Truffaut loved Hitchcock.

Hitchcock had a very strange mind.

Mr. Hitchcock knew what he was doing.

You can watch any Hitchcock film and be blown away.

I would have loved to have been in a Hitchcock movie.

I'm a huge fan of Akira Kurosawa, a big Hitchcock fan.

Hitchcock had to fight to the death to make his movies.

I'm a big Hitchcock fan, and I love anything by Almodovar.

With Hitchcock, you work with a script, and you stick to it.

He wasn't directing it, of course, so I didn't work with Hitchcock.

I grew up on Edgar Allen Poe, and I loved Alfred Hitchcock's movies.

Who was the real Hitchcock? I interviewed him once and haven't a clue.

Some of my favorite scores include Bernard Herrmann's Hitchcock scores.

Well, for someone who looks like me you wonder where Alfred Hitchcock is.

As a kid, I was a Hitchcock lover; I cared about the dark side of things.

When people think of a Hitchcock movie, it isn't just the visual, it's the sound.

Any great movie in the old days has a red herring. Hitchcock was so good at that.

I'm attracted to things that scare me, like 'Psycho,' my favorite Hitchcock movie.

B.I.G. was like the Alfred Hitchcock of rap. Like, this dude's story form was so nuts.

Hitchcock loved long convoluted shots that contained a lot of tracking and camera moves.

I didn't hang around films. I don't know if I'd ever seen Hitchcock's The Lady Vanishes.

Well, maybe it has to do with the fact that I was a complete Hitchcock fanatic from age 9.

I don't steal stories. If I'm a plagiarist, so is Hitchcock. And Tolkien. And Shakespeare.

I read mysteries like Nancy Drew and Alfred Hitchcock, and I swim and I ride my motorbike.

Tim and Fritz Lang I loved working with. Not Hitchcock so much. There was no communication.

More than anything else, I'd like to be an old man with a good face, like Hitchcock or Picasso.

I could never be like Hitchcock and do only one kind of movie. Anything that's good is worthwhile.

Hitchcock loves to be misunderstood, because he has based his whole life around misunderstandings.

When you watch a Hitchcock movie, you feel like learning back because there's a master in control.

I kind of look at my modeling career and the Hitchcock years as stepping stones to what I'm doing now.

I make cameos in all my movies for no particular reason other than a joke. It's just a Hitchcock thing.

No matter how many books I've sold, nothing can correct the fact I look like Alfred Hitchcock from the side.

My knowledge of trains - and love before first sight, love at negative-one sight - comes from Alfred Hitchcock.

Hitchcock had a charm about him. He was very funny at times. He was incredibly brilliant in his field of suspense.

I fell in love with Errol Flynn and Tyrone Power and Basil Rathbone and Hitchcock and Orson Welles and John Huston.

I love Hitchcock movies. I took a Hitchcock class in college, so I saw all his movies. I wrote papers on his movies.

Hitchcock's murder set-pieces are so potent, they can galvanize (and frighten) even a viewer who's seen them before!

So, Hitchcock wouldn't say anything about my work in the movie but, on the other hand, he wouldn't complain, either.

I don't think of Storefront Hitchcock or Stop Making Sense as documentaries, I think of them more as performance films.

I like thrillers. That's a genre that I'm really taken with. I love Hitchcock, that thriller style. I'm a student of it.

Being the object of Alfred Hitchcock's obsession was horrific, but while he ruined my career, he could never ruin my life.

So I think it is common knowledge that Hitchcock had fantasies or whatever you want to call them about his leading ladies.

I worked with the best directors - Martin Scorsese, John Huston, David Lynch, Alfred Hitchcock. Alfred Hitchcock was great.

My favorite types of movies definitely aren't thrillers, but at the same time you can't deny the genius of Hitchcock's films.

When I started watching movies, I saw a lot of Hitchcock films. When I was 10, I saw 'North by Northwest' and movies like that.

Akira Kurosawa, David Lean and Alfred Hitchcock were the main inspirations for 'Samurai Jack,' along with a lot of '70s cinema.

Alfred Hitchcock once told me, when I was analyzing a lot of things about his pictures, 'Clint, you must remember, it's only a movie.'

Alfred Hitchcock had to find ways to create tension without showing it, but now with computer-generated effects you can show anything.

I really love Hitchcock; I think he was a complete genius, to me one of the best directors. Such a sense of how to put things together.

I had to change the shape of my own voice. It was quite hard to pull off and so once I had it, I stayed in Hitchcock's voice all day on set.

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