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Everyone who loves film – particularly dissecting film – loves Alfred Hitchcock’s 1958 movie Vertigo. It’s inescapable, everywhere, a Freudian treasure trove that allows any film student with a modicum of psychological training to draw conclusion after conclusion about its meaning, its subtext, the director, man’s relationship with woman, the nature of death and obsession, and more.
Vertigo‘s plot concerns police officer James Stewart and his romance with the very blonde Kim Novak, whom he eventually sees fall to her death from a clock tower. When he sees a brunette a few months later who looks a whole lot like her, he woos this doppelgängerin and eventually begins to try to make her over to become his deceased lover.
I won’t spoil the rest of it for you, because this is It’s Hammer Time!, not Movies You Should Watch. But the reason I mention it is that six years before Vertigo was released, Hammer and director Terence Fisher came up with Stolen Face. In it, plastic surgeon Philip Ritter (Paul Henreid) falls in love with a gifted, beautiful and very blonde concert pianist Alice Brent (Lizabeth Scott). They meet and a romance soon develops. However, Alice is already engaged to be married and, afraid to tell Ritter, runs away.
She later calls him to tell him she is marrying David (André Morell). Meanwhile, Ritter has a new patient, Lily Conover (Mary Mackenzie), a female convict whose face is disfigured. Ritter believes he can change her criminal ways by making her look like Alice.
All very Vertigo-ish… and I won’t tell you how this one ends either. But’s it’s today’s movie, so enjoy!
Since it is St Andrew’s Day today, apparently, to celebrate, I thought I’d share Armando Iannucci’s take on a familiar phrase that haunted many a BBC1 viewer during the 70s and 80s: “Except for viewers in Scotland.”
While it’s all steam ahead over in Justice League #14 as far as the Wonder Woman-Superman romance is concerned…


…it doesn’t seem that those over on Superman have got the message. While it’s clearly intended to be taking place at the same time as Justice League #12, judging by the fact this flashback happens at night…

…Clark’s thoughts about the arrival of Lois Lane suggest that maybe not everyone’s on board with the whole thing…

“The most most amazing woman he has ever met.” Hmm…
BTW, Lois needs to eat some food. That’s not a healthy look.
Okay, they’re just pretending they don’t like Go On and The Office, because of that naughty Angus T Jones. Nice jab at Studio 60, too.
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