Film Review
When the occasion arose in 1956 for Alfred Hitchcock to remake one of
his earlier British films, the one he quickly settled on was his 1934
suspense thriller,
The Man Who Knew Too Much,
which starred Leslie Banks, Edna Best and Peter Lorre. In his
subsequent interview with French film critic and filmmaker
François Truffaut, Hitchcock described this first version as
being the work of a talented amateur, whilst he judged his remake to be
the work of a professional. For years, admirers of the great
director have been divided as to which of the two versions is
superior. The first is more atmospheric, more coherent and better
structured; the remake is slicker, visually more effective, but perhaps
a little too quirky for its own good.
It was the 1934 version of the film that assured Hitchcock's future as
a filmmaker in England, after a somewhat precarious beginning whilst he
was learning his metier. It was also the film that brought him to
the attention of American film producers, resulting in him being
offered work in Hollywood before the end of the decade. The 1956
version wasn't nearly as significant but it helped to assure the
director's continued popularity in the United States, allowing him a
greater measure of freedom on many of his subsequent films.
Pretty well from the outset, Hitchcock wanted James Stewart and Doris
Day to star in the 1956 remake. It was a decision that his bosses
at Paramount Studios were quick to endorse since both actors had crowd
appeal, although they did insist that Ms Day be given a number to sing
in the film, to capitalise on her popularity as a singer and hence
bolster the box office returns. Hitchcock agreed
unwillingly to this but he was pleased with the number that songwriters
Jay Livingston and Ray Evans came up with:
Que sera, sera. The song,
which serves the film extremely well, would win an Academy Award in
1956 and would top the music charts in the UK and the United States
that year.
Hitchcock always liked to include recognisable landmarks in his
films and this one, as in the original version, features one of
London's most famous, the Royal Albert Hall. This monument
actually turns out to be the crux of the whole film, providing the
climactic set piece which is one of the best illustrations of
Hitchcock's use of suspense. The famous scene in which an
assassination is narrowly thwarted is played without dialogue, the only
sound being the music of a concert recital, which gradually builds to a
terrifying crescendo. For this sequence, the part of the
conductor is played by Bernard Herrmann, who scored the music for this
and several other Hitchcock films, most notably
Vertigo
(1958) and
Psycho (1960). Hitchcock
gave Herrmann the opportunity to compose his own concert piece for this
sequence but the composer declined. Instead, he opted for a
slightly re-orchestrated version of Arthur Benjamin's
Storm Clouds cantata, which had
featured in the original 1934 film.
Comparing the two versions of
The
Man Who Knew Too Much reveals not only how Hitchcock had refined
his technique in the intervening years but also shows how his
philosophy of filmmaking had altered. By the 1950s, he had become
far more concerned about meeting his audience's expectations than he
was in his early years. His time in Hollywood and taught him much
about the psychology of audiences and he knew instinctively what worked
and what didn't. Yet whilst pleasing mainstream cinemagoers was
very much in his game plan, so was making films that respected the
aesthetics of cinema. As he famously said, he saw no interest in
merely showing photographs of people talking. Hitchcock saw no
contradiction in being an auteur and being a maker of popular
movies. This explains not only why he enjoyed unparalleled
success in his own lifetime, but also why his films have endured and
retained their popularity, delighting film enthusiasts and inspiring
successive generations of filmmakers.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
The Wrong Man (1956)
Film Synopsis
Whilst vacationing in Morocco, Dr Ben McKenna and his wife, Jo, make
the acquaintance of a mysterious Frenchman, Louis Bernard. Jo's
initial suspicions about Bernard grow when he declines to dine with
them one evening. Instead, they dine with another pair of
tourists, Mr and Mrs Drayton, who strike them as a perfectly
respectable couple. The next day, whilst visiting the market, Ben
sees a man stabbed to death. The victim is none other than Louis
Bernard, disguised as a local. Before he dies, Bernard whispers a
last message to Ben, warning him of an imminent assassination in
London. Not long after this, Ben receives a telephone call from a
stranger informing him that his young son, Hank, has been
kidnapped. Providing Ben keeps what he has learnt to himself, no
harm will befall his son...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.