I am an honest man when I ain't lying
I don't know if Alfred Hitchcock is one of my favorite filmmakers. I have seen twenty of his films,* which is probably more than I have by anyone who didn't direct for television; if he doesn't make me seize strangers' lapels and proselytize like Powell and Pressburger, I know I don't dislike him. Some of his movies, from acknowledged masterpieces like Notorious and Vertigo to lesser lights like Suspicion, I could watch over and over. To this number I can now add The Man Who Knew Too Much, which I saw a few nights ago—not the more famous version which got "Que Sera, Sera" stuck in everyone's head, but the 1934 original with Leslie Banks, Edna Best, and Peter Lorre in his first English-language role. It surprised me. I have the impression I saw the remake at some point in my childhood, although I can remember no details—I understand now that Foul Play (1978) is riffing off the assassination plot in both versions—but I have a hard time believing I would prefer it. Even more so than The Lady Vanishes or The 39 Steps, The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934) jags unpredictably from coziness to chilling realization, horror to humor with liberal eccentricity throughout; you never know which way the narrative is going to jump. I didn't expect a turnabout of gender roles from Hitchcock—diffident and sometimes clumsy as he is, the leading man isn't a silly ass, but neither does his homespun detecting metamorphose him into an effective man of action; his wife is the sharpshooter, familiarly blonde, but no cool and alluring foil: she is the mother of a kidnapped daughter and when the police hang back from shooting an assassin for fear of hitting the kid, she seizes the rifle and dispatches him herself, like the narrator's mother in Angela Carter's "The Bloody Chamber." The villain is not a mastermind, but a conversational anarchist, quite friendly with the Lawrences when he meets them in Switzerland, amused at the altered roles of all concerned once the wrong information has changed hands; he will not scruple to kill a twelve-year-old girl, but he is not a sadist. And yet he laughs so mercurially, with an elm-streak of white in his hair; it's funny until it's not and then it's funny again. There's an interlude at the dentist's. There's an interlude with a cult. The stakes are high, but no one hangs off the Statue of Liberty or Mount Rushmore—the police don't even carry guns until someone fetches them. It's a short-story movie and I do not disdain those, especially when they are such tonally shifting sand that the viewer can't even conjecture who's going to make it to the end credits, even among the protagonists. (We never even learn the motives behind this attempt on a foreign diplomat's life. The British government wants the man alive and well and politically active, but who knows? We might side with Abbott and his gang.) I have run out of intelligent things to say, except why has Criterion not put this film out on DVD? I will have to think about it more when I'm awake.
* The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934), The 39 Steps (1935), The Lady Vanishes (1938), Jamaica Inn (1949), Rebecca (1940), Suspicion (1941), Saboteur (1942), Lifeboat (1944), Spellbound (1945), Notorious (1946), Rope (1948), Under Capricorn (1949), Rear Window (1954), To Catch a Thief (1955), The Trouble with Harry (1956), Vertigo (1958), North by Northwest (1959), The Birds (1963), Marnie (1964), Torn Curtain (1966). I realize there are some odd gaps in this list; probably the ones I want most to see at the moment are Shadow of a Doubt (1943), Strangers on a Train (1951), and Frenzy (1972), but I'll take recommendations.
* The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934), The 39 Steps (1935), The Lady Vanishes (1938), Jamaica Inn (1949), Rebecca (1940), Suspicion (1941), Saboteur (1942), Lifeboat (1944), Spellbound (1945), Notorious (1946), Rope (1948), Under Capricorn (1949), Rear Window (1954), To Catch a Thief (1955), The Trouble with Harry (1956), Vertigo (1958), North by Northwest (1959), The Birds (1963), Marnie (1964), Torn Curtain (1966). I realize there are some odd gaps in this list; probably the ones I want most to see at the moment are Shadow of a Doubt (1943), Strangers on a Train (1951), and Frenzy (1972), but I'll take recommendations.

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Like you, I'm never sure quite how I feel about Hitch. I admire him enormously but I don't quite love him. There's something about him that's slightly repellent. Maybe it's that he's so manipulative.
You should probably add Psycho to your list of must sees. I'd also recommend his last film- the under-rated, in fact almost forgotten, Family Plot. It's small and cheeky- and sweet as a nut.
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It's funny until it's not and then it's funny again --okay, sold! Also, for some reason I like the notion that the stakes are high, but no one hangs off the Statue of Liberty or Mount Rushmore
Between you and Teenybuffalo, I have quite a depthful false acquaintance with old film.
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And of course I'll be watching "The Man Who Knew Too Much" just because I like Peter Lorre. As I understand, he learned the part phonetically, which I'm curious to hear. (You must have heard the one about him going to an interview with Alfred Hitchcock, and not speaking enough English at that point to follow what Hitchcock said. So he just sat there and nodded along and burst out laughing whenever Hitchcock appeared to have made a joke. I wonder what Hitchcock thought of it all.)
I'll bite. What should I watch by Powell and Pressburger?
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Hm. The first one I ever saw was The Birds, but I wouldn't recommend it as an introduction . . . If you want to start with one of the stone classics, either The 39 Steps or Vertigo is probably your best bet; they are quite different in tone, one being a a crackling chase story and the other the kind of nightmare you can't wade out of, but they are both very representative of Hitchcock. I think you might also like Suspicion, which is precisely what its title indicates—a woman comes to believe that her husband is plotting her murder, and since she's a Hitchcock heroine, she might very well be right. It makes a good bookend with Notorious, also with Cary Grant. And if you want more screwball with your suspense, The Lady Vanishes. All recommended.
I recall watching a couple of movies of his when I was younger ("Niagara"
I don't think that's by Alfred Hitchcock.
and whatever the one is where the kid gets on the bus with the time bomb)
Sabotage (1936)? I've never seen that one.
And of course I'll be watching "The Man Who Knew Too Much" just because I like Peter Lorre.
Honestly, start with that one. Secret Agent (1936) also features Peter Lorre; if you see it before I do, please give a full report!
I'll bite. What should I watch by Powell and Pressburger?
My favorite in all respects is A Canterbury Tale (1944)—I wrote about it extensively in 2007, so you should be able to tell whether it sounds like something that attracts you. After that, probably I like best The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943), I Know Where I'm Going! (1945), and The Small Back Room (1949), although Black Narcissus (1947), The Red Shoes (1948), and The Tales of Hoffmann (1950) are it if you want Technicolor phantasmagoria. I have written about most of these, and can again point you toward my reactions if you think it will help. They were just an extraordinary team.
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Yes. And I love its anything-goes-and-the-kitchen-sink-too approach to its story—I mean, it has an evil dentist and a fight scene that consists entirely of people throwing chairs. And it works.
There's something about him that's slightly repellent. Maybe it's that he's so manipulative.
I'm never sure that he's interested in people. Most of the artists I like best are.
You should probably add Psycho to your list of must sees.
I know, I know. I like Anthony Perkins. I just fell so much in love with Peeping Tom.
I'd also recommend his last film- the under-rated, in fact almost forgotten, Family Plot.
I've never even heard of that one! I will take your advice. All your other recommendations have been wonderful.
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It even seems to be available on DVD. Let me know what you think!
Between you and Teenybuffalo, I have quite a depthful false acquaintance with old film.
It's worth seeing, too . . .
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You may also want to see Jamaica Inn for the young Robert Newton, although I suspect you will prefer him in Major Barbara (1941).
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I'd love to hear what she has to say.
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So noted. I think by now I really have to.
Also his early film Blackmail (1929) is pretty great.
Cool. I know nothing about that one.
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I'm a bit surprised that anything from such a famous director as Hitchcock hasn't been issued on DVD.
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I haven't seen A Canterbury Tale and The Small Black Room yet. Your posts regarding the former have me resolved to seek it out ASAP!
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Aha! Niagara isn't by Hitchcock; it's probably just beside the Hitchcock films on the shelf at my friendly little rental. (By the way, they have a poster on the wall at the video store. It shows a large tattooed construction worker and a very conformist-looking teenager standing at the counter in a video store, saying in unison, "But don't you have any Fellini, Bergman or Kurosawa?!") Sabotage was forgettable, frankly (and I can't recommend Niagara either, though that's not the issue in hand. It did have Marilyn Monroe, but all she did was stand around and be zaftig).
And, my gosh, I walk right by The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp whenever I go in that store. Thank you! I'll check it out sometime. You speak so highly of A Canterbury Tale that I want to seek it out. I guess I just wasn't that into old movies, back in 2007. (I don't know what was wrong with me, but I'm better now.)
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Oh, nice; I haven't been able to find that one. Thank you for letting me know! Powell by himself is responsible for Peeping Tom (1960), which I love.
I haven't seen A Canterbury Tale and The Small Black Room yet. Your posts regarding the former have me resolved to seek it out ASAP!
Excellent!
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The Man Who Knew Too Much? I believe it is on DVD; I just don't know in what quality of transfer. Criterion has editions of several of his films including The Lady Vanishes, so they seemed the natural choice.
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I know! And I think Max Adrian was the Dauphin: there were some seriously random people in that film. Fluellen, however, was Esmond Knight, a Powell and Pressburger regular. Transitively, I am fond of him.
I'm curious what you thought of Robert Newton as Long John Silver, too.
The same day I saw Treasure Island,
(I don't know what was wrong with me, but I'm better now.)
". . . I got better."
Enjoy!
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Oh, I see. Well, hopefully Criterion will release an edition someday.