I was more affected by the climaxes to Vertigo and North by Northwest.






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Yeah, those two both contain a great climax. They are great films as well. Both of them are in my top 5 Hitchcock films. Vertigo is my favourite out of all his films, and it's in my top ten favourite films of all time.

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I thought it was silly having cops fire shots into a carousel among other things. I film that started well but just got sillier as it got towards the end. Not one of Hitchcock's best works IMO.

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I'm with you. I was stretching my incredulity at the storm drain, where Bruno could barely reach it 2 feet down and then did reach it 4 feet down. The scene added to the drama with a bit of a fakeout, so I was OK with it. But it had me on guard for unreasonableness.

And then came the carousel scene. A cop randomly firing into the crowd to stop a man from getting on a merry-go-round? Then hitting the operator, who falls on the switch, who makes it go impossibly fast, which causes it to collapse ... I was laughing, which was probably not the reaction Hitchcock was going for. Even Throw Momma From The Train had a more serious climax.

I think the film is praiseworthy for the basic script, and the build to the end had a lot of good elements. But the climax itself? Silly.

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Currently we have cops shooting fleeing suspects in the back and planting evidence and getting away with it. So some dumb cop takes a pop at a perp in a crowd, what's so surprising?

I'm not a woman much less Deanna Durbin, but the old-time glam-shot appeals to me.

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Hitchcock and/or the studio obviously wanted a big set-piece finish (and I'm sure it looked spectacular on the big-screen), but it didn't do much for me. That said, the film had a certain cartoonish quality, so perhaps this was a fitting climax.

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I think it's the most entertaining, but not the best.



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Vertigo's the best. Hitchcock wanted a different ending for "Suspicion " but was overruled. In "Vertigo" he had the clout to get the ending he wanted.




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Hitch has a lot of great endings, and this is certainly one of his best. I'm not sure what I'd pick as the best climax. Psycho had a great scene where "Mother" was revealed, Vertigo was amazing and Rear Window was as stressful as endings get. One that I personally enjoyed very much was The Birds. There's just something with the eeriness of driving out with all those birds just sitting there. The fact that there was no music, just the sounds the birds made... it was so tense. I also loved the ending for Notorious. There was no huge climactic action scene or anything like that. He was able to make a terrific ending with nothing but an amazing plot. You don't always need tons of action to make a great ending.

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Vertigo, hands down.

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My favorite is Rear Window. We have the man who is physically incapable of even standing up vs. a big psychotic murderer. How does he get out of the situation? He flashes his camera temporarily blinding him. It was clever and intense!

This one is my second favorite, though. The carousel was such a wonderful set piece.

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"He flashes his camera temporarily blinding him. It was clever and intense!"

It was dumb.

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Oh, absolutely yes!

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I saw it. A thing that was cold and dry. It was me. - La Belle Noiseuse

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Its one of them.

Here is something to remember:

Hitchcock had a "male menopausal period" after Notorious(1946.) The Paradine Case, Rope, Under Capricorn and Stage Fright were all considered rather on the static and boring side -- except that Rope opened with a grisly murder and focused on the "stunt" of "no cuts, continual single takes."

As the 50's got under way, Hitchcock was looking for a comeback movie and a way to "greet a new decade." The result was Strangers on a Train, which was his biggest hit in years and which ...by Hitchcock's own design ...needed and got a spectacular action climax after five movies(INCLUDING Notorious) which ended pretty quietly.

In short...Hitchcock was perhaps a little less than serious when he put that carousel climax into Strangers on a Train(its not in the novel)...but he wanted to get a big audience, a hit, a profit.

He would do this again 8 years later.

With The Wrong Man and Vertigo having been dour, dramatic, and (in one case) tragic films, Hitchcock needed a big box office hit, and he devised one: North by Northwest, which had ITS big climax via a chase across Mount Rushmore.

The Berserk Carousel and the Mount Rushmore Cliffhanger Chase. Hitchcock's two biggest action finales...for a reason. He was looking for box office after slow, dramatic art films.

Runners-up: the plane crash into the sea in Foreign Correspondent and the Albert Hall Concert Assassination attempt in The Man Who Knew Too Much '56 (but that one isn't the climax of that movie.)

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