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The Wrong Man (1956)
In Alfred Hitchcock's stark, film-noirish crime drama
filmed in semi-documentary style:
- the rare opening (before the title credits) of director
Hitchcock, seen in silhouette within a deep triangular-shaped shadow
at a distance on a movie soundstage, lighted in extreme chiaroscuro
and speaking directly to the audience: "This is Alfred Hitchcock
speaking. In the past, I have given you many kinds of suspense
pictures. But this time, I would like you to see a different one.
The difference lies in the fact that this is a true story, every
word of it. And yet it contains elements that are stranger than
all the fiction that has gone into many of the thrillers that I've
made before"
- the characterization of Stork Club string bass player-musician
Christopher Emanuel "Manny" Balestrero (Henry Fonda), a
devoted family man who was living in the Jackson Heights (Queens)
neighborhood of New York City
- the early sequence in which he was mistakenly identified
as a suspect for robberies (at gunpoint) at the Associated Life Insurance
Company office - he had visited the insurance office to obtain a
loan from wife Rose's (Vera Miles) policy, to pay for her expensive
$300 dental work, and the three suspicious female clerks in the office
were certain that he was the man who had twice robbed the office
- the scene of his detainment and intense questioning
for armed robbery without a lawyer (Manny called the grilling a "meatgrinder")
in the 110th Precinct - when unusual coincidences caused police to
believe that he was responsible for a string of robberies
- during questioning, Manny's mis-spelling of the word "drawer" as "draw" -
the same mistake made by the robber in his hold-up note - Manny was
arrested for assault and robbery and ultimately put in jail - with
his utter dejection as he leaned back against his cell wall in the
oppressive and nightmarish space, his confinement and disorientation
was depicted by the camera's rotation (moving in rapid, clockwise
circles) - a subjective shot from an objective POV
- innocent 'everyman' Manny protested the charges, claiming
he was "the wrong man" - after being bailed out for $7,500
after a night in jail, inexperienced criminal attorney Frank D. O'Connor
(Anthony Quayle) was hired to defend Manny; his alibi was that he
was at a resort hotel in Cornwall, NY with Rose during one of the
robberies, but it couldn't be substantiated
- the brief, kinetically-filmed bedroom sequence between
Rose and Manny when she completely lost control, pushed the comforting
Manny away, and struck him with a hairbrush - she broke a mirror
and lacerated his forehead - seen in a fragmented mirror image; due
to the stress of the case, Manny's strained and guilt-ridden wife
Rose fell into depression, became totally apathetic, and was institutionalized
in a mental hospital in Ossining, NY
- during the trial, Manny was convincingly prosecuted,
although it was judged a mistrial due to a juror's remarks; meanwhile,
the real robber was caught while Manny awaited a second trial; the
case against him was ultimately dismissed, but his life and the life
of his family had been shattered
- the most memorable sequence when falsely-accused
Manny began to pray for strength, following the advice of his mother
(Esther Minciotti) at the kitchen table ("My son, I beg you
to pray") - he began to pray in the kitchen, then moved to his
bedroom to pray more (as he clutched his rosary), in front of an
iconic painting of Jesus; as his lips moved in prayer, the astonishing
match-cut scene in which the face of the actual look-alike robbery
criminal (wearing a hat and overcoat) became super-imposed and merged
onto Balestrero's transparent face - there was an unmistakable resemblance
between the real armed robber and Manny
The Miraculous Double-Exposure Prayer Shot
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- the heartbreaking sequence of Manny's visit to see
Rose in the sanitarium when she calmly rejected him: ("Nothing
can help me. No one. You can go now")
- in the film's epilogue, Rose was "completely
cured" two years later, left the sanitarium, and the couple
moved to Florida: "Today, she lives happily in Florida with
Manny and the two boys...and what happened seems like a nightmare
to them - but it did happen..."
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