The Man Who Knew Too Much
Film
Marrakech: Jennifer Aniston and Gwyneth Paltrow Break Bread in Morocco...a mainstay for celebrities for decades before it closed its doors three years ago. Even Alfred Hitchcock was a fan and shot The Man Who Knew Too Much in the hotel's lobby, which was also a favorite hang out for the Rolling Stones, Charlie... In this article: Gwyneth Paltrow, Jennifer Aniston, Morocco, Marrakech, Brad Pitt, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Miranda Kerr, Charlie Chaplin, and Sarah Jessica Parker |
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L.A. Times - Europe | November 19, 2009
Critic's Pick: Hitchcock: The British Thrillers
...on Saturday, "The 39 Steps" on Nov. 27, "The Lady Vanishes" on Nov. 28) and little-seen ("Murder" on Friday, "Number 17" on Nov. 27). Start your weekend right with "The Man Who Knew Too Much" on Friday and prepare to be entertained.
In this article: The Lady Vanishes, The 39 Steps, and Los Angeles County Museum of Art
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washingtonpost.com | November 17, 2009
Paul Farhi on pop culture: Nostalgia not what it used to be? Plus Lou Dobbs and Washington Blade.
Song/Poetry Mashups: and all of Emily Dickenson's poems can be sung to The Yellow Rose of Texas 50s Hitchcock: the remade "Man Who Knew Too Much" with Stewart and Doris Day doesn't hold up very well. Paul Farhi: One of his weaker...
In this article: James Garner, The Prisoner, YouTube, Grace Kelly, Dragnet, All in the Family, and Ivy League
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Blogcritics | November 15, 2009
DVD Review: North by Northwest - 50th Anniversary Edition
...being a direction slightly off-center) serves as a culmination of many of Hitchcock's common themes dating back to the 1930s with The Man Who Knew Too Much, The 39 Steps and The Lady Vanishes. This film marks the fourth and last time...
In this article: North by Northwest, Cary Grant, Alfred Hitchcock, DVD, The Wizard of Oz, Jimmy Stewart, Psycho, Rear Window, The Lady Vanishes, and Vertigo
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch | November 15, 2009
McKay makes a Day of it
Conspicuous by its absence is "Que Sera Sera," a song that Day performed in a film in which she co-starred with James Stewart, "The Man Who Knew Too Much" (1956). But overall, "Normal as Blueberry Pie" provides a tasty introduction to...
In this article: Nellie McKay, Doris Day, Dog, The Very Thought of You, Sentimental Journey, John Allred, P.S. I Love You, I Remember You, Dig It, and South Pacific
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PopMatters | November 05, 2009
The 39 Steps (Review)
...actions that arise from a pragmatic response to contingency. And here it is: the film that started it all. There would be, perhaps, no Man Who Knew Too Much, no North by Northwest, no Strangers on a Train without The 39 Steps. In this film...
In this article: Richard Hannay, Alfred Hitchcock, The 39 Steps, Strangers on a Train, Robert Donat, The 39 Steps, and Madeleine Carroll
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Cele-bitchy | November 05, 2009
Will Johnny Depp play Angelina Jolie's lover in 'The Tourist'?
...global criminal. It follows in the long tradition of innocents caught up in shady activities abroad that dates back to Hitchcock ("The Man Who Knew Too Much"), Polanski ("Frantic") and beyond, and a theme that also has contemporary echoes with...
In this article: Angelina Jolie, Johnny Depp, The Tourist, Charlize Theron, Interpol, Graham King, Rango, and Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette | November 04, 2009
Mamounia hotel reopens in Marrakech
...Churchill invited Franklin Roosevelt here to relax following strategic talks during World War II, and Alfred Hitchcock shot some of "The Man Who Knew Too Much " in the hotel's lobby -- which has also been a haunt of the Rolling Stones,...
In this article: Marrakech, Winston Churchill, Paris, Morocco, London, and Ice cream
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Independent.co.uk - Music | October 29, 2009
Album: Sparks, The Seduction of Ingmar Bergman (Lil' Beethoven)
...way: Wilder, Lang, Murnau, Tourneur, Von Sternberg, and "Alfred Hitchcock, bless his soul, there chomping on a dinner roll, The Man Who Knew Too Much done twice, in Hollywood, done twice as nice". Bergman remains unconvinced, and tries to...
In this article: Ingmar Bergman, Hollywood, Orchestration, Ron Mael, Greta Garbo, Alfred Hitchcock, and Russell Mael
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Life123 | October 21, 2009
Alfred Hitchcock Biography
...movies from the 1930's through the 1970's. Some of his most famous films are Psycho, Rear Window, North by Northwest, The Birds and The Man Who Knew Too Much. By: Rachel Mork Hitchcock's Psycho remains one of the most important films...
In this article: Alfred Hitchcock, Psycho, Norman Bates, The Pleasure Garden, University of London, London, England, and The Birds
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Sydney Morning Herald - Business | October 04, 2009
Famed star-magnet luxury hotel re-opens
...were inspired to write their song Marrakech Express and the Mamounia featured in many scenes of the 1956 Alfred Hitchcock thriller The Man Who Knew Too Much. The hotel's art-deco-inspired interior was starting to look tired before it...
In this article: Marrakech, Winston Churchill, Charles de Gaulle, Morocco, L'Opinion, Michelin, Zinedine Zidane, Charlie Chaplin, and Joan Collins
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More on The Man Who Knew Too Much
Description from Wikipedia:
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956) is a suspense film directed by Alfred Hitchcock, starring James Stewart and Doris Day. The film is a remake in widescreen VistaVision and Technicolor of Hitchcock's 1934 film of the same name.
In the book-length interview, Hitchcock/Truffaut (1967), Hitchcock told fellow filmmaker François Truffaut that he considered his 1956 remake to be superior, saying that the 1934 version was the work of a talented amateur, the 1956 version the work of a professional.
The film won an Academy Award for Best Song for "Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera, Sera)," sung by Doris Day at several points in the action.
- Name:
- The Man Who Knew Too Much
- Release Date:
- June 01, 1956
- Directed By:
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Produced by:
-
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Uncredited:
- Written By:
-
- John Michael Hayes
- D.B. Wyndham-Lewis
- Charles Bennett
- Story:
- Screenplay:
- Editor:
- George Tomasini
- Starring:
- Cinematography:
- Robert Burks
- Music By:
- Distributed By:
- Paramount Pictures
- Length:
- 120 min.
- Language:
- English
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