DVD - Wide Screen Learn more
Enter a zip code
The Making of the Man Who Knew Too Much; Production photographs; Re-release trailer; And more!
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- The Man Who Knew Too Much
1. Main Titles [2:49]
2. The Bus to Marrakech [9:24]
3. Bernard's Business [5:06]
4. The Draytons [7:48]
5. Murder at the Market [7:44]
6. The Interrogation [9:43]
7. The Awful Truth [6:44]
8. London [10:45]
9. Ambrose Chappell [6:45]
10. It's a Place [3:14]
11. Cinspirators [5:18]
12. Confrontation [5:11]
13. An Empty Chapel [3:28]
14. Albert Hall [5:08]
15. A Crash of Cymbals [8:20]
16. Remove the Child [5:58]
17. Mother's Song [6:08]
18. One Last Stroll [6:53]
British-born director Alfred Hitchcock made two versions of this taut espionage thriller. The first served as his international breakthrough in 1934, and while the debate goes on over whether or not his 1956 Hollywood remake is better, there is no denying that the later, bigger-budgeted take finds the master at the height of his powers. After an American doctor (James Stewart) and his wife (Doris Day) accidentally stumble onto an assassination plot while vacationing in Morocco, their young son is kidnapped in an attempt to keep them from talking. Day's character is a singer, and with typical ingenuity Hitchcock makes her voice an integral part of the action. In the famous concert hall scene, her screams as she witnesses a stabbing coincide with the orchestra's crashing cymbals; later she sings the film's Academy Award-winning song, "Que Sera Sera" in a desperate ploy to locate her son. Kryssa Schemmerling, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations