WT

Downhill

1927 · Directed by Alfred Hitchcock

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Woke Score

49

Critic

🍿42

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 48 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #1189 of 1469.

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Synopsis

When school captain Roddy Berwick takes the blame for his friend's scandal, he is expelled and disowned by his family. Cast out of his privileged world, Roddy drifts through a series of humiliations—from waiter to penniless actor to gigolo—descending ever further into ruin and self-disgust.

Consciousness Assessment

Downhill presents itself as a meditation on class, scandal, and social degradation, themes that feel almost quaint in their specificity to the concerns of 1920s British society. The film follows a privileged young man's descent through various humiliating positions as he bears the consequences of taking the fall for his friend. This is, at its core, a tragedy about social structure and shame, not a work concerned with contemporary progressive consciousness. The casting reflects the theatrical world from which Hitchcock emerged, with no apparent deliberation toward diverse representation as a cultural statement. The film's moral framework is conservative, concerned with the consequences of scandal rather than interrogating the systems that produce such consequences.

In the vocabulary of modern cultural analysis, Downhill registers as nearly silent. There are no LGBTQ+ themes presented as such, no interrogation of gender roles that might be called feminist, no racial consciousness, no environmental messaging, and certainly no anti-capitalist sentiment. The protagonist's degradation is presented as a natural consequence of his circumstances rather than as an opportunity for social critique. What we encounter instead is a straightforward narrative of falling status, a plot device as old as drama itself. Hitchcock would eventually become a master of suspense and psychological tension, but in this early work, he remains primarily interested in documenting the mechanics of social collapse.

This is not to diminish the film's cultural or historical significance. It deserves recognition as an important artifact of early British cinema and as evidence of Hitchcock's developing craft. Yet it would be a category error to assess it through the lens of sensibilities that would not emerge for nearly a century. The film exists in a different moral universe entirely, one where social class and personal honor carry meanings that later cinema would either complicate or abandon entirely.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

49%from 39 reviews
Film Threat80

I loved Downhill for precisely what it meant to be—a character-driven comedy working its way through a painful and real conflict.

Entertainment Weekly75

As an attempt to scale the craggy heights of a marriage in crisis, Downhill may be more bunny slope than black diamond — a force mineure, but still worth the trip.

Leah GreenblattRead Full Review →
New York Magazine (Vulture)70

It can’t quite match the power of Östlund’s film, or its bemused, clinical (dare I say Scandinavian?) sensibility, but it has an awkward, American charm all its own.

Bilge EbiriRead Full Review →
Boston Globe38

When the best thing about a movie is the title, that’s never a good sign. It’s all downhill from there? Exactly, and that’s the case with Downhill.

Mark FeeneyRead Full Review →