Rear Window

Rear Window(1954)

PG
08/01/1954 (US)Thriller, Mystery1h 52m
8.3

"It only takes one witness to spoil the perfect crime."

Overview

A wheelchair-bound photographer spies on his neighbors from his apartment window and becomes convinced one of them has committed murder.

Alfred Hitchcock

Director

John Michael Hayes

Screenplay

Where to Watch

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Media

REAR WINDOW ('54) - Re-issue Trailer

REAR WINDOW ('54) - Re-issue Trailer

Trailer

Rear Window Original Theatrical Trailer

Rear Window Original Theatrical Trailer

Trailer

Rear Window - Trailer

Rear Window - Trailer

Trailer

Fathom's Big Screen Classics: 70th Anniversary Spot

Fathom's Big Screen Classics: 70th Anniversary Spot

Teaser

The Unsettling Scream in the Night

The Unsettling Scream in the Night

Clip

James Stewart Takes A Peek | 'Rear Window' (1954) | Hitchcock Presents

James Stewart Takes A Peek | 'Rear Window' (1954) | Hitchcock Presents

Clip

Lisa Sneaks Into the Apartment

Lisa Sneaks Into the Apartment

Clip

The Opening Scene - 'Rear Window' | Hitchcock Presents

The Opening Scene - 'Rear Window' | Hitchcock Presents

Clip

Jeff Gets A Closer Look - 'Rear Window' | Hitchcock Presents

Jeff Gets A Closer Look - 'Rear Window' | Hitchcock Presents

Clip

The Difference Between You And Me - 'Rear Window' | Hitchcock Presents

The Difference Between You And Me - 'Rear Window' | Hitchcock Presents

Clip

Detective Doyle Finds Zero Leads - "Rear Window" | Hitchcock Presents

Detective Doyle Finds Zero Leads - "Rear Window" | Hitchcock Presents

Clip

A Block Full Of Lonely Hearts - "Rear Window" | Hitchcock Presents

A Block Full Of Lonely Hearts - "Rear Window" | Hitchcock Presents

Clip

A Rainy Night - "Rear Window" | Hitchcock Presents

A Rainy Night - "Rear Window" | Hitchcock Presents

Clip

Lisa's Hunt For Evidence - Rear Window | Hitchcock Presents

Lisa's Hunt For Evidence - Rear Window | Hitchcock Presents

Clip

Jeff The Window Shopper - "Rear Window" | Hitchcock Presents

Jeff The Window Shopper - "Rear Window" | Hitchcock Presents

Clip

The Final Scene - "Rear Window" | Hitchcock Presents

The Final Scene - "Rear Window" | Hitchcock Presents

Clip

Tina Fey & Alec Baldwin discuss James Stewart and Grace Kelly

Tina Fey & Alec Baldwin discuss James Stewart and Grace Kelly

Featurette

Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin discuss "Rear Window"

Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin discuss "Rear Window"

Featurette

TCM Presents Spot

TCM Presents Spot

Teaser

Caught Snooping - Rear Window (7/10) Movie CLIP (1954) HD

Caught Snooping - Rear Window (7/10) Movie CLIP (1954) HD

Clip

Writer Robert Towne on REAR WINDOW

Writer Robert Towne on REAR WINDOW

Featurette

Martin Scorsese on REAR WINDOW

Martin Scorsese on REAR WINDOW

Featurette

Social

C
A review by CharlesTheBold

Written on February 21, 2017

L.B. Jeffries (Jimmy Stewart), an adventurous photographer, is temporarily immobilized by a serious leg injury. Bored, and living in a time where TV and internet were not available as distractions, he watches the courtyard out his real window and speculates about the lives of the neighbors that he sees. In particular, he wonders whether his neighbor Thorvald (Raymond Burr, who actually looks older than his later character Perry Mason) may have killed his wife.

Hitchcock examines the situation from numerous points of view. At one extreme, Jeff could be considered a brilliant detective who sleuths out a case based purely on close observation. At the other end, he could be considered a voyeur and a paranoid whose suspicions could damage other people. These interpretations are voiced by his acquaintances, including his nurse (Thelma Ritter) and his fiance (Grace Kelly, the future Princess Grace of Monaco). In the end physical evidence is found that settles the Thorvald case but leaves Jeff's motivation still in question.

Hitchcock takes advantage of the situation to introduce numerous subplots -- but they're MINIMALIST subplots, where the audience only sees what Jeff sees from his window. (Mild spoilers follow) Newlyweds quarrel, a depressed woman considers suicide but is rescued by a neighbor; a sexy girl ("Miss Torso") turns out to be not a party girl but devoted to an absent boyfriend.

An entertaining thing about this movie is that we have numerous actors -- Stewart, Kelly, and Burr -- who are to become more famous for later movies and incidents.