Tonight's Movie: The Trouble With Harry (1955)

I've been gradually working my way through a small stack of films I've never seen directed by the great Alfred Hitchcock.
The autumn season made it the perfect time to finally check out THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY (1955), which was shot in Vermont in the fall of 1954.
I'd put off seeing this film as I'm not the world's biggest fan of Shirley MacLaine, plus I'd heard it was "offbeat" -- I mean, it's focused almost entirely around a dead body?!
Well, I've now seen it and can say it was very definitely offbeat, but in the most delightful ways. I was almost surprised that I found it quite entertaining, even heartwarming. It sounds absurd to describe it that way, but Hitchcock really accomplished something unique with this film.
The plot, such as it is, concerns various people in a small rural village stumbling -- some of them quite literally -- over a body on a hill outside town.
The people who come in contact with the body include a retired sailor, Albert Wiles (Edmund Gwenn); a handsome young artist named Sam (John Forsythe); a young mother, Jennifer (MacLaine), and her little boy Arnie (Jerry Mathers); and an older woman, Ivy (Mildred Natwick), for whom the discovery of the body leads to unexpected late-life romance.
None of these folks are particularly concerned or disturbed to find a dead man in their midst; indeed, the identity of the corpse comes as a relief to Jennifer, as he's a difficult person from her past.But who killed him, and why? What should be done with the body? And will the Deputy Sheriff (Royal Dano) unfairly suspect one of the townspeople is the murderer?
It's a bizarre little 99-minute movie about absolutely lovely people with a problem on their hands. I was amused that at various times it reminded me of "feel good" films as diverse as CHRISTMAS IN JULY (1940) and DONOVAN'S REEF (1963).
The clever script was written by John Michael Hayes from a novel by Jack Trevor Story. Among the funny quotes was MacLaine's deadpan "He looked exactly the same when he was alive, only he was vertical."
Vermont was filmed in its autumnal glory by Robert Burks, with a superb Bernard Herrmann score to accent the action.I watched THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY on Blu-ray.
Anyone open to trying something completely different from the norm should check out THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY...and this is definitely the perfect time of year to watch it.
Among the Hitchcock films remaining in my stack: LIFEBOAT (1944), UNDER CAPRICORN (1949), THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH (1956), and TOPAZ (1969).
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