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The Trouble with Harry

N/R 1955 Color/B&W 1 hour 39 minutes

Awards

Starring: Edmund Gwenn, John Forsythe, Mildred Natwick, Mildred Dunnock, Jerry Mathers, Royal Dano, Parker Fennelly, Barry Macollum, Dwight Marfield, Shirley MacLaine, Leslie Wolff, Philip Truex, Ernest Curt Bach
Director: Alfred Hitchcock Screen Writer: John Michael Hayes
Produced by: Herbert Coleman (associate) 
Alfred Hitchcock 
Casting: N/A Based on/Novelized by: Jack Trevor Story (novel)
Music: Bernard Herrmann Movie Co.: MCA (video) 
Paramount Pictures 
Production Co.: Alfred J. Hitchcock Productions, 
Paramount Pictures
SFX Co.: N/A
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The Trouble With Harry
by Elizabeth Gray

Super

The Trouble With Harry is that Harry is a corpse that has dropped into the lives of some residents of an idyllic but sleepy little town.  Everyone thinks that they accidentally killed the man who is lying in their beautiful country meadow; they each have their own reasons to think so.  And the real problem is that no one knows what to do with him.

After burying the man to hide the evidence, and digging him up three times for various reasons, love blooms between the two elderly residents of the town who have been smitten with each other for quite some time, and a young couple meet, fall in love, and become engaged.

The country doctor finally stumbles on the dead man, and says that the body must be examined.  When the residents find out that Harry died of natural causes they happily bury him again and continue with their quiet little lives.

To the average person this theme does not seem appropriate for a comedy.  But Alfred Hitchcock is not the average person.  And he is not the average director.  In many of Hitchcock's movies he makes the ordinary seem sinister.  With the use of camera angles, shadows, space, and timing, techniques he learned under German filmmaker Murnau, he can make an average-looking motel look like a deathtrap, as in Psycho, and an apartment building across the street look like an ominous setting for a murder, as in Rear Window.

In The Trouble With Harry he does the opposite.  He takes a morbid situation, and by putting it in a serene rural setting and having the characters act inappropriately to the situation, he creates a comedy that allows the audience to laugh, rather than sit in horror and suspense as his audiences normally do.

When the movie begins it is a young child (played by Jerry Mathers, Leave it to Beaver) who first finds the body.  As the child runs off to get help the audience is led to believe that this movie will be another whodunit suspense mystery movie.  But it is when the second character comes upon the body that the mood starts to change.  An old man (played by British actor Edmund Gwenn), who is out practising shooting with his rifle, thinks that he accidentally killed the man.  In a panic, he is about to drag the body off by the legs into the bushes when a neighbour woman (played by Mildred Natwick) happens by, and asks what he is doing. The audience thinks that she will act horrified by the situation and panic, but instead, she acknowledges the body, and then turns the conversation to the old man's health, and she invites him over for tea and muffins later in the day.  It is the civility and gentility of their conversation that makes the audience realize that this is not going to be a suspense thriller.

With each passing character that finds the body, the comedy starts to grow.  When the young boy brings his mother (played by a young Shirley MacLaine) to look at the body, the audience discovers that she was married to the deceased man for a few days, and is not unhappy that he is dead.  Another character happens by, and, noticing the man's brand new shoes, takes them off the body and puts them on his own feet. And another character, engrossed in a book he is reading out loud, stumbles on the body three times, and without noticing, gets up, and keeps walking without taking his eyes off the book or losing his place.

It is not only the way the characters treat the body that creates the humor. It is also the way Hitchcock treats the body through camera angles.  By only showing sections of the body, the audience starts to think of it as a thing rather than a person. When the child looks down at the body, the audience sees the face of the man upside down. For the rest of the movie, the only time the man's face is seen again is in an artist's sketch.  The rest of the time the camera stays on his legs and feet, particularly the bottoms of his feet, as he is lying on the ground.  In the scene when the body is about to be examined, the feet are seen sticking out of the bathtub. When the man is buried it is always his feet that are sticking out.

There are also priceless moments of genious in this movie.  When an artist (played by John Forsythe) happens through the meadow with his sketch pad looking for inspiration, he sits on a stump and begins to draw the scene in front of him.  It is not until he draws the body into his scene, and looks at it on paper, that he realizes that it is there.

In another scene it is revealed that Forsythe has been trying to sell his paintings at a roadside stand outside a country store for a number of months. He is starting to give up hope that he will ever get recognition as an artist.  It is when he is busy and inspired working on another project – making the neighbour woman look beautiful for her gentleman caller – that a limousine drives up and a wealthy old gentleman gets out to look at the paintings.  When Forsythe comes out to the stand to get the scissors to cut the woman's hair, the old man starts to ask how he can purchase the paintings.  Forsythe brushes by him and goes back into the store to work on his masterpiece.  The old man shrugs, gets back in the limousine, and drives away.

When the grocery store owner holds up one of the paintings and says how much she admires it, Forsythe reveals that she is holding it upside down.

Each of these scenes makes a timeless statement about the life of an artist.  Hitchcock is always making subtle comments about life in his movies that the audience has to watch closely to see.  And The Trouble With Harry is no exception.  If you watch closely you will see Hitchcock make his fleeting appearance, as he does in many of his movies, walking by the roadside stand as the old man looks at the paintings.

This 1955 black comedy is based on the book written by Jack Trevor Story, and is scripted by John Michael Hayes.  Hitchcock bought the rights to the book anonymously for $11,000.

The Trouble With Harry is a comedy gem among Hitchcock's many suspense thrillers with excellent performances from all the cast, including Harry (played by American actor Philip Truex).

 
 Awards & Nominations: IMdb Full Cast & Credits: IMdb
Links: Official Site, 

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