Albany Times Union

DIRECTED BY BRIAN DE PALMA

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TCM, beginning at 8 p.m. Catch a Classic! Turner Classic Movies often showcases the works of director Alfred Hitchcock, who has influenced many later artists with his work. You’ll see a number of movies from one of the filmmakers who has most obviously been influenced by the Master of Suspense — Brian De Palma. In the style, content, plot structures and occasional outright homages contained in a number of the psychologi­cal thrillers he made earlier in his career, De Palma has not hidden the impact Hitch has had on him. Before getting to those thrillers, though, the evening begins with a more convention­al and commercial film that De Palma directed, 1990’s “The Bonfire of the Vanities,” making its TCM premiere. The dark satire is based on Tom Wolfe’s bestseller and stars Tom Hanks,

Bruce Willis and Melanie Griffith. Bonfire did not exactly burn up the box office, and was also generally not as critically well received as the next films in the lineup, De Palma’s early thrillers. First among those is “Obsession” (1976), which clearly bears the influence of Hitchcock’s “Vertigo” and is just as thrilling in its tale of a man who falls in love with a woman who is the exact lookalike of his long-dead wife. Cliff Robertson and Geneviève Bujold star. After that is the 1972 psychologi­cal slasher film “Sisters,” with Margot Kidder in a dual role as a woman and her separated conjoined twin who is suspected of a brutal murder. In its references to films like “Rope,” “Psycho” and “Rear Window,” and even with its musical score by frequent Hitchcock collaborat­or Bernard Herrmann, “Sisters” is clearly a De Palma work indebted to the Master of Suspense. The lineup concludes early tomorrow morning with the network premieres of “Blow Out” (1981) and “Body Double” (1984). The former thriller, starring John Travolta, is more directly influenced by another iconic filmmaker, Michelange­lo Antonioni, specifical­ly his 1966 film “Blowup.” “Body Double,” starring Craig Wasson and Griffith, brings De Palma back to his Hitchcock influence, in a graphicall­y violent tale that references titles like “Rear Window,” “Vertigo” and “Dial M for Murder.”

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