Peeping Tom

95% of critics liked it

83% of users liked it

In theaters Apr 07, 1960
Unrated, 1 hr. 49 min.

Movie Info

Director: Michael Powell
Rated: Unrated
Running Time: 1 hr. 49 min.
Genre: Drama, Mystery & Suspense, Classics
Theater Release: Apr 07, 1960
DVD Release: Nov 16, 1999
Synopsis: Michael Powell's controversial meditation on violence and voyeurism effectively destroyed his career when it was first released, but later generations have come to regard it as a masterpiece. Karl Heinz Boehm stars as Mark, the son of a psychologist who kept a video journal of the boy's upbringing for research purposes. The constant intrusions profoundly affected the boy, who grew up to be a photographer himself; but his principal subject matter consists of women whom he murders before the

Critic Reviews

  • Stripped of its color and some excellent photography plus imaginative direction by Michael Powell, the plot itself would have emerged as a shoddy yarn. More...
  • It's an understanding and at times even celebratory film -- attitudes that scandalized critics years ago and are still pretty potent today. More...
  • A Freudian script of notable maturity teases limitless implications from this premise, while maintaining a healthy sense of humour. More...
  • Peeping Tom's rediscovery, I fear, tells us more about fads in film criticism than it does about art. More...
  • Though it effectively ended Mr. Powell's career, Peeping Tom is now considered a once-forbidden classic, an audacious act of self-cannibalization in which cinema itself is a lethal weapon. More...
  • The original first-person horror film. More...
  • Today, thanks largely to a 1980 revival engineered by Powell enthusiast and fellow director Martin Scorsese, Peeping Tom is rightly seen as a horror classic and sophisticated psychological journey. More...
  • The movies make us into voyeurs. We sit in the dark, watching other people's lives. It is the bargain the cinema strikes with us, although most films are too well-behaved to mention it. More...
  • It's a perceptive, blackly comic masterwork. More...
  • While Hitchcock's masterpiece is unquestionably the more mainstream and formally groundbreaking of the two films, it's arguable that Peeping Tom is the more thematically profound and insightful work. Just don't expect to feel good after watching it. More...