In 1997,
Rear Window was selected for preservation in the United States
National Film Registry by the
Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". By this time, the film interested other directors with its theme of voyeurism, and other reworkings of the film soon followed, which included
Brian De Palma's 1984 film
Body Double and
Phillip Noyce's 1993 film
Sliver. In 1998
Time Out magazine conducted a poll and
Rear Window was voted the 21st greatest film of all time. In 2006,
Writers Guild of America West ranked its screenplay 83rd in WGA’s list of 101 Greatest Screenplays. In the
British Film Institute's 2012
Sight & Sound polls of
the greatest films ever made,
Rear Window was ranked 53rd among critics and 48th among directors. In the 2022 edition of the magazine's
Greatest films of all time list the film ranked 38th in the critics poll. In 2017
Empire magazine's readers' poll ranked
Rear Window at No. 72 on its list of
The 100 Greatest Movies. In 2022,
Time Out magazine ranked the film at No. 26 on their list of "The 100 best thriller films of all time".
Rear Window was restored by the team of
Robert A. Harris and
James C. Katz for its 1999 limited theatrical re-release (using Technicolor dye-transfer prints for the first time in this title's history) and the Collector's Edition DVD release in 2000.
American Film Institute included the film as number 42 in
AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies, number 14 in
AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills, number 48 in
AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) and number three in
AFI's 10 Top 10 (Mysteries).
Rear Window was one of five films that Hitchcock made with Paramount that were included under a deal in which the rights reverted to him after eight years. Hitchcock removed all five films from circulation for almost 20 years (often referred to as "The Lost Hitchcocks" or "The Forbidden Five"), and he rarely granted rights for them to be shown publicly. The rights were purchased by Universal in 1983 for a rumored $6 million, after which they were re-released in theaters. These films include:
Vertigo,
Rear Window,
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956),
Rope, and
The Trouble With Harry.
Rear Window was remade as a
TV movie of the same name in 1998, with an updated storyline in which the lead character is paralyzed and lives in a high-tech home filled with assistive technology. Actor
Christopher Reeve, himself paralyzed as a result of a 1995 horse-riding accident, was cast in the lead role. The telefilm also starred
Daryl Hannah,
Robert Forster,
Ruben Santiago-Hudson, and
Anne Twomey.
Rear Window has directly influenced plot elements and themes of numerous
Brian De Palma films, particularly
Hi, Mom! (1970),
Sisters (1972),
Dressed to Kill (1980), and
Body Double (1984).
Disturbia (2007) is a modern-day retelling, with the protagonist (
Shia LaBeouf) under house arrest instead of laid up with a broken leg, and who believes that his neighbor is a serial killer rather than having committed a single murder. On September 5, 2008, the Sheldon Abend Trust sued
Steven Spielberg,
DreamWorks,
Viacom, and
Universal Studios, alleging that the producers of
Disturbia violated the copyright to the original Woolrich story owned by Abend. On September 21, 2010, the U.S. District Court in
Abend v. Spielberg, 748 F.Supp.2d 200 (S.D.N.Y. 2010), ruled that
Disturbia did not infringe the original Woolrich story. The 2004 horror film
Saw pays homage to
Rear Window, in a particular scene involving the character
Adam Stanheight (
Leigh Whannell). In the film, Adam is kidnapped and uses a camera to take photos with his camera to illuminate the dark surroundings, mirroring the actions of Jeff in
Rear Window, with both scenes sharing a similar tone. Numerous television episodes have paid homage to, or spoofed,
Rear Window, including the
Simpsons episode "
Bart of Darkness," the
Pretty Little Liars episode "
How the 'A' Stole Christmas,"
CSI: NY episode "
Point of View,"
season four episode seven of
9-1-1, "Night Terrors," the second episode
of season 2 of the British crime drama
Whitstable Pearl and "Mrs. Crabtree's Neighbourhood," season 17, episode 2 of
Murdoch Mysteries. In February 2008, the film was referenced as a part of
Variety's The 2008 Hollywood Portfolio: Hitchcock Classics spread, with
Scarlett Johansson and
Javier Bardem as Lisa and Jeff, respectively.
Rear Window has been referenced multiple times by singer-songwriter
Taylor Swift. In the music video for her single "
Me!", Swift wears a dress similar to one of
Edith Head's designs worn by
Grace Kelly. Swift has also stated that the voyeuristic elements of the film inspired the storytelling of her album
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