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The Man Who Knew Too Much

The Man Who Knew Too Much

★ 7.41956Movie2 h 0 mUnited States
CrimeDramaMystery

An American doctor and his wife, a former singing star, witness a murder while vacationing in Morocco, and are drawn into a twisting plot of international intrigue when their young son is kidnapped.

75419 people rated
🔇

The Man Who Knew Too Much

1956

R

2 h 0 m

United States

Crime

Drama

Mystery

An American doctor and his wife, a former singing star, witness a murder while vacationing in Morocco, and are drawn into a twisting plot of international intrigue when their young son is kidnapped.
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7.4 /10

75419 people rated

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Top Cast(18)
starring avatar
James Stewart
Dr. Benjamin McKenna
starring avatar
Doris Day
Josephine Conway McKenna
starring avatar
Brenda de Banzie
Lucy Drayton
starring avatar
Bernard Miles
Edward Drayton
starring avatar
Ralph Truman
Inspector Buchanan, Special Branch
starring avatar
Daniel Gélin
Louis Bernard
starring avatar
Mogens Wieth
Ambassador
starring avatar
Alan Mowbray
Val Parnell
starring avatar
Hillary Brooke
Jan Peterson
starring avatar
Christopher Olsen
Hank McKenna
starring avatar
Reggie Nalder
French Marksman
starring avatar
Richard Wattis
Albert Hall Assistant Manager
starring avatar
Noel Willman
Woburn, Special Branch
starring avatar
Alix Talton
Helen Parnell
default avatar
Yves Brainville
French Police Inspector
starring avatar
Carolyn Jones
Cindy Fontaine
default avatar
London Symphony Orchestra
London Symphony Orchestra
starring avatar
Bernard Herrmann
Conductor

User Review

author avatar

Nomzamo Mbatha

29/05/2023 21:01
source: The Man Who Knew Too Much
author avatar

_ᕼᗩᗰᘔᗩ@

18/11/2022 08:30
Trailer—The Man Who Knew Too Much
author avatar

Meo Plâms'zêr Øffïcî

16/11/2022 12:23
The Man Who Knew Too Much
author avatar

merryriana

16/11/2022 02:22
This isn't among my favorite Hitchcock films, though I must admit it's still pretty good. Among the things I really liked were the presence of Jimmy Stewart (he always improves even the most mediocre material) and the incredibly scary looking assassin (who looks like a skeleton with just a thin layer of skin stretched over him). Although it cost the studio a lot of money, I didn't particularly care for Doris Day in the film--she seemed to weep a lot and belts out "Que Sera" like a fullback. Yes, I know that she was supposed to sing in that manner, but this forever made me hate this song. Sorry. The other complaint, though minor, I had about the movie was that it was a little "too polished" and "Hollywood-esque". The original version (also done by Hitchcock) just seemed a lot grittier and seedier--and this added to the scary ambiance.
author avatar

nandi_madida

16/11/2022 02:21
As we learn early in the movie, Doris Day's character has left the stage for marriage and motherhood in a city far from the bright lights. Then her child is abducted and in order to find him she has to return first to the place where she was famous and the people who knew her, and finally to the songs she sang. It's strange, in a movie by Hitchcock, to find we are watching the story of a woman who sacrifices her identity to her husband's and then finds it again, but I find it hard to ignore the parallel between the child held hostage by killers and the singer's career held hostage by her husband. Heavy stuff for 1956.
author avatar

Ranz and Niana

16/11/2022 02:21
Alfred Hitchcock's remake of his own 1934 suspense-drama comes dangerously close to being an hysterical melodrama instead of a thriller, as The Master of Suspense is far too leisurely in working this convoluted plot up to a boil. American couple James Stewart and Doris Day (a convincing husband and wife) are swept up in an assassination plot while vacationing in Morocco, and are frantic when their young son is kidnapped. Despite Hitch's usual class and an exceptionally handsome production design, the film has few thrills. Scenes drag on interminably, the characters mumble and shoot terse looks at each other, but the threads of the story are kept far too opaque, and only the star-leads are able to hold interest. Doris introduces the big hit song "Whatever Will Be (Que Sera, Sera)", which serves as a plot-function and yet gets perhaps too much screen-time here. ** from ****
author avatar

Yasser | ياسر

16/11/2022 02:21
I hadn't seen it since I was in college. I remembered it like a fun, absurd movie. Now in 2018 what hit me the most was the wife played by Doris Day. She is spectacular and the absurdity becomes totally real just by looking at her. James Stewart is great of course but he seems to be the foil here rather than the center that keeps us connected to that essential leap of faith. The scene in which he gives her the tranquilizers before telling her the terrible news. What Doris Day manages to do with her character is extraordinary. Brenda de Banzie is a terrific villainess and Bernard Herrmann's score another major plus. I'm sure that even my grandchildren's grandchildren will talk about The Man Who Knew Too Much and about Doris Day.
— No more content —

User Review

author avatar

Nomzamo Mbatha

29/05/2023 21:01
source: The Man Who Knew Too Much
author avatar

_ᕼᗩᗰᘔᗩ@

18/11/2022 08:30
Trailer—The Man Who Knew Too Much
author avatar

Meo Plâms'zêr Øffïcî

16/11/2022 12:23
The Man Who Knew Too Much
author avatar

merryriana

16/11/2022 02:22
This isn't among my favorite Hitchcock films, though I must admit it's still pretty good. Among the things I really liked were the presence of Jimmy Stewart (he always improves even the most mediocre material) and the incredibly scary looking assassin (who looks like a skeleton with just a thin layer of skin stretched over him). Although it cost the studio a lot of money, I didn't particularly care for Doris Day in the film--she seemed to weep a lot and belts out "Que Sera" like a fullback. Yes, I know that she was supposed to sing in that manner, but this forever made me hate this song. Sorry. The other complaint, though minor, I had about the movie was that it was a little "too polished" and "Hollywood-esque". The original version (also done by Hitchcock) just seemed a lot grittier and seedier--and this added to the scary ambiance.
author avatar

nandi_madida

16/11/2022 02:21
As we learn early in the movie, Doris Day's character has left the stage for marriage and motherhood in a city far from the bright lights. Then her child is abducted and in order to find him she has to return first to the place where she was famous and the people who knew her, and finally to the songs she sang. It's strange, in a movie by Hitchcock, to find we are watching the story of a woman who sacrifices her identity to her husband's and then finds it again, but I find it hard to ignore the parallel between the child held hostage by killers and the singer's career held hostage by her husband. Heavy stuff for 1956.
author avatar

Ranz and Niana

16/11/2022 02:21
Alfred Hitchcock's remake of his own 1934 suspense-drama comes dangerously close to being an hysterical melodrama instead of a thriller, as The Master of Suspense is far too leisurely in working this convoluted plot up to a boil. American couple James Stewart and Doris Day (a convincing husband and wife) are swept up in an assassination plot while vacationing in Morocco, and are frantic when their young son is kidnapped. Despite Hitch's usual class and an exceptionally handsome production design, the film has few thrills. Scenes drag on interminably, the characters mumble and shoot terse looks at each other, but the threads of the story are kept far too opaque, and only the star-leads are able to hold interest. Doris introduces the big hit song "Whatever Will Be (Que Sera, Sera)", which serves as a plot-function and yet gets perhaps too much screen-time here. ** from ****
author avatar

Yasser | ياسر

16/11/2022 02:21
I hadn't seen it since I was in college. I remembered it like a fun, absurd movie. Now in 2018 what hit me the most was the wife played by Doris Day. She is spectacular and the absurdity becomes totally real just by looking at her. James Stewart is great of course but he seems to be the foil here rather than the center that keeps us connected to that essential leap of faith. The scene in which he gives her the tranquilizers before telling her the terrible news. What Doris Day manages to do with her character is extraordinary. Brenda de Banzie is a terrific villainess and Bernard Herrmann's score another major plus. I'm sure that even my grandchildren's grandchildren will talk about The Man Who Knew Too Much and about Doris Day.
— No more content —
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English
العربية
Français
Bahasa Indonesia
हिन्दी
اردو
Filipino
About 1234money
Official Link ReleaseDownload 1234money APKPrivacy PolicyUser Agreement
Disclaimer: All videos and pictures on 1234money are from the Internet, and their copyrights belong to the original creators. We only provide webpage services and do not store, record, or upload any content.