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Shadow Of A Doubt
/ DVD-Video
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Standard 1.33:1 B&W / Production Year: 1942 / Region 1
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Overall Rating:    3.25 out of 5, including 1 review Be the first customer to comment on this Title. |
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When Uncle Charlie comes to visit his relatives in the sleepy town of Santa Rosa, the foundation is laid for one of his most engaging and suspenseful excursions. Joseph Cotton stars as the charming Uncle Charlie, a beguiling killer who travels from Philadelphia to California just one step ahead of the law.
But soon his unknowing niece and namesake, "Young Charlie" (Teresa Wright), begins to suspect her uncle of being the Merry Widow murderer, and a deadly game of cat-and-mouse begins. As his niece draws closer to the truth, the psychopathic killer has no choice but to plot the death of his favorite relative in one of Hitchcock's most riveting psychological thrillers.
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Features:
| "Beyond Doubt: The Making of Hitchcock's Favorite Film": An original documentary on the making of Shadow Of A Doubt, featuring interviews with cast members Teresa Wright and Hume Cronyn, along with art director Robert Boyle, filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich and Pat Hitchcock O'Connell, daughter of Alfred Hitchcock
Production Drawings by Art Director Robert Boyle
Production Photographs: A Photo and Poster Gallery from the Film
Production Notes
Cast and Filmmakers
Theatrical Trailer and More!
| Video:
| | Standard 1.33:1 B&W | | Audio: (more info) | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Mono [CC]
SPANISH: Dolby Digital Mono
| Subtitles:
| | French
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| Studio: Universal Studios Production Year: 1942 Release Date: 3/6/2001
Length: 108 mins Rating: NR Chapters: 18
| Packaging: Keep Case Number of Discs: 1 Disc: SS-DL Item Code: 61020672 UPC Code: 025192067228
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Overall Rating:    3.25 out of 5, including 1 review Be the first customer to comment on this Title. |
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Empire Review
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SHADOW OF A DOUBT - 3.25 out of 5 (6/14/2001)
SHADOW OF A DOUBT was another big breakthrough for legendary director Alfred Hitchcock. It began his love affair with the dark, hidden understrata of American life and remained his favorite film of all according to those who knew him best. It also has the distinction of being the only Hitchcock film to be shot on location extensively, the only time he would revel in such a situation as he preferred the control he had in the studio and with the optical printer to add location footage as he plea
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