The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934 film)

The Man Who Knew Too Much
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Produced by Michael Balcon (uncredited)
Written by Charles Bennett
D. B. Wyndham-Lewis
Edwin Greenwood (scenario)
A.R. Rawlinson (scenario)
Starring Leslie Banks
Edna Best
Peter Lorre
Nova Pilbeam
Frank Vosper
Music by Arthur Benjamin
Cinematography Curt Courant
Distributed by Gaumont-British Picture Corporation
Release dates
  • December 1934 (1934-12) (United Kingdom)
Running time
75 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Budget £40,000 (estimated)

The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934) is a British suspense film directed by Alfred Hitchcock, featuring Peter Lorre and released by Gaumont British. It was one of the most successful and critically acclaimed films of Hitchcock's British period.

Hitchcock remade the film with James Stewart and Doris Day in 1956 for Paramount Pictures. The two films, however, are very different in tone, in setting, and in many plot details.

The film has nothing except the title in common with G. K. Chesterton's 1922 book of detective stories of the same name. Hitchcock decided to use the title as he had the rights for some of the stories in the book.[1]

Synopsis

Bob and Jill Lawrence (Leslie Banks and Edna Best) are a British couple on a trip to Switzerland, travelling with their daughter Betty (Nova Pilbeam). Jill is participating in a clay pigeon shooting contest. She is the best shot but she loses first place to a male sharpshooter because, at the crucial moment, she was distracted by the noise of a chiming watch which belongs to Abbott (Peter Lorre).

Bob and Jill have befriended Frenchman Louis Bernard (Pierre Fresnay) who is staying in their hotel. One evening, Louis is fatally shot as Jill dances with him. Before he expires, Louis tells Bob where to find a note to be delivered to the British consul. Bob reads the note, which contains vital indications about a planned international crime.

The criminals kidnap the couple's daughter Betty and threaten that she will be killed if her parents tell anyone what they know. Unable to seek help from the police, the couple return to England. They follow a series of leads and discover that the group, led by Abbott, intends to assassinate the head of state of an unidentified European country during a concert at the Royal Albert Hall. The group has hired the winner of the Swiss clay-pigeon contest as gunman for the assassination, who has excellent sharpshooting skills. Jill attends the concert and distracts the gunman's aim with a scream at the crucial moment.

The criminals return to their lair, which is the temple of a sun-worshipping cult in a working-class area of Wapping in London, near the docks. Bob had entered the temple as he was searching for Betty, and is being held prisoner in the adjoining house. Betty is also imprisoned there in another room. The police surround the buildings and a major gunfight ensues; the police are issued with rifles. The criminals hold out until their ammunition runs low and nearly all of them have been killed.

Betty climbs up to the roof, fleeing from the gunman who follows her. A police marksman dares not try to shoot him, as he is standing so close to Betty. Jill grabs the rifle and her sharpshooting skills finally triumph—she shoots the gunman and he falls off the roof without harming Betty.

The police storm the building. Abbott, the criminal mastermind, is still alive and hiding behind a door, but he is betrayed by the chiming of his watch, and is shot and killed by the police.

A terrified Betty is reunited with her parents.

Cast

Nova Pilbeam was the last surviving cast member until her death on 17 July 2015.

Production

Before switching to the project, Hitchcock was reported to be working on Road House (1934), which was eventually directed by Maurice Elvey.[2] The film started as Hitchcock and writer Charles Bennett tried to adapt a Bulldog Drummond story revolving around international conspiracies and a baby kidnapping; its original title was Bulldog Drummond's Baby. As the deal for an adaptation fell through, the frame of the plot was reused in the script for The Man Who Knew Too Much, the title itself taken from an unrelated G.K. Chesterton compilation.[1]

The story is credited to Bennett and D.B. Wyndham Lewis; Bennett claims Lewis had been hired to write some dialogue which was never used and provided none of the story.[3]

Peter Lorre was unable to speak English at the time of filming (he had only recently fled from Nazi Germany) and learned his lines phonetically.[4]

The shoot-out at the end of the film was based on the Sidney Street Siege, a real-life incident which took place in London's East End (where Hitchcock grew up) on 3 January 1911.[5][6][7] The shoot-out was not included in Hitchcock's 1956 remake.[8]

Hitchcock hired Australian composer Arthur Benjamin to write a piece of music especially for the climactic scene at Royal Albert Hall. The music, known as the Storm Clouds Cantata, is used in both the 1934 version and the 1956 remake.

Alfred Hitchcock's cameo appears 33 minutes into the film. He can be seen crossing the street from right to left in a black trench coat before they enter the Chapel.

Release

The Man Who Knew Too Much opened in London in December 1934.[9] The film received it's opening in New York on the 21 March 1935.[9]

Reception

From contemporary reviews, C.A. Lejeune of The Observer stated that he was "happy about this film [...] because of its very recklessness, its frank refusal to indulge in subtleties, to be the most promising work that Hitchcock has produced since Blackmail".[10] The Daily Telegraph referred to it as a "striking come-back" for Hitchcock, while the Daily Mail stated that "Hitchcock leaps once again into the front rank of British directors."[10] The New York Times praised the film as the "raciest melodrama of the new year", noting that it was "excitingly written" and an "excellently performed bit of story-telling".[11] The review praised Alfred Hitchcock as "one of England's ablest and most imaginative film makers." and that actor Peter Lorre "lacks the opportunity to be the one-man chamber of horrors that he was in [M]" but was "is certainly something to be seen" comparing him favourably to actor Charles Laughton.[11]

References

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 "The Making of The Man Who Knew Too Much", The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956) DVD
  2. Ryall p.103
  3. Pat McGilligan, "Charles Bennett", Backstory 1, p25
  4. Classic Film Guide: "his first English-speaking role (learned phonetically)"
  5. TimeOut Review: "shootout re-enacting the Sidney Street siege"
  6. "Review". Screenonline.org. modelled on the notorious Sidney Street siege of 1911
  7. "Review". Britmovie.co.uk. based on the Sidney street siege
  8. TCM.com
  9. 1 2 "The Man Who Knew Too Much". American Film Institute. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  10. 1 2 Yacowar 2010, p. 135.
  11. 1 2 Sennwald, Andre (31 March 1935). "Peter Lorre, Poet of the Damned". New York Times. p. X3.

Sources

  • Ryall, Tom. Alfred Hitchcock and the British Cinema. Athlone Press, 1996.
  • Yacowar, Maurice (2010). Hitchcock's British Films. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0814334946. 
  • Youngkin, Stephen D. (2005). The Lost One: A Life of Peter Lorre. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2360-7. 

External links

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