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North by Northwest: Hitchcock’s funniest, most ambitious film

1 day ago
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Imagine: you’re a handsome and relatively successful ad man in idyllic 50s New York.You’re having a delicious mid-afternoon snack in the lobby of the Plaza hotel, which presumably cost all of $2.50, when suddenly you are abducted in broad daylight at gunpoint by two polite and well-dressed men.You don’t put up a fight.You merely walk with them to their car, trying to object in the only way you know how: asking nicely for them to stop.

The kidnappers are gleeful; they’ve finally captured you, George Kaplan.That’s not your name, you exclaim, you’re Roger Thornhill! They must have the wrong man!Thus begins Hitchcock’s funniest, most ridiculous and visually ambitious film, North by Northwest.All the hallmarks of a Hitchcock classic are here: Cary Grant as the leading man, a completely inexplicable MacGuffin (who is George Kaplan anyway? And more importantly, does anyone even care?), a director cameo, a mysterious and beautiful blonde (the darling and charming Eva Marie Saint), and a 20-minute opening so overstuffed with dialogue that you kind of tune out but it’s fine because once the inciting incident happens, you can’t look away.It’s so Hitchcockian that it borders on parody.Released in 1959 and coming in hot after Hitchcock’s most famous Technicolor nailbiters (including Rear Window and Vertigo, heard of them?), North by Northwest is clearly the work of a film-maker who already knows his success is preordained.

He can go absurd, so why not? There is absolutely no reason Cary Grant, painted in three coats of fake tan as always, should be free climbing Mount Rushmore, dodging bullets from Lincoln’s giant rocky nose after being chased around the US by an underground anti-government movement.Grant as Thornhill is one of the most underrated comedic performances of the 20th century.Every single character he meets in this film is very clearly working to screw him over, yet he remains surprised at every turn.He is like a bronzed Homer Simpson in a well-tailored suit, blindly walking into every trap and then believing he can merely talk his way out of it.You want to shake him by the shoulders and scream: CARY, WAKE UP!Despite being made in the thick of Hollywood’s conservative Hays Code, North by Northwest is hornier than any modern blockbuster.

Grant and Saint can barely keep their hands off each other in their shared train carriage, and the film ends with an infamous shot of a steam train racing full steam ahead into a snug and innuendo-heavy tunnel.It’s hard to imagine anything as erotic in a Marvel film.In one of the film’s most storied scenes, Grant flees from an aeroplane in an epic chase through a cornfield.Out of context, it seems random and illogical.In context, it still makes no sense.

Why wouldn’t the villains just shoot him? Why concoct a plan to try to mow him down with a plane in the middle of nowhere? And that is the core thesis of the film.There is no reason other than it looks fabulous on screen, and that’s why Hitchcock is the master.As long as it looks gorgeous and the stakes are high, reason can be shoehorned into anything.Just as Grant dusts himself off after each life-or-death struggle and immediately emerges ready to trust again, it’s impossible not to enter every absurd scene in North by Northwest with blind wonder and intrigue.Over and over and over again.

North by Northwest is streaming on HBO Max in Australia and available to rent in the UK and the US.For more recommendations of what to stream in Australia, click here
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Labour is privatising the NHS in plain sight | Letter

Gaby Hinsliff is right to ask if the government’s reorganisation of the National Health Service will be the final nail in its coffin (Wes Streeting’s gamble with the NHS is greater than any play for Downing Street, 14 November). Such large‑scale redundancies are bound to create problems.There are other threats to the delivery of NHS services too. The privatisation of the NHS is happening in plain sight. Last month, the government proudly announced that “A total of 6

about 8 hours ago
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Krysty was diagnosed with breast cancer months after getting the all-clear. New Australian guidelines aim to help women like her

When Krysty Sullivan had a routine mammogram in 2019, she was given the all-clear.Eleven months later, she felt a lump.Doctors discovered two tumours, each more than 2cm in size. Sullivan, then 48 years old, was diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer, a type that can be challenging to treat as the cancer cells do not respond to typical targeted treatments.“It’s always a shock to hear that you have breast cancer, but to learn that I had it months after I had a clear mammogram … it was like the Earth shifted,” Sullivan said

about 12 hours ago
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Mahmood and Lammy breached human rights law over segregation of prisoner, judge finds

Shabana Mahmood and David Lammy have been found to have breached a prohibition on inhuman or degrading treatment with respect to a prisoner who spent months segregated from other inmates, in what is believed to be a legal first.Sahayb Abu was confined to his cell at HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes, for 22 hours a day and prevented from associating with other prisoners for more than four months after Hashem Abedi, the brother of the Manchester Arena bomber, allegedly attacked prison officers at HMP Frankland.Abu, a convicted terrorist serving a life sentence, was already being held in a separation centre for prisoners believed to be at risk or radicalising others, which has also been described as small group isolation, but was moved to even more restrictive conditions following the attack by Abedi in April.In what is believed to the the first instance of ministers being found in breach of article 3 of the European convention on human rights, Mr Justice Sheldon found that Lammy, the justice secretary, and Mahmood, his predecessor, should have considered Abu’s existing mental health issues before he was moved.In his written judgment, the judge said: “In the context of a prisoner who has a history of trauma and where there was a failure to obtain an assessment of his needs even though he was known to have mental health issues, and a failure to provide him with any therapeutic treatment to address his trauma, a contravention of article 3 is made out, notwithstanding the importance of the aim behind the segregation regime

about 12 hours ago
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Coroners’ advice on maternal deaths in England and Wales routinely ignored, study finds

The advice given by coroners in England and Wales to help prevent maternal deaths is not being acted upon, research suggests.Academics at King’s College London looked at prevention of future deaths (PFD) reports issued by coroners in cases of pregnant women and new mothers who died between 2013 and 2023. They found these reports were not being “systematically used nationally”.The study, published in the BMJ Gynecology and Obstetrics Clinical Medicine, identified 29 PFDs involving maternal deaths, but found that nearly two-thirds of these reports were ignored.Two-thirds of deaths occurred in hospitals, with more than half of the women dying after giving birth

1 day ago
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NHS failing to cut waiting times as promised in recovery plan, report warns

The NHS has failed to cut waiting times as promised in its recovery plan despite billions of pounds in investment, the public accounts committee (PAC) has warned.The influential parliamentary committee’s verdict raises serious doubts over whether Labour can fulfil its key pledge to voters to “fix the NHS” by ensuring that patients can once again get hospital care within 18 weeks by 2029.In a scathing report, the cross-party PAC warns that improvements in providing faster tests and treatment have “stalled”. And it criticises Keir Starmer and the health secretary, Wes Streeting, for ordering a costly, unplanned reorganisation of the NHS in England. It said this could damage care and was reminiscent of the shambles surrounding the HS2 rail project

1 day ago
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Lack of planning has hit Labour’s efforts to fix public services, says thinktank

Keir Starmer is failing to make major improvements to public services partly because he did not plan properly while in opposition, according to a report from the Institute for Government (IfG).The prime minister went into government without a clear idea about how to achieve his targets, the IfG found, resulting in haphazard attempts to reform various sectors, from the health service to the courts.The annual report provides a damaging overview of an occasionally chaotic first year in government for Labour, during which the party and Starmer have slumped in the polls.Nick Davies, a programme director at the IfG and one of the authors of the report, said: “Starmer went into government with a set of missions, but no clear idea about how to achieve them or how those targets fit together in any meaningful way.“He has not been properly engaged with this process

1 day ago
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North by Northwest: Hitchcock’s funniest, most ambitious film

1 day ago
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David Nicholls to adapt The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13¾ for BBC

2 days ago
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‘People still blame me for their perforated eardrums’: how we made the Tango ads

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Memoirs, myths and Midnight’s Children: Salman Rushdie’s 10 best books – ranked!

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High art: the museum that is only accessible via an eight-hour hike

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Spanish Armada-era astrolabe returns to Scilly after mysterious global journey

4 days ago