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“Because technically actors are just public servants really. They just tell stories because people need to be told stories. That’s all it is. And yet we get treated as though we’re important.” - James McAvoy
(Source: ghastlys)
Jan. 25, 2012 at 4:45pm with 46 notes
Reblogged from ghastlys
Hitchcock Classics: Strangers on a Train (1951) Emile Hirsch and James McAvoy.
Photograph by Art Streiber.
Hitchcock may have exaggerated when he called “the ineffectiveness of the two main actors” one of the film’s main flaws, but had Guy (Granger) been played by a stronger figure (Hitchcock’s first choice was William Holden), he might have been more sympathetic as a hero. It’s hard not to root for the villain (Walker), especially when he has his hands around the neck of Guy’s fat, loathsome, unfaithful wife, and begins to squeeze. Then again, that may have been Hitchcock’s intent all along.
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Jan. 10, 2012 at 8:04am with 2,275 notes
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