"…Rothman's extremely detailed … style makes for a captivating read, and it proves that when writing is triggered by an author's passion readers will more easily understand content." — Film MattersPraise for Hitchcock: The Murderous Gaze"Perceptive, graceful, illuminating … As a model of how to view a movie it has few equals." — CHOICE[An] eloquent, intelligent work." — Philip French, Times Literary Supplement"This is academic film criticism of the very highest order; the readings are inclusive and illuminating, and the writing is at once polished and congenial." — Worcester Sunday Telegram"William Rothman's Hitchcock: The Murderous Gaze is the best treatment of Hitchcock to date. It addresses what is unique about Hitchcock's films … [in order] to establish the centrality of Hitchcock to the art of making films … The book rewards the reader by providing pleasures that convey, to a remarkable degree, the exhilarating experience of viewing a Hitchcock film … Most readers, I am convinced, will have the sense that Rothman has really captured Hitchcock, and that he has shown Hitchcock to be more masterly, and more profound, than they ever imagined … Rothman's book, clear, passionate, and witty, neither reduces the films it studies to a set of codes nor is itself written in code." — Paul Thomas, American Film"The whole book in fact is richly suggestive—perhaps more fully responsive to Hitchcock's complexities than any previous account—and it deserves to be widely discussed." — Douglas Pye, Journal of American Studies"Rothman's approach is engagingly far from dictatorial; his readings, crammed with useful questions rather than inflexible assertions, should stimulate … Rothman's is the best desert-island reading the Hitchcock fan could wish for." — Philip Strick, Films and Filming"Rothman's study is like no other I have read of Hitchcock, or any other director for that matter … The book represents an immense labor of love and devotion." — Forsyth Hardy, Literary Review