It's what we'd expect a film heroine to do, but it's what Melanie can't do, and in fact, she goes upstairs and makes matters worse.
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Well, I think when she goes upstairs she has decided not to awaken the bloodied and exhausted Mitch. She goes up to "check things out," and maybe report back. Contrary to some reports, Melanie doesn't enter the room and stupidly close the door behind her. She enters the room and the BIRDS knock her against the door (she had no reason to think there would be birds INSIDE the house.)
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To modern viewers it's a deliberate defiance of movie cliches
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Hitchcock always used to like to brag about "eschewing cliches" but the truth is, he DID. He gave us weaknesses and venalties in his heroes, and sympathetic villians.
Hell, James Stewart alone played rather ornery yet weak men in Rope, Rear Window and Vertigo. He's a bit more of a traditional hero in Man Who Knew Too Much.
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and makes us wonder about Hitchcock's tense relationship with Hedren,
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Well, I think as Tippi Hedren herself pointed out, perhaps the REAL reason he hired her as a young unknown from a TV commercial is that he knew "Melanie Daniels' was going to get pecked at by birds. A LOT in her climactic scene. It had been hard enough for Janet Leigh to lie on the floor playing dead in Psycho; this was going to be a lot worse.
So I'm not sure if Hitchcock was all that emotionally involved with Hedren on The Birds(Marnie, moreso) ...just aware that this young woman was going to be put in a cage with birds EVENTUALLY.
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