Peeping Tom: The end of Michael Powell?
It is possible that Powell had reached his creative peak with Peeping Tom, though I don't entirely agree.
Another brilliant man of his type, Preston Sturges, wrote and directed eleven films between 1940 and 1949. Three were awful turkeys; of the eight contenders for greatness, THE GREAT McGINTY, THE LADY EVE, PALM BEACH STORY, MIRACLE OF MORGAN'S CREEK, UNFAITHFULLY YOURS and especially SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS are now considered superior examples of off-centre Hollywood movie making.
Sturges' flame burned too brightly, perhaps -- and by the mid 1950's he was a dissolute hack, exiled to Paris and writing crap for Eurotrash films. He died in 1959, only 61 years old.
By contrast, Powell had a lot more to contribute. I do wonder if PEEPING TOM's failure ended his effective career.
I don't agree with some folks who say it was a horror movie - it was a cleverly written and well acted psycho-drama, equal to Hitchcock's contemporary PSYCHO and superior to most until VERTIGO.
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