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London. A mysterious serial killer brutally murders young blond women by stalking them in the night fog. One foggy, sinister night, a young man who claims his name is Jonathan Drew arrives at the guest house run by the Bunting family and rents a room.

Ivor Novello as  The Lodger Jonathan Drew
Marie Ault as  Mrs. Bunting the Landlady
June Tripp as  Daisy Bunting
Malcolm Keen as  Joe Chandler
Reginald Gardiner as  Dancer at Ball (uncredited)
Eve Gray as  Showgirl Victim (uncredited)
Alfred Hitchcock as  Man in Newspaper Office (uncredited)
Alma Reville as  Woman Listening to Wireless (uncredited)

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Reviews

kkonrad-29861
1928/06/10

'The Lodger' is the first real Hitchcock movie and it is his best from his silent era. With this movie Hitchcock managed to establish many of his trademarks (including his cameos). Suspenseful and interesting screenplay has enough turns to keep the film from being predictable. I think, I don't need to go over the plot, but the mystery, killings, revenge, love is all there. Plus Hitchcock plays wonderful trick with revealing the killer.Delightfully moody mystery piece that really treats the eye. Mus see film for every fan of Hitchcock and silent era films general

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utgard14
1928/06/11

Silent classic from Alfred Hitchcock, considered by many to be the first "true" Hitchcock film in that it's more like his later suspense films than the rest of his silent work, and it features some of the themes that would pop up again and again throughout his career. The story is about a serial killer known as The Avenger killing blonde women in London. A stranger checks into a boarding house and soon after he becomes a suspect for the killings. It's a great film, with some of Hitchcock's best direction of his early years. Stylistically, he's clearly been inspired by some of the talented German directors of the time. The cast is good, with Ivor Novello giving some of the best wide-eyed "silent movie stares" you've ever seen from a male actor. Novello would star in a Hitchcock-less remake of this just five years later. Another remake would be made in 1944 with Laird Cregar as the star. That version is different in some key ways from this one. It's also the only version besides this one that's worth watching.

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binapiraeus
1928/06/12

After a few flops in his early career, Alfred Hitchcock in 1926 tried his hand for the first time at the crime genre - and the result, "The Lodger", became his first big hit, of course. And it already introduced to the audience MANY of his later famous features: the storyline, the suspense-enhancing effects, the haunting, creepy music - and of course the plot twists...The movie really goes RIGHT into the matter from the very beginning: in the first scene, we see a young blonde being strangled... It was the work of the "Avenger" again, as we soon learn, who is described as 'tall, with his face hidden behind a scarf'; immediately, the news is spread by the newspapers and over the radio, and everybody reads or listens, shocked and curious at the same time, just like this was a crime novel or a radio play; but the girls who work at the nearby club called "Golden Curls" really are a little worried by this maniac serial killer and his 'preference' for blonds...And then, next door at Mrs. Bunting's inn, a mysterious stranger turns up to rent a room - tall, with a scarf over his face... And not only that: Mrs. Bunting's pretty young daughter Daisy is - a blonde...Slowly though, the lodger, with his good manners and appealing ways, wins Daisy's confidence, which makes her boyfriend Joe pretty jealous; but she ignores him as well as her parents' warnings, and goes out with him - on a TUESDAY night, the day the 'Avenger' always commits his murders...! Now, from here on, we who have seen the movie are not allowed to give away any further information, of course...It's really formidable how Hitch, with his FIRST thriller, at once seemed to have found his so very own, special style; Hitchcock fans will recognize LOTS of issues he later used again in all those classics that brought him the reputation of the BEST director of thrillers there ever was. But "The Lodger" isn't only of special interest for fans of the director or the genre: it's also a very interesting time document.It gives us a very nice glimpse of the Age of the Flappers, with their bobs and their loose dresses, and some good old jazz music to match with the atmosphere of the time. But as soon as the plot becomes dramatic, we hear that strangely threatening music that sends shivers up our spine and lets us feel that something horrible's about to happen...There are movies that NEVER get dated; "The Lodger" is one of them. It's still as IMMENSELY suspenseful from the first until the last moment as it was 90 years ago!

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Zbigniew_Krycsiwiki
1928/06/13

I love the opening title card, showing a caricature of a trenchcoated figure with a wide brimmed hat, lurking through a doorway, bathed in orange light. Girl, with a wide open gape, screaming, as she discovers the blonde body, the latest victim of "The Avenger", a Jack The Ripper-like maniac stalking and killing blondes on the foggy streets of London. But who is responsible? Is it the new lodger taken in by the Buntings, who has taken an uncanny interest in their blonde daughter? Hitchcock's first suspense flick, as well as one of his earliest surviving films, is nearly expressionistic, theatrical, essential viewing for Hitchcock fans and fans of silent films, even if a bit static and harmed by contrived happy ending. A lot of the film deals, not with the actual murders, but with the sensationalistic media coverage of the murders. Based on the somewhat overrated book by Marie Belloc Lowndes, this film improves on that slow moving tale, based partially on the Jack The Ripper killings form 1888, and theories as to who the killer was. A lot of commenters merely mention this as being Hitchock's first film, and talk about the traits he later used which he originated with this film. But people couldn't say that at the time of the initial release, they could (and should) only talk about what a good movie this is, to this day. It still holds up as a good suspense movie, despite being nearly a century old, and regardless of who directed it and at what point in their career.

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