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The Trouble with Harry

The Trouble with Harry

1955 film by Alfred Hitchcock

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Contents

Is a
Creative work
Creative work

Creative Work attributes

Wikidata ID
Q1413227
Directed by (Film)
Alfred Hitchcock
Alfred Hitchcock
Edited by
‌
Alma Macrorie
Screenplay by
John Michael Hayes
John Michael Hayes
Cinematographer of
‌
Robert Burks
Music by
‌
Bernard Herrmann
Author
‌
Jack Trevor Story
Key People
Mildred Dunnock
Mildred Dunnock
Royal Dano
Royal Dano
‌
Wally Westmore
‌
Hal Pereira
Mildred Natwick
Mildred Natwick
Emile Kuri
Emile Kuri
John Goodman
John Goodman
‌
John P. Fulton
...
First Release
September 30, 1955

Other attributes

Country
United States
United States
Latest Release
1984
Platform
Rotten Tomatoes
Rotten Tomatoes
Xfinity
Xfinity
IMDb
IMDb
Netflix
Netflix
Amazon
Amazon
Roku
Roku
YouTube
YouTube
HBO
HBO
...

The Trouble with Harry is a 1955 American Technicolor black comedy film directed by Alfred Hitchcock. The screenplay by John Michael Hayes was based on the 1950 novel by Jack Trevor Story. It starred Edmund Gwenn, John Forsythe, Mildred Natwick, Jerry Mathers and Shirley MacLaine in her film debut. The Trouble with Harry was released in the United States on September 30, 1955, then re-released in 1984 once the distribution rights had been acquired by Universal Pictures.

The action in The Trouble with Harry takes place during a sun-filled autumn in the Vermont countryside. The fall foliage and the beautiful scenery around the village, as well as Bernard Herrmann's light-filled score, all set an idyllic tone. The story is about how nine residents of a small Vermont village react when the dead body of a man named Harry is found on a hillside. The film is, however, not a murder mystery: it is a light comedy-drama with a touch of romance, in which the corpse serves as a Macguffin. Four village residents end up working together to solve the problem of what to do with Harry. In the process, the younger two (an artist and a very young, twice-widowed woman) fall in love and become a couple, soon to be married. The older two residents (a captain and a spinster) also fall in love.

The film was one of Hitchcock's few true comedies (though most of his films had some element of tongue-in-cheek or macabre humor). The film also contained what was, for the time, frank dialogue. One example of this is when John Forsythe's character unabashedly tells MacLaine's character that he would like to paint a nude portrait of her. The statement was explicit compared with other contemporary movies.

Plot

When a local man's corpse appears on a nearby hillside, no one is quite sure what happened to him. Many of the town's residents secretly wonder if they are responsible, including the man's ex-wife, Jennifer (Shirley MacLaine), and Capt. Albert Wiles (Edmund Gwenn), a retired seaman who was hunting in the woods where the body was found. As the no-nonsense sheriff (Royal Dano) gets involved and local artist Sam Marlowe (John Forsythe) offers his help, the community slowly unravels the mystery.

Timeline

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Further Resources

Title
Author
Link
Type
Date

The Trouble With Harry (1955) Trailer

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y8FH4eKZJ4s

Web

April 12, 2010

The Trouble With Harry: Hitchcock's lost masterpiece

Peter Bradshaw

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2012/jul/02/trouble-with-harry-alfred-hitchcock

Web

July 2, 2012

References

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