It is a commentary on appearance profiling in a decade when that probably was not something of which your average viewer could claim to be innocent. The first episode ever of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, directed by the master himself, half an hour long, aired at 9:30 on CBS on a 1955 Sunday night, is not just a little thriller yarn watered down for the new medium it is an indictment of the human belief that we can ever be certain of anything, ever. There is even an interesting moment of fleeting lesbian undertones, yet the moment is not placed for such reasons. The dialogue is never corroborated or denied by the visual text, which is why there is such great tension owing to the incomprehensible eyewitness testimony of Miles, who pre-Psycho here shows us how riveting she can be in terrified close-up. The exposition not directly heading to the story's turning point, Alfred Hitchcock knew how to tell a story without having to tell us anything. 1963 Youll Be the Death of Me 6.8 (349) Rate A woman becomes the target of her murderous spouse after she finds a button from one of his victims. Yet this story is not only playing on the violent in the mind of the spectator, us, pertaining to the murder, but in the assault on his wife, too. Meeker spirals into swelling rage about what has happened, and he is obstinate in his resolution to kill the man accountable, if he can find him. The police investigate, but find but a few generic details to go on. But then he comes home from work to find her terror-stricken and mortified after, evidently, a man assaulted her in the trailer. Meeker sees Miles' ballet dancing as fantasy and playing, wehre he is a practical work force type, an engineer. She is adjusting well to a more mellow life, after her strict schooling as a ballerina. A married couple played by Ralph Meeker and Vera Miles have moved into a trailer park in California, after she apparently suffered a nervous breakdown.
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