Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo Dethrones Citizen Kane as the Greatest Movie of All-Time reads the headline of a story. Much as I enjoyed watching Jimmy Stewart in Anatomy of a murder last weekend, and much as I like Kim Novak (I lo-oh-ve Kim Novack), I don't know about that.
Move over, Orson Welles. Alfred Hitchcock’s 1958 thriller Vertigo has been named as the greatest film of all time by more than 800 international film critics and experts. The poll, carried out every 10 years by Sight & Sound,
a magazine published by the British Film Institute, picked Hitchcock’s
psychological drama as the best film ever made. For the past 50 years,
Orson Welles’ Citizen Kane held the top spot, but this year, critics picked Hitchcock’s masterpiece over Citizen Kane, which has been relegated to second place.
I'll have to think on it.
BBC News also notes that Vertigo
was Hitchcock’s most personal film in which he tackles “one of his
recurring themes — love as a fetish that degrades women and deranges
men.”