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Rear Window
After breaking his leg during photographing a race accident, the thing that forces him to stay at home, where he begins to watch his neighbors from his rare window, but incidents come to climax when he suspects that one of the neighbors murders his wife, so he begins to investigate on the case by the help of his nurse.
7 August 1929, Los Angeles, California, USA
18 March 1912, Tacoma, Washington, USA
26 October 1908, Springer, New Mexico, USA
25 November 1933, Houston, Texas, USA
January 4, 1935 in San Diego, California, USA
June 2, 1927 in Seattle, Washington, USA
8 April 1926, Los Angeles, California, USA
December 6, 1926 in New York, USA
3 September 1921, New York City, New York, USA
July 29, 2008
...the film surely remains one of the most memorable and downright essential examples of the slow-burn thriller genre.
May 28, 2004
Don't resist the urge -- steal a peek at it now, and be reminded why Hitchcock is still without equal in the clammy thrills department.
March 05, 2012
It's one of Alfred Hitchcock's inspired audience-participation films: watching it, you feel titillated, horrified, and, ultimately, purged.
December 15, 2010
Hitchcock masterpiece stars peeping Jimmy Stewart.
February 09, 2006
Of all Hitchcock's films, this is the one which most reveals the man.
May 29, 2010
In this brilliant movie about watching the neighbors, Alfred Hitchcock turns the lens on his audience. "We have become a race of Peeping Toms," notes one character not only commenting on Jeff's obsessive voyeurism but also that of the cinematic spectator.
January 01, 2000
Restored to its original Technicolor grandeur!
September 02, 2009
As close to 'perfect' as a film is likely to get.
July 21, 2005
The deliciousness of watching the film as it's intended to be seen is that the big screen gives Rear Window back its claustrophobia.
August 08, 2009
a taut and (verbally) jaunty thriller
March 26, 2014
Beneath pointed dialogue, perceptive character development and tense plot twists, the movie plays like a breakpoint in our journey towards complete voyeurism.
April 20, 2009
Just possibly the second most entertaining picture (after The 39 Steps) ever made by Alfred Hitchcock.

