Murder!

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Murder!
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Produced by John Maxwell
Written by Alfred Hitchcock
Walter C. Mycroft
Starring Herbert Marshall
Norah Baring
Cinematography Jack E. Cox
Editing by Rene Marrison
Distributed by British International Pictures Inc. (America) Flag of the United States
Wardour Films Flag of the United Kingdom
Release date(s) 1930
Running time 104 minutes
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Language English
IMDb profile

Murder! is a 1930 film directed by Alfred Hitchcock based on a novel and play called Enter Sir John by Clemence Dane and Helen Simpson. The film stars Herbert Marshall and Norah Baring. It was Hitchcock's third all-talkie film, after Juno and the Paycock and ″Blackmail″.

After being thought in the public domain for decades, the film's rights were obtained by French media company Canal+ in 2005. A restored and remastered print of the film was released on DVD by Lionsgate Home Entertainment in 2007.

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[edit] Plot synopsis

An actress is found standing over the body of a murdered colleague from her troupe, and has no memory of what happened. The ladies were known to have been enemies. At her trial the jury decides that she is either guilty or has schizophrenia and should be hanged lest she strike again. One juror, Sir John Menier, is not convinced and, using skills he has learned from the theatre, investigates the circumstances of the case.

Sir John discovers who the real murderer is, and tries to lure a confession from him. The action comes to a thrilling climax at the circus.

[edit] Cast

  • Herbert Marshall as Sir John Menier
  • Norah Baring as Diana Baring
  • Phyllis Konstam as Dulcie Markam
  • Edward Chapman as Ted Markham
  • Miles Mander as Gordon Druce
  • Esme Percy as Handel Fane
  • Donald Calthrop as Ion Stewart
  • Esme V. Chaplin as Prosecuting Counsel
  • Amy Brandon Thomas as Defending Counsel (as Amy Brandon-Thomas)
  • Joynson Powell as Judge
  • S.J. Warmington as Bennett
  • Marie Wright as Miss Mitcham
  • Hannah Jones as Mrs. Didsome
  • Una O'Connor as Mrs. Grogman
  • R.E. Jeffrey as Foreman of the Jury
  • Alan Stainer as Jury Member
  • Kenneth Kove as Mr. Matthews - Jury Member
  • Guy Pelham Boulton as Jury Member
  • Violet Farebrother as Mrs. Ward - Jury Member
  • Clare Greet as Jury Member
  • Drusilla Wills as Jury Member
  • Robert Easton as Jury Member
  • William Fazan as Jury Member
  • George Smythson as Jury Member
  • Ross Jefferson as Jury Member
  • Picton Roxborough as Jury Member
  • Alfred Hitchcock as Man on Street (uncredited)
  • Gus McNaughton as Tom Trewitt (uncredited)

[edit] Trivia

  • Murder! was the first ever film to have a character's thoughts on the soundtrack. The scene where this takes place appears early on in the film. Sir John is shaving in his bathroom and he asks his valet to bring in the radio so that he can hear about the accused Diana Baring's progress in the news. After the news, the overture from Wagner's Tristan und Isolde is broadcast. Sir John thinks to himself that he must solve the crime as he listens to the music, his thoughts becoming more passionate as the music does. Due to the limited technology of the day, a phonograph record of the monologue was played while a small orchestra played Wagner's music behind the set.
  • Hitchcock directed a German version, titled Mary, which was filmed simultaneously on the same sets. Alfred Abel played Sir John. Two actors from Murder!, Esme V. Chaplin and Miles Mander, acted in it. It is 78 minutes long, or 28 minutes shorter than Murder!
  • It has been erroneously stated that the character of Handel Fane, a male actor who plays the parts of women, was played by an actress. Handel Fane was played by Esme Percy, but some think that he was a woman because of his first name. There is in fact, an actress called Esme V. Chaplin in this film (she plays the prosecuting counsel).
  • Hitchcock has a cameo role near the midpoint of the film, as a passerby in front of the house where the murder took place.
  • In the film, there is a character who is ostracised because he is of mixed race (a "half-caste", in the language of 1930). However, in the source novel, he was ostracised because he was homosexual.

[edit] External links