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Alfred Hitchcocks Vertigo Ending, ExplainedWhen the two meet again in Vertigo, Kim Novak's character introduces herself as Judy, and while she looks much different than Madeleine now, Scottie is quick to see the resemblance. Since Scottie ...
Hitchcock on Vertigo: “What I liked best is when [Judy] came back after having had her hair dyed blond. [Scottie] is disappointed because she hasn’t put her hair up in a bun.
It was never more apparent in Vertigo, with the Madeleine/Judy role, hiding in plain sight was the truth behind Scottie's mystery. After several trips to buy new cloths and make-up ...
Thanks to the internet, the world is full of people crafting fake identities: Judy and Elster were simply ‘catfishing’ before the term was invented. And that’s why Vertigo is so horrifying ...
When Scottie discovers the truth, he angrily drags Judy back to the bell tower, where his vertigo is cured but she falls to her death. That ending especially — Scottie alone on the precipice ...
When Alfred Hitchcock’s 1958 movie “Vertigo,” opened Thursday in a newly restored 70 mm version–advertised everywhere as “Hitchcock’s masterpiece”-it capped one of the most unusual ...
He sees Judy fall to her death, but seeing that fall isn’t what cures him of his vertigo. He has already had the shock of realizing that his lust had turned him unwittingly evil—thus he is ...
Judy will never be Madeleine, Stewart’s detective Scottie will never be cured, “Vertigo” will never be real, your DVD of “Vertigo” will never be “Vertigo,” and the McKittrick Hotel ...
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