Troubled Times-Alfred, Oops Sir Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Man Who
Knew Too Much” (1934)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Film Critic Sam Lowell
The Man Who Knew Too Much, starring Peter Lorre, directed by Sir
Alfred Hitchcock, 1934
The last director Sir Alfred Hitchcock (I guess you can still use
the honorific “sir” if a guy is dead and in any case he longingly coveted that
title so I will stick with it) had two period in his long film directing career
(three if you include his television work). The early British period which
produced among other films the one under review, The Man Who Knew Too Much and the American period with such gems as
the really chilling Psycho and The Birds. While nobody would claim that
the British period films compared with the production values of the later
period you can see the little tweaking that Hitchcock would do with his later
films in this one.
There was no escaping the reality of the 1930s after Hitler’s rise
to power that any thriller would have to have as a part of the plot the threat
of assassination to political figures as part of the mix. This film is a
classic example of the genre in the 1930s (as in the 1950s and 1960s the Soviet
Union would ask as foil for espionage fare. Here an ordinary English couple
with their young daughter are in Switzerland for a clay pigeon shot (well,
maybe I had better amend that “ordinary English couple” and make it a stiff
upper lip English couple) when friend is mysteriously shot. Before he goes
beyond the pale though he confides in the husband that he has to get some
information to the British consulate. The husband dutifully gets the
information and is ready to move heaven and earth to make sure the proper
authorities get the crucial information.
Well the husband wanted to move heaven and earth except that a
nefarious foreign agent, played by Peter Lorre, and his minions who are up to
no good have kidnapped the couple’s daughter as a hostage. The couple go back
to London to await their fate. The play is that Lorre and his crew are in that
fair town to set up and commit an assassination on an important foreign
dignitary from an unnamed country (although it could have been one of a number
that were unstable after World War). The dastardly deed was to be done while
that diplomat was attending a classical music concert. The wife whose quick
action while she was in attendance at that same concert averted that fate for
the hapless diplomat.
Get this though the assassin left a trail for the husband and
seemingly every bobby in London to follow to their hide-out. That proved to be
curtains for Lorre and his crafty crew as the police performed a classic
shoot-out with the bad guys. Lorre took it in the end. As for the daughter
showing her metal despite her age skillfully escaped the clutches of the
assassin who was fatally shot by her mother who was the crack clay pigeon
shooter. How about that. If you want to see an early product of a thriller master
check this one out because of that lot this is probably the best.
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