![]() ![]() I’m writing an update today to talk about progress and what you can expect from the project in the near future. Hello detectives! Welcome to the latest instalment of the dev blog. New enforcer scanner notification sound Fixed: Some culling bugs with atriums (eg City Hall lobby) Fixed: Snow was overly affected by motion blur Fixed: Issues with fruit market stands becoming invisible at close range Fixed: Errors occurring when updating strings for the case board Fixed: The various ammo boxes in the game would not display a first person model Fixed: Error when loading save game where the player was in a vent You can now attach grenades and trackers to walls and static furniture You can now put down items directly by looking at a flat surface without going into the inventory AI will now be ok with you turning on the table lamps at eating places and public places ![]() Improved caching of rooms and material handling, which should mean less stutter as you play on A change in the way the game loads its configuration files: It now uses () (this may affect current mods) This is about as close to perfect as Hitchcock's pictures get.Hey everyone, after some time spent in the experimental branch we're now happy to move the main branch of the game to 34.05. It marks the beginning of his golden age and lays down the blueprint for such classics as Rear Window, Vertigo and Psycho. It's quite appropriate that in his cameo for Shadow of a Doubt, Hitchcock is shown holding all the cards, because here he really did have all the elements working in his favour. The icing on the cake is a couple of spot-on comic relief supporting parts from Henry Travers and Hume Cronyn. Theresa Wright also does a brilliant job of handling her character's transition from childlike innocence to knowing cynicism. That air of affected friendliness, which gives way to a deadpan monotone, is ironically far more convincing than when he attempted to play genuine niceness. I believe the reason is that, although his soft, honest features meant he usually played clean-cut good guys (as well as making him the perfect choice for the friendly uncle no-one would suspect), he was actually at his best when playing villains. This is among Joseph Cotton's finest performances, which is unusual because Hitch was not a brilliant director of actors. He interpolates Franz Lehar's Merry Widow waltz at just the right level, making it noticeable but never overstated throwing in just a bar or two at an opportune moment, sometimes disguising it in a minor key. His sparse string arrangements really capture that sense of spiralling terror without overpowering the scene and turning it into melodrama. Tiomkin was the best composer Hitch worked with before Bernard Hermann, and one of the few who really understood how a Hitchcock film needs to be scored. Special mention should also be made of Dimitri Tiomkin's score. Another trick is to have the camera dolly back as a character advances, only at a faster speed than the actor is moving, which gives a very dizzying effect. For example, he has Joseph Cotton look directly into the camera for a brief moment as he snatches the newspaper back from Theresa Wright. Whereas those early films were swamped and sometimes spoiled by showy camera tricks, Hitch now uses those techniques sparingly, like playing a trump card. From then on, every shot, move and edit is calculated to keep up the suspense and unfold the plot. He begins by carrying us into the story, sweeping in over the city through scenery both pretty and ugly, to home in on an average looking neighbourhood. By now though he knows exactly how to use the camera to manipulate the audience. Hitch's British pictures had great charm and character, but they were often technically a little haphazard. It is the purest example of murder in a "normal" setting, bringing the audience uncomfortably close to the killer, helped along with plenty of the grisly gallows humour that the Master loved. It represents a welcome return to the domestic murder dramas that had given him his earliest successes (The Lodger, Blackmail), with a storyline ideal for Hitchcock. Finally, with Shadow of a Doubt he came upon a project that was right up his street. He had made a couple of adventure thrillers in the vein of his late 30s British films, but the old magic wasn't there. Three years and five pictures into his Hollywood career, Hitch had been having some trouble finding projects he was comfortable with. He wasn't comfortable adapting his style to suit the material, but when the material suited his style he could do incredible things. Alfred Hitchcock's style as a director was a bit like a train it ran perfectly well, but only along its own lines.
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