

18 tonnes of steel, one iconic face, and a father-son therapy session for the ages.
Filmmaker Lee Donaldson takes a poignant journey down memory lane with his acclaimed artist father Antony Donaldson about his art, the artwork, and the monumental task of producing a colossal mask of Alfred Hitchcock made from 18 tonnes of solid steel for Gainsborough Studios apartments in London where Hitchcock made his earlier works.
Direction
Lee turns a making-of into emotional archaeology.
Production
Watching 18 tonnes of Hitchcock face come alive is hypnotic.
Director
Lee Donaldson
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Gainsborough Studios was where Hitchcock directed his first nine films, making this sculpture a literal homecoming.
Antony Donaldson was a key figure in 1960s British Pop Art, making this late-career monument feel like his own artistic reckoning.
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