Talking To The Screen
The Man Who Knew Too Much :1956
I didn't realize when watching this that it was a remake of a 1934 movie of the same name. Only after reading more about it did I find out that both versions were directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Yet another reason Hitch is so kick-ass. Who else would remake their own film twenty years later? The story is a Hitchcock favorite. The innocent is whisked into a sinister world where no one can be trusted. This time, the innocent is played by James Stewart. Stewart is one of my favorite actors of the era. I can't quite put my finger on why, I think it has something to do with the sympathy he can evoke just by raising his eyebrows while holding his hat between two clenched fists. The McKenna family is traveling in Morocco where they are befriended by Louis Bernard, a man who slowly becomes more and more mysterious, until dying in an open air plaza. Bernard spends his last breath to reveal an assassination plot to Dr. Ben McKenna. The conspirators will stop at nothing to keep their plan going according to plan. Stop at nothing may be a slight exaggeration. One omission struck me as fairly odd. There are no attempts made on Dr. McKenna's life. It's been a couple of years since I last saw 'North by Northwest', but I'd love to see the similarities of plot and suspense tactics between these two movies. There's really no comparison between this version of 'The Man Who Knew Too Much' and 'The 39 Steps' (the last Hitchcock film I watched). The tension and use of music that makes this film so wonderful is replaced by a mildly comedic string of errors in 'The 39 Steps'. Call me old-fashioned, but I want to be kept on the edge of my seat in a suspense flick, not lightly laughing at the misfortune of the protagonist. The laughs in 'The Man Who Knew Too Much' I found to be mostly elicited by James Stewart's portrayal of an awkward American in Morocco. It would be too confused by fog of memory for me to pick between 'North by Northwest' and 'The Man Who Knew Too Much'. Suffice to say, both of these are canonical examples of the tension and suspense the Hitchcock is known for.