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You've Got Your Whole Life Ahead of You!


"Frenzy" was a big comeback hit for Hitchcock. There was some irony that the film was much better reviewed, on the whole than "The Birds" had been in 1963...and that some 1972 critics specifically listed "The Birds" as the FIRST "Hitchcock film of decline"(followed by Marnie, Torn Curtain, and Topaz) that had been "beaten" by "Frenzy."

I single out "The Birds" versus "Frenzy" here because while "The Birds" had set piece after set piece after set piece and represented Hitchcock piling on more sheer movie-making action than he'd ever done before..."Frenzy" is really rather small and tight and uneventful.

But within that smallness,"Frenzy" perhaps worked with more gem-like precision. It has a better script than "The Birds" and better structure. And it has a few set-pieces all its own.

One is called the "Farewell to Babs" sequence, which begins this way:

Close-up on Babs Milligan(Anna Massey): And all the noisy sound of the Covent Garden marketplace recedes to silence and the voice of an unseen man:

"Got a place to stay?"

The camera rack-focusses past Babs to the man saying this, and the stomachs of the audience drop:

the man is Bob Rusk, whom everybody likes for his surface, cheery charm, but whom only WE know is REALLY "the necktie killer," a vicious homicidal maniac given to attempting rape of his female victims before strangling them to achieve true sexual satisfaction.

We are HORRIFIED to see Bob Rusk there, and the innocent Babs his next potential victim.

There is a Hitchcock rhyme, next. The dialogue:

Babs: Oh, its you, Bob.
Rusk: (A bit sadly) Yeah.

Whereas earlier in the film when he came through the door of Brenda Blaney's office at lunchtime to kill HER, the dialogue:

Brenda: Oh, its you, Mr. Robinson
Rusk: (A bit sadly) I'm afraid so.

Hitchcock perfection. Though Brenda calls Rusk "Mr. Robinson"(because he's registered with her matrimonial agency under an assumed name") the call-and-callback response is the same "Oh its you" and Rusk's sad affirmation "I'm afraid so/Yeah" (sad, because HE knows he's here to kill another victim. He just can't help it.)

But back to Babs and Rusk in Covent Garden.

Having asked Babs if she's got a place to stay(she doesn't; she just quit her barmaid job and the free room and board that comes with it), Rusk walks Bab through a good stretch of Covent Garden -- from the outside to inside(a fruit and flowers warehouse) and outside again, to his flat. The single travelling take camerawork is good, the scenery colorful, the acting great, the writing, trenchant.

To wit:

Rusk offers Babs his flat for the night "til you get things settled."

Babs: No strings?
Rusk: Do I look like THAT sort of a bloke?
Babs: (Lightly) ALL blokes are that sort of a bloke.

Rusk just chuckles, but the line has resonance. A woman has to be cautious. Unfortunately, Rusk is just too cheery and harmless seeming to seem dangerous.
(BTW, all blokes ARE that sort of a bloke...they just have to gauge their chances and how long they have to work at it. But most men don't rape and kill. I'm talking courtship, here.)

Next Rusk tries to ascertain what Babs knows about her boyfriend , Richard Blaney, who is on the run for being the Necktie Killer(he isn't; Rusk is.)

Rusk: Leaving your boyfriend a bit in the lurch, aren't you? Can you tell me where he's staying?
Babs: I can't tell you that, Bob.
Rusk: Me and Dick have always been mates, you know that...all right, keep your little secret.

Exactly why Rusk wanted that information will become clear much later: when he turns Blaney into the cops.

As Rusk and Babs walk through the warehouse of colorful fruits and flowers, we notice that THEY are colorful: Babs with her bright orange suit(which will figure -- off her body -- as evidence in later scenes), Rusk with his bright purple tie(reminding us of the murder weapon he wears in plain sight.)

Heading out of the warehouse and towards the stairwell leading to Rusk's upstairs flat, the dialogue becomes harshly, sadly ironic:

Rusk: You know, quitting your job can be a blessing in disguise. It gets you out of a rut. You should travel, see the world. Jaffa. California -- where the fruit comes from. That's what I'd do if I wasn't tied down here.

Almost to the doorway to the stairs to Rusk's flat, Rusk offers Babs his most cutting advice:

Rusk: After all, you've got your whole life ahead of you!

All 15 minutes or so, we horrifyingly realize.

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The next sequence, all the way up the curving staircase to Rusk's room, his opening the door to let Babs in ahead of him, his final line "I don't know if you know this, Babs, but you're my..type...of woman"(exactly what he said to Brenda Blaney before killing HER; another Hitchcock rhyme) and then the famous retreat of the camera backwards down the stairs and out into the Covent Garden marketplace that now fills with sound...is the famous "Farewell to Babs" shot.

That's a great shot, with great meaning, but I will contend that there are a great many other great Hitchcock touches before it happens, from the soundtrack cutting down on "Got a place to stay?" to the walk and talk through the colorful fruit warehouse, to Rusk's advice about quitting a job being a blessing in disguise and how Babs should travel(its funny, I KNOW he's going to kill her, but I find myself imagining Babs travelling) and how Rusk's line about "your whole life ahead of you" is his own sadistic little in-joke, as well as a way of making sure Babs is "thinking past the present" to a future he is about to end.

Its classic Hitchcock, its adult in its execution and yes -- I think it is better than a lot of the script in The Birds.

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One more thing:

Everybody was supposedly taken by surprise when Janet Leigh gets killed in Psycho.

I'd say Hitchcock pulled off as much of a big surprise when Anna Massey gets killed in Frenzy.

For we'd thought that that the "Janet Leigh" of Frenzy was Barbara Leigh-Hunt(Brenda Blaney) the "big victim of the film." Anna Massey, had, we thought, the Vera Miles part in Psycho(Lila Crane) or the Ruth Roman part in Strangers on a Train(Anne Morton) the "female lead" after a victim is killed early on(Marion in Psycho; Miriam in Strangers.)

Anna Massey as Babs DOES have the heroine part in Frenzy, and it is part of our shock and disbelief to slowly realize that Rusk is GOING TO KILL HER TOO. In other words, it is the SECOND murder in Frenzy that is the big surprise.

Hitchcock never quit surprising us....

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