Vertigo
a
film by Alfred Hitchcock released through Paramount Pictures in 1958

Few films have come so far. Dismissed upon its release in 1958, Alfred
Hitchcock’s forty-fifth film is now legendary.
Vertigo, the tale of a San
Francisco detective with too much time on his hands, claims the admiration of
millions of fans, scholars, and critics.
Many consider it the greatest film ever made. It certainly is the best of Hitchcock. More suspenseful than Shadow of a Doubt, more intimate than Notorious, more expressionistic than Rear Window, more serious than Psycho,
Vertigo is a dark romance wrestling
with the vicissitudes of traditional male-female relations. No film handles the perverting of love with
such discretion. And no film marries
lust and betrayal with such an unsettling combination of hammer blows and
needle pricks.
The story, for
all its bizarre plotting, is remarkably universal. Anyone who’s been in love has been
disappointed, either by the object of his affections or maybe as a result of
inflated expectations. And every one
would like to be admired, to be cared for and appreciated. Thus, Vertigo
makes a deep intuitive
impression.
Almost no film
has been analyzed as exhaustively as Vertigo. Its remarkable shifts of point-of-view; its
iconic imagery of the forest, the nightmare, and the murder; its elegiac
surrealism; its bold conceit of sacrificing surprise for suspense; and its
incomparable score have inspired voluminous writings viewing the human condition
through the prism of Vertigo.
Scotty is a man
who can’t recognize his own limits.
Midge knows him better than he knows himself. She loves him, but it was she who called off
their engagement, perhaps recognizing that he could not relate to women in a
realistic manner. Midge is pretty, but
not sexy. She is loving, but not
sensual. There is no mystery about her. She is as straight-forward as her designs for
new brassieres. She reduces sex to the
level of pure practicality. But she
understands how love can survive romance; among other necessary qualities,
these prevail: honesty, patience, sacrifice, fortitude.
She fully
recognizes the severity of his vertigo, which he is quick to dismiss. He’d rather quit the force than serve where
he can be useful, behind a desk. Midge
says that it’s where he belongs, but he wants to keep adventuring, exploring
and questing. Madeline’s condition is
for him the ultimate case. He’s got a
really important mystery to solve and he can feel heroic. Madeline makes him feel needed. She wants his protection and his comfort, and
he responds to her helplessness, but it’s all fake, and all in keeping with
what Scotty wants out of life—he wants something impossible. Mathematical Midge knows this, but “the
hard-headed Scot” won’t accept it. He’s
a lot like Gavin Elster, looking to the unattainable, idealized past which San
Francisco cultivates assiduously. He
doesn’t have time for honesty, patience, sacrifice, and fortitude; he wants the
color, the excitement, the power, the freedom.
He knows he
shouldn’t accept the task of following Elster’s wife. But he allows his curiosity to lead him down
a path where, though he once thought the whole idea of being possessed
ludicrous, he now refuses to accept anything else, as evidenced by his
rejection of Midge’s parody-portrait.
She doesn’t know the whole thing is a con, but she does know that Scotty
is taking it all way too seriously. He
no longer sees the situation objectively, but he is lost, having given himself
body and soul to Madeline. It angers
Midge that Scotty would (she thinks) sleep with Elster’s wife. In her mind he’s betraying Elster and he’s
betraying her, in a way.
But she can’t
find a way to slow his deliberate slide into lunacy. And once he’s there, only Judy can get him
out. (After all, she led him there.)
Though we can’t
get inside his head (because he refuses to speak his mind to Midge, the film’s
conscience) we can gauge the depth of his emotional involvement by his
actions. While pursuing any clue he can,
he speaks to Gavin Elster, Pop Lievel, and Madeline with an intensity out of
keeping with his laconic persona. On top
of that, we get the sense that at some point he stops caring about Elster and just
follows Madeline for himself. When he
rescues Madeline from the bay, he’s betraying his secret by calling her,
“Madeline, Madeline” when depositing her in the car. Instead of taking her to Elster’s apartment,
he, significantly, takes her to his own.
That’s because, for Scotty, she belongs to him now. He has no problem stripping her down and
laying her in his bed, knowing full well who she is. This is where he crosses the line.
But, as they
say, his cover is “blown.” Before, if
she saw him, he could pass himself off as another random wanderer like
her. But now that she knows him, if he
is seen by her again, all bets are off.
But he doesn’t care, he’s so far gone.
He’s just stalking Madeline.
Upon their
formal introductions by the fire, Madeline suggests that she call him “Mr. Ferguson,”
as she should, given that she’s married and considerably younger. But he won’t hear of it, won’t keep his
distance. This, of course, fits right
into Gavin Elster’s plans, as Madeline is really Judy putting on an incredible
act. But all we know at this point of
the story is what Scotty knows, and what he’s doing based on that knowledge is
seriously wrong.
Gavin Elster
seems to be the weakest character, merely a catalyst to set the labyrinthine
plot in motion. However, going behind
the story, we discern that he may, like the other players, qualify as an
emotional wreck. We know he is a
calculating killer who manipulates people like a puppet master. But he is also, perhaps, passionate. We know that Judy was his lover. We don’t know if he recruited her merely to
facilitate the murder or if he decided to murder his wife to be with her. That she looks somewhat like his wife is a
given, but it’s not a necessity for the murder to work. Gavin Elster will be asked to identify the
body. Scotty probably never saw the
corpse up close. And since he was the
only one thinking that Judy was the real Madeline, Gavin’s scheme is not
obvious enough to draw suspicion. Scotty
was just the set-up, available to witness the death, but unable to stop
it.
So Gavin calmly
wraps things up and retreats to Europe.
But what if he really wanted Judy and was upset when Judy fell in love
with Scotty? As she confesses in her
discarded letter, “that wasn’t part of the plan.” Gavin finds that he’s locked in a fantastic
love triangle with his fall-guy, and the scheme to embroil Scotty now becomes
as much a means of revenge as a way to kill off his wife—implicated in another
bizarre death, Scotty will lose his only love and suffer ‘til the end.
With his wife
gone, Gavin unloads some cash and the necklace on Judy, confident she won’t
talk because of her own involvement, or counting on the difficulty of
extradition from another country. But
maybe his retreat from America was as sad as Scotty’s retreat from the bell
tower. Sure, it’s just a guess, but by
considering the story from Gavin Elster’s perspective, we can appreciate that a
figure who seemed a mere catalyst for the plot has his own challenges. Just like Judy, Scotty, and Midge, he
can’t hold everything in his control.
Scotty tells Madeline in the stables, “Try for me.” Midge tells Scotty at the sanatorium, “Johnny,
please try.” And Judy says, "Couldn't you
like me, just for me?" It’s richly ironic that
just before Madeline runs in the tower, Scotty holds her tight, saying, “Nobody
possesses you.” He's trying to possess her, she’s really
possessed by Gavin, and later in the film, she, Judy, loses herself to the
idealized memory of a woman who never really existed, Madeline (who’s
supposedly possessed by Carlotta). It’s as
if all these disparate souls are interconnected. Carlotta dies, tragically. Decades later, one of her kin, the real
Madeline Elster, dies, similarly discarded by a callous man. With her dies the idealized Madeline of
Scotty’s fantasies, and, not long after, Madeline’s embodiment, Judy. Prisoners of destiny’s chain gang, each
personage tumbles, at her appointed time, into the grave.
What Scotty
wants, he can never have. Madeline is
but a construct. This mysterious
creature is helpless, yet independent, cool to the eye but warm to the touch,
married, yet virginal. Her
contradictions are many, particularly because she is really Kansas-born,
earthy, carnal, manipulative, and Kansas-bred.
But somehow she falls in love with a very flawed man, one who seems a
blank slate for us to project our own feelings upon. However, as the story progresses, we stop
seeing what we want to see and realize that Scotty is cruel, neurotic, and
extraordinarily possessive. But he was
pitifully duped, employed as a pawn in an outrageous murder plot destined to
crush his spirit. Once the whole sordid
scheme is revealed with Judy’s flashback, our sympathies constantly shift—we
feel awful for doorstop Judy, desperately searching for any way she can be
loved. But then Scotty sees the
necklace, and we’re instantly back on his side—you started this and Johnny-O’s gonna finish it once and for all, you
bra-shirkin’ whore! The look on
Scotty’s face, as epiphany passes across it, speaks volumes, and it’s the most
exhilarating moment of the film.
But where can
we go from here? What does the audience
want? Revenge, reconciliation… neither
feels right. In a story with such strong
overtones of spiritualism and the cycles of time—Carlotta returning/the rings
of the tree/endlessly crashing waves/one fall after another—somebody must die. It could be Scotty, but Judy works
better. It is her ironic comeuppance,
facing a death eerily similar to that of the woman she conspired to destroy,
Elster’s wife. Also, as Madeline was
unattainable (which paradoxically was central to Scotty’s desire for her) now
that she is back, and with their souls bared, only if she dies will she remain
unattainable. Yes, Scotty had this
woman, but it was Judy he had sex with, not Madeline. He was living out a fantasy that gives a whole
new meaning to the term ‘virtual reality.’
He made himself believe this was really Madeline he was bedding,
resurrected through force of will. And
Judy allowed herself to be taken because she was so desperate to be accepted
she would cater to any sick fantasy, even if it degrades her very identity
beyond recognition. Judy is confusing
the erotic with the intimate, as many of us are wont to do.
Beyond
possession, attraction, identity, and security, Vertigo deals eloquently with death, specifically the feelings of
death, the attraction of release balanced with the fear of the unknown. Judy fears Scotty, even as she loves him—only
when she fully gives herself over to Madeline and, for the first time, sleeps with
Scotty, does she let go. She crosses
over. In literature, orgasm is analogous
to death—it’s the great release; all senses acute, the spirit mysteriously
passes into a new reality. Judy kills
herself by giving into Madeline and by giving her body to Scotty. And in the subsequent scene, with their
passions spent somewhere in the fadeout, she inhabits Madeline, exhibiting pure
contentment. But now her true death is
inevitable.
Scotty says he
wants to be free of the past, but really all he wants is the past. He wants Madeline back, he wants the power
and the freedom. Once he discovers the
pendant around Judy’s neck, he starts playing a role, just as she did. Half crazy, he’s probably not sure if he’s
trying to cure himself of vertigo or love or what. Maybe he’ll just kill her.
Bullying her up
the steps of the tower, all the while he works out his rage. She, terrified, anguished, and (possibly)
suicidal, scarcely resists. Scotty
generates a new name for this frightened, gorgeous girl cowering before him in
the belfry. She’s not Madeline, nor the
Judy to whom he was so dismissive. He
calls her ‘Maddy.’ “I loved you so,
Maddy.”
Ah, but he
doesn’t love her now. Despite her
desperate entreaties, he can’t keep his mind off of the fantasy. “No, he whispers, “there’s no bringing her
back.” We can’t say he loves a corpse,
because the woman he loved never existed.
Judy is Madeline, physically,
but Madeline was always an idealized construct of Scotty’s wandering mind. We often saw Madeline, then Judy, in profile,
because neither incarnation was a complete person, just half the story.
Vertigo is
related to dizziness, and, depending on the definition, the two may be
synonymous. Vertigo can be very
disturbing, but in some instances this sensation of seeing or feeling movement
even as the body is stationary can be strangely exhilarating. It’s like a kind of disembodied
weightlessness. (This construct matches
the famous ‘Vertigo’ shot conceived by Hitchcock of simultaneous
forward-zoom/ reverse-tracking movements as well as Scotty’s
repulsion-attraction
to Judy.) Vertigo is often a by-product
of a balance disorder, and some balance disorders induce the feeling of
falling. Falling is the only fear, some
say, that is ingrained at birth; all other fears are learned. And falling is one of the major themes of
dreams/nightmares.
Acrophobia, the
fear of heights, is one of the more common in the phobia-fear lexicon. Falling is a great terror, but it is the
rushing advance of the ground, the sensation of imminent death, that so
terrifies. However, many people enjoy
skydiving. These people enjoy the thrill
of descent, safely channeling the adrenaline rush (as the body anticipates
annihilation) through the mind’s filter of assurance. For the experienced skydiver, there is no
fear, because he fully expects the chute to open and to land without
incident. Therefore, it is not falling,
per se, that so frightens a man, but, anticipating the impact, feeling helpless
in the face of death.
What we are
considering here is something fundamental and instinctively understood. So when, in the dream sequence, Scotty
Ferguson, falling into the grave, emerges on the other side of the vortex as a
shadow headed straight for those Spanish tiles, we feel the simultaneous fear
of death (by hitting the tiles) and see the helplessness (or acceptance?) of
the figure (arms and legs nearly still).
But the real shocker is when, just before impact, the figure passes into
a gray realm of frightening ambiguity.
Now there is no knowledge, and the fear of the known has been supplanted
by the fear of the unknown. However,
with nothing to strike, the figure is oblivious to harm, neither floating nor
falling—an endlessly terrifying or endlessly exhilarating prospect. This is an extraordinary representation of
madness, primal fear, “falling” in love, and, most important, the longing for
oblivion. Sometimes people neither want
to live nor die. They seek that third,
impossible option available only in the mind—oblivion. At that point where death is seen as both a
blessed release and a terrifying passage, oblivion is the only way. So Scotty retreats, fully, into a life of the
mind.
But there can
only be death or life, despite mistaken promises of reincarnation, rebirth, and
supra-chronological second chances. In
his dream, Scotty may want to join Madeline in death, or he may want to take
her place, falling in her stead. But
it’s too late for that. And he still has
many challenges to overcome. By the time
the film has spent itself, he and Judy will have made their choices, and fate
will have denied them the consequences of their actions. There is no retreating into the past. There is no way to go but forward, toward
inexorable death.
A lot of films
don’t make sense, but they don’t make us care either. And so a curious two hours pass into the
subconscious. But when a film doesn’t
make sense but hits us like a two-ton piano, we’ve no masts left to which we
can strap ourselves. We cannot dismiss
or diminish; we care too much. We can’t
rationalize, we can’t rest comfortably in our superior understanding. We’re no longer smugly at ease with the
world. No, Vertigo dogs us like the memory of Madeline hounded Scotty over the
precipice of madness.
Speaking
broadly, the movie’s greatest strength is that it doesn’t make total
sense. Thus follows the unease and the
compulsion for practically everyone who takes cinema seriously to tackle this
film. Additionally, the uncertain, loose
conclusion of Vertigo lets us project
on the canvas of the story what we projected onto Scotty’s character. We see ourselves as we’d like to be seen and
then we see ourselves as we really are.
Few films can
inspire, mystify, frighten, and haunt like
Vertigo.