Alain Kerzoncuf is the author of several articles
on Hitchcock’s work and was interviewed for the bonus features on
the French DVD releases of Dial M for Murder and North by Northwest
in 2007.
Charles Barr is the author of Vertigo (from the
British Film Institute’s Film Classics series) and English
Hitchcock, as well as the editor of All Our Yesterdays: 90 Years of
British Cinema. He serves on the editorial board of the US-based
journal Hitchcock Annual.
"In their fascinating Hitchcock Lost and Found: The Forgotten
Films, cinema scholars Alain Kerzoncuf and Charles Barr do what
their title promises, burrowing deep into the archives to gather
evidence on items from the tantalizing margins of Hitchcock's
filmography." -- Hitchcock Annual
"An important contribution to Hitchcock scholarship covering
various important aspects of his 1930s and postwar American career
as well as the early years and the 1940s.... Kerzoncuf and Barr
clearly indicate that there is plenty of life left in the subject
[of Hitchcock], especially when it is based upon the high standard
of diligent and imaginative archival research exemplified in
Hitchcock Lost and Found." -- Journal of British Cinema and
Television
"Despite being one of the most written about filmmakers of all
time, it seems there is still plenty to discover and to say about
Alfred Hitchcock. Hitchcock Lost and Found pulls together a host of
impressive new research into the murkier areas of Hitchcock's
filmography: the missing, rediscovered, and generally forgotten or
overlooked works on the margins of his feature film career. The
book presents a rich buffet of choice morsels, which, when put
together, make up a varied but satisfying meal." -- Journal of Film
Preservation
"For the more strictly cinematic sort of genius which everyone
agrees Hitchcock had, the best bets are [... ] the exploration of
the lesser-known byways of his long career, Hitchcock Lost and
Found, by Alain Kerzoncuf and Charles Barr." -- Claremont
Review
"In summary, the research is impeccable, its results exciting and
the whole is written with immaculate clarity. This is the new
Hitchcock book you need.... The serious student of Hitchcock's
career will lap up the new insights into his contributions to
silent films." -- Screen Education
"In this fascinating and absorbing book [the authors'] analysis
ranges over almost all of Hitchcock's long career, paying
particular attention to those 'transitional moments' from which the
lost, overlooked and forgotten materials tends to merge. This book
will be of great benefit not only to Hitchcock scholars and
teachers -- by revealing in such detail the origins of the
director's distinctive practice -- but to those interested in film
archives and history, as well as the national cinemas of Britain
and the USA from the earliest days of the 1920s up to the 1970s:
that is, cinema's and Hitchcock's crucial half-century." --
Viewfinder
"Overall, Hitchcock Lost and Found delivers a thorough examination
of little-known components of the Hitchcock oeuvre. The monograph
remains compelling reading for those interested in the details of
the director's most obscure, but always compelling, work." --
Journal of Popular Film and TV
"This welcome book is a detective story, a reference work, and a
model for the study ofincomplete and missing films." -- Silent
London
"[A]n essential book for any serious Hitchcock fan and both authors
are to be thoroughly congratulated for unearthing so much new
content from the archives." -- The Hitchcock Zone
"An extremely valuable and well-executed book. Kerzoncuf and Barr
report their findings in an accessible, authoritative, and engaging
way and are well-versed in relevant critical work on Hitchcock,
which they skillfully use as a guide when evaluating the uses of
their discoveries. Hitchcock Lost and Found adds substantially to
the effort to gain a truly comprehensive understanding of the full
range of Hitchcock's activities and achievements." -- Sidney
Gottlieb, editor of Hitchcock Annual
"For the Hitchcock completist, Hitchcock Lost and Found is an
essential resource." -- Philadelphia Inquirer
"In addition to the pleasures it will surely afford readers,
Hitchcock Lost and Found renders the Hitchcock community a signal
service by setting such a high bar for future scholarship on the
Master of Suspense." -- Thomas Leitch, author of The Encyclopedia
of Alfred Hitchcock
"Just when everyone thought that the subject of Alfred Hitchcock
had been picked clean to the bone, we are offered this incredibly
enlightening effort. Alain Kerzoncuf and Charles Barr have given
fans and scholars an incredible gift. Their original research and
lucid writing makes for an enjoyable reading experience. Hitchcock
Lost and Found: The Forgotten Films is extremely easy to recommend
without any qualifiers." -- hitchcockmaster.wordpress.com
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