“It’s the end of the
world.”
This month marks the 50th anniversary of Alfred
Hitchcock’s THE BIRDS.
In 1961, residents of a small town in California awoke to
find a bird species by the name of the Sooty Shearwater slamming into their rooftops,
and their streets littered with dead birds. This was a real event which
Hitchcock, fresh off the success of PSYCHO (1960), was inspired by. For further
inspiration, he adapted Daphne du Maurier’s novella The Birds, (1952) which
also told a story of a community attacked by seabirds in suicide-like missions.
This story was also based on a true event.
Hitchcock, known in circles as the Master of Suspense, put
together a very strong cast including Rod Taylor, Jessica Tandy, Suzanne
Pleshette, a young Veronica Cartwright, and in her first role ever, Tippi
Hedren. In typical Hitchcock fashion, the film was put together using new
methods. The score was very sparse, using only an eerie, electronically-produced
soundtrack. The special effects shots were done at Walt Disney Studios
utilizing a new compositing process for blending several images in the bird-attack
sequences.
The film was a success financially and critically, and was
nominated for Oscar for Best Special Effects. Tippi Hedren (who would go on to
star in Hitchcock’s next film, MARNIE in 1964), won a Golden Globe for New Star
of the Year. Today, THE BIRDS appears on several Top 100 lists by the American
Film Institute.
*
THE BIRDS place in history would be the template for humans
being attacked by insurmountable forces they cannot understand or fight back
against. If you are looking to get educated on the influence of THE BIRDS, try
watching Hitchcock’s film back-to-back with M. Night Shyamalan’s SIGNS (2002).
The similarities are so many it’s nearly the same film. But the thing that
separates THE BIRDS from any other invasion/attack film is that the threat is
based on something real: birds. Birds which we see every day. Hitchcock clearly
knew that he would be invoking fear into anyone strolling down the street or
boardwalk where any common bird lurks about. That is part of his genius, and
the lasting power of THE BIRDS."I have never known birds of different species to flock together. The very concept is unimaginable. Why, if that happened, we wouldn't stand a chance! How could we possbily hope to fight them?"
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