Analyzing a Scene: Hitchcock and the Male Gaze
There is a scene in Hitchcock’s I Confess (1953) in which the leading lady played by Anne Baxter descends an outdoor staircase to the man she loves waiting below. Hitchcock uses a tilted or Dutch angle camera shot to show the descent and he slows the motion of the camera down so that Baxter’s movements are more ethereal and less ephemeral: she remains in the frame longer than would otherwise be natural and the viewer is invited to gaze upon her loveliness all the more. It is a titillating and beautifully shot segment, framed perfectly to capture the brilliance of Baxter, the outdoor light, and the sensual movement of her descent in a stylized and romanticized manner. As Goffman notes, framing is everything in cinema: it allows the camera to “locate, perceive, identify, and label a seemingly infinite number of concrete occurrences defined in its limits” (8). By use of framing, lighting, slow motion, and camera angle, Hitchcock is able to convey a very deliberate message of beauty, love, harmony, and wonder to the viewer—all in Baxter’s descent down the staircase. However, as Mulvey pointed out, this technique of filmmaking can also be understood through the theoretical framework of Mulvey’s “male gaze,” which highlights the way in which women are portrayed on screen for the sole purpose of giving male viewers pleasure. From this perspective, there is a cultural meaning to Hitchcock’s scene, especially when it is analyzed within the context of the film’s plot and the context of the culture at the time the film was made. This paper will analyze this scene in I Confess and show how it communicates an effective plot point in the film (the development of love between the two characters) and uses the visual image to generate sympathy in the viewer while simultaneously relying on the male gaze in a way that promotes scopophilia, as Mulvey calls it.
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