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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH, THE (director: Alfred Hitchcock; screenwriters: Edwin Greenwood/A.R. Rawlinson/story by Charles Bennett & D.B. Wyndham Lewis; cinematographer: Curt Courant; editor: H.St.C. Stewart; cast: Leslie Banks (Bob Lawrence), Edna Best (Jill Lawrence), Peter Lorre (Abbott), Frank Vosper (Ramon), Hugh Wakefield (Clive), Nova Pilbeam (Betty Lawrence), Pierre Fresnay (Louis Bernard), George Curzon (Gibson), Henry Oscar (Dentist); Runtime: 75; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Michael Balcon; Hollywood Classics; 1934) |
| "Much more fun than the more
expensive and longer 1956 remake."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz This early Alfred Hitchcock ("Young and Innocent"/"Torn Curtain"/"Jamaica Inn") thriller is much more fun than the more expensive and longer 1956 remake with James Stewart and Doris Day. Hitch takes an implausible plot and gives it life as an exciting suspense yarn that's filled with a splendid mix of slapstick and gallows humor, and terrific set-pieces. It proved to be the international "breakthrough" film for the British director. It's the first English-speaking role (learned phonetically) by Peter Lorre. Writers Edwin Greenwood and A.R. Rawlinson adapted it to film from an original story by Charles Bennett & D.B. Wyndham Lewis. The Lawrences, Bob (Leslie Banks) and his wife Jill (Edna Best),
and their adolescent daughter Betty (Nova
It might be too stagy for today's standards, and we never learn why
the assassination attempt. But all that is forgiven
REVIEWED ON 9/18/2007 GRADE: A- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |