The Wrong Place At The
Wrong Time- Sir Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Man Who Knew Too Much”(1956)-A Film
Review
DVD Review
By Sandy Salmon
The Man Who Knew Too
Much, starring James Stewart, Doris Day, directed again (first time 1934) by
Sir Alfred Hitchcock, 1956
People, historians,
especially counter-historians, often speculate if one little fact was changed
then history would have taken a decisive turn the other way. You know stuff
like if Hitler had been killed at the beer garden in Munich in 1923 or if Lenin
could not have gotten back to Russia in the spring of 1917. That idea runs to
the personal side of life as well, sometimes with strange results like being in
the wrong place at the wrong time like the protagonists in the late Sir Alfred
Hitchcock’s off-beat remake of his 1934 classic The Man Who Knew Too Much. So just like with great historical
figures and events we can play the same game here what if Ben, played by Jimmy
Stewart, Jo played by Doris Day and their young son had not been in heading
from Casablanca to Marrakesh on some dusty woe begotten bus and run into a
French intelligence agent whose dying words talked of an assassination plot
against a big shot foreign dignity in bloody England.
But, of course, they
were and the chase was on from there ruining a perfectly respectable little
family vacation and putting Ben and Jo on the edge-to speak nothing of their
son who will eventually be kidnapped just because Ma and Pa knew too freaking
much. Once the conspirators know they know what was what that young son’s life
isn’t worth much, maybe. He is kidnapped to insure Ben and Jo’s silence. But
they trace the party to London where the action gets hot and heavy and the
conspiracy to kill the foreign big wigs in full gear. Except through keen
analysis and some luck Ben and Jo figure out that the plot is going to be
hatched, that dignitary is going to be killed while attending a symphony
concert at Royal Albert Hall (where else). The long and short of it is that Ben
and Jo discover where the kidnappers have taken their son, they struggle to get
to him and eventually find out about the Royal Albert caper. They are able to
foil the plot by a timely scream from Jo who sights the paid assassin as he
attempts his dastardly work. After much ado their son is recovered and they can
go on about their average American family life.
But let’s say that bigwig
in the gunsights had been killed maybe there would have been another Sarajevo,
1914. There’s a little history in the conditional for you. See this one. It is
better that the 1934 version which as Hitchcock himself is quoted as saying was
the work of an inspired amateur and the 1956 was done by a master artist, a
pro. And that is right.
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