In this imaginative and scholarly book, Steven Jacobs explores the
architectural elements of Alfred Hitchcock's films and the vital role
they played in providing atmosphere and facilitating plot development.
Hitchcock famously left nothing to chance, and from the Greenwich
Village apartment that provided the set for Rear Window or the
now-iconic Bates house in Psycho, every architectural entity plays a
significant role both in setting the scene and in advancing the
suspenseful narratives of which Hitchcock was master. Having worked as a
set designer in the early 1920s, the director remained intimately
involved with his films' sets throughout his entire career. With the
help of reconstructed floor plans made specially for this book, the
author explains how, for example, confined spaces reinforce vulnerable
characters' sense of being powerless, while readers also learn of the
importance of stairs and windows at key moments in Hitchcock's
masterpieces.