| Leslie Banks, Edna Best, Peter Lorre
, Frank Vospe, Hugh Wakefield, Nova Pilbeam
The first film version of The Man Who Knew too Much proved to be
the international "breakthrough" film for British director
Alfred Hitchcock, transforming him from merely a talented domestic
filmmaker to a worldwide household name. While vacationing in Switzerland,
Britons Leslie Banks and Edna Best befriend jovial Frenchman Pierre
Fresnay. Not long afterward, Fresnay is murdered. He whispers a
secret in Banks' ear before expiring. This is witnessed by several
sinister foreign agents, who kidnap Banks' daughter Nova Pilbeam
to keep him from revealing what he knows: That a diplomat will be
assassinated during a concert at London's Albert Hall. Unable to
turn to the police, Banks desperately attempts to rescue his child
himself, still hoping to prevent the assassination. The film's now-famous
setpieces include the "Siege of Sidney Street" re-creation
and the climactic clash of cymbals at Albert Hall, followed by the
crucial scream of Edna Best. German film star Peter Lorre made his
English-speaking debut in The Man Who Knew Too Much, though he was
still monolingual in 1934 and had to learn his lines phonetically.
Written by A. R. Rawlinson, Charles Bennett, D.B. Wyndham Lewis,
Emlyn Williams and Edwin Greenwood (an impressive lineup for a 75-minute
film!), Man Who Knew Too Much was remade by Hitchcock himself in
1956. |