| ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S STRANGERS ON A TRAIN |
| LOS ANGELES CONSERVANCY - LAST REMANING SEATS |
| WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2ND, 8PM |
Los Angeles Conservancy annual classic film series present's Alfred Hitchcock's thriller, Stranger's on a Train. Starring Farley Granger, Robert Walker, Ruth Roman, and Mr. Hithcock's lovely daughter Patricia Hitchcock with a very special performance. |
| http://www.laconservancy.org |
Article from RogerEbert.com
The abiding terror in Alfred Hitchcock's life was that he would be accused of a crime he did not commit. This fear is at the heart of many of his best films, including "Strangers on a Train" (1951), in which a man becomes the obvious suspect in the strangulation of his wife.
He makes an excellent suspect because of the genius of the actual killer's original plan: Two strangers will "exchange murders," each killing the person the other wants dead. They would both have airtight alibis for the time of the crime, and there would be no possible connection between killer and victim.
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| Patricia Hitchcock |
| Interview about Strangers on a Train |
| From BBC's Close Up on Hitchcock (1997) |