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The Trouble With Harry (1955)
In director Alfred Hitchcock's lightweight, subversive
and surrealistic black comedy - John Michael Hayes' screenplay was
faithfully based upon British author Jack Trevor Story's 1950 novella
of the same name; it was the first of many films that Hitchcock made
with composer Bernard Herrmann, and Herrmann would continue scoring
Hitchcock's films through Marnie (1964). There were no major
film stars - 21 year-old Shirley MacLaine was in her screen debut,
John Forsythe was a TV actor, and aging Edmund Gwenn was predominantly
a character actor.
The enchanting film's title referred to the predicament
of seven members of a small, idyllic New England village, all of
whom reacted strangely with some "guilt" (or uneasiness)
about having learned about or believing that they had caused the
death of "Harry" whose
body was discovered in the woods. However, most of the initial reactions
were of mild non-chalance, except there were multiple concerns amongst
the residents (due to their varying motivations) about burying and
disposing of the body (the film's MacGuffin), and how to avoid having
the village's dim-witted Deputy Sheriff learn about the crime. By the
farcical film's conclusion, after many calm conversations about what
to do with Harry's body (over tea and coffee, for example), Harry
unexpectedly and romantically brought together two couples in the
Vermont village.
Not well-received and a major box-office
failure (on a budget of $1.2 million, it made $3.5 million), it was
considered off-beat, bizarre, odd and experimental for the director,
and contained little of what became known as the director's "signature."
It was more reminiscent of the British Ealing comedies. One film tagline
explained: "THE UNEXPECTED FROM HITCHCOCK." However,
the style of the film went on to further influence Hitchcock's TV series
Alfred Hitchcock Presents (that debuted in October of 1955).
- in the opening panoramic title sequence, the backdrop
scrolled from right to left, composed of simplified or cartoonish
sketches-drawings by American artist Saul Steinberg (famed for
his The New Yorker work) of the main street of a rural small-town;
the final sketch, emblazoned with "Directed by Alfred Hitchcock"
was placed atop a dead man lying on his back
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An Idyllic Small Country Town in Vermont in the Autumn
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- during a beautiful, autumnal Vermont morning (photographed
by Robert Burks' exceptional Technicolor cinematography),
4 year-old Arnie Rogers (Jerry (the Beaver) Mathers) was playing
with a pretend sci-fi plastic gun as he ran through some colorful
woods, but then dropped down when he heard three distinct gun-shots;
he heard a loud voice and rushed forward, and in Mansfield Meadows,
he came upon a neatly laid-out corpse of a well-dressed man with
a bleeding bullet hole in his forehead; the body (clothed with
a suit and tie, and shiny shoes) seemed to be resting comfortably
in a transparent casket or coffin; Arnie came up to the body from
the perspective of the corpse's enormous feet, and then rushed off
- in another part of the woods, plump, retired seaman
Captain Albert Wiles (Edmund Gwenn) was seated against a tree cleaning
his rifle during a break from shooting rabbits; as he searched
for his kill and found that he had accidentally shot a rusted beer
can and a "NO TRESPASSING" sign, he also stumbled upon
the body, and hypothesized that his third stray shot had killed
the man: "I've done him in. Cor. A harmless pot-shot at a rabbit and
I'm a murderer, a killer"; he searched in the man's upper
coat pocket and found an envelope (strangely without a postmark!),
addressed to the victim, identified as:
"Mr. Harry Worp, 87 Maple Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts"
Captain Albert Wiles (Edmund Gwenn)
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An Envelope Identified the Dead Man (uncredited
Philip Truex) as "Mr. Harry Worp..."
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- as Captain Wiles dragged the man's body by his two
feet into the brush to bury him, he was interrupted by his neighbor
Miss Ivy Graveley (Mildred Natwick), a spinster who was out for
a walk by herself; she asked: "What seems to be the trouble,
Captain?"; the Captain nervously admitted the death was "an
unavoidable accident" and "human error"; she prodded the body with her foot
to check if he was really dead; the Captain was planning on hiding
the body and not notifying the police: "I'm gonna hide him,
cover him up, forget him"; he begged Miss Graveley to not
say anything to anybody - she agreed and urged him to hurry with
his burial task; the kind attention he gave to her prompted the
lonely woman to attempt to woo the Captain by inviting him over
for an afternoon "social call" - it would be a first
time visit to her house after they had known each other for three
years: "Perhaps you would care to come over for some blueberry muffins and coffee
later on, high-bush blueberries?...And maybe some elderberry wine";
he then asked her to leave to avoid being an "accessory after the fact"
- when Arnie returned with his pretty mother Jennifer
Rogers (Shirley MacLaine) to show her the body, the Captain ran
off and hid behind a tree; he overheard Jennifer react positively
to the murder with delight and relief, and reveal that she knew
him: "Harry, thank Providence, the last of Harry!"; she
told her son to forget what he saw: "Forget you saw him" before
they returned home for lemonade [Note: it was later revealed that
Jennifer was Harry's estranged wife]
- another individual Dr. Greenbow (Dwight Marfield),
who was intently reading a book, tripped over the extended legs
of the body, but didn't notice it and kept on his way; the Captain
remarked: "Couldn't have had more people here if I'd sold
tickets. What's the big attraction, I wonder?"; and then a
5th person, a scraggly-looking Tramp (Barry Macollum) with a bed
roll over his shoulder and a walking stick wandered by; after kicking
at the corpse to verify it was dead, he stole Harry's shiny leather
shoes; meanwhile, the Captain fell asleep propped up against a tree
- new characters were introduced, handsome artist
Sam Marlowe (John Forsythe) who was strolling down a county road
to the center of the village of Highwater, Vermont while singing
"Flaggin' the Train to Tuscaloosa" with a new painting
under his arm; he came up to a makeshift roadside stand in front
of Wiggs Emporium, where the store owner Mrs. Wiggs or "Wiggy" (Mildred
Dunnock) was attempting to attract customers by offering apple
cider, lemonade, and maple syrup; Sam reprimanded her for not selling
any of his abstract paintings: ("All my pictures in the same
place. So few cars"); next-door, Mrs. Wiggs' son Calvin Wiggs
(Royal Dano) served as the village's low-paid Deputy Sheriff, who
also tinkered in his spare time with antique cars; Mrs. Wiggs mentioned
how Calvin made his living based upon the number of arrests or
fines levied (what she called "piecework")
Mrs. Wiggs (Mildred Dunnock) - the Wiggs Emporium Store Owner in Her Roadside Stand
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Sam Marlowe (John Forsythe) - The Village's Resident Abstract Artist
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The Wiggs Emporium Storefront
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- Calvin casually told Sam that he had recently heard
unusual gunshots in the direction of posted land, and was thinking
about investigating: "The law's the law. I got a good mind
to scout around to find out who's doin' the shooting and level
a little fine"; while Sam was with Mrs. Wiggs inside the
Emporium purchasing some grocery items from her, they were briefly
interrupted by Miss Gravely; they neglected to see a chauffeured
car drive up carrying a rich elderly Millionaire (Parker Fennelly)
who attentively perused the roadside stand's paintings
- Miss Gravely asked for Sam's opinion about the
size of a cup and saucer that she was considering purchasing for
her afternoon's tea guest at her cottage - the Captain; match-maker
Sam called Miss Gravely a "social butterfly," and advised
her that regardless of her age (she falsely claimed she was 42),
she should show the Captain her true "character, the inner self,
the hidden qualities, the true Miss Gravely, sensitive, young in
feeling, timeless with love and understanding"; he also recommended
that she have a complete make-over (with a shorter hairstyle,
makeup, etc.), but in their distracted excitement while cutting her
hair, he neglected and lost the customer outside at the stand who
became frustrated and drove off
- later in the day, Sam objectively reacted to finding
Harry's body in the woods, and opened up his large
sketchbook to draw a portrait of Harry's legs and feet; nearby,
the Captain woke up, as Sam scolded the prone body: "Hey!
Would you mind getting out of my picture?" and then suddenly
realized the man was dead; the Captain explained: "Don't turn
me in, it was an accident";
Sam drew a second sketch - a close-up of Harry's face, and philosophically
tried to absolve the Captain of any crime: "You shoot him
and heaven's will is done and destiny fulfilled. Your conscience
is quite clear. You've got nothing to worry about"; the Captain
was more concerned about covering up the crime and avoiding a murder
charge: "I want nothing more to do with him. Bury him I say, and be done with him.
He's no good to anyone now. Lay him to rest. Put him under the
sod. Forget him. I never did it and you never saw him"; Sam
asked about the others who had already seen the body, but then
reluctantly agreed to help bury the corpse, if they learned that
Jennifer didn't intend to notify the police of the death: ("If
she's a distant friend of his and doesn't intend to notify the
authorities, then I, personally, will help you bury Harry")
- with his guilt somewhat relieved, the Captain was
about to hurry off to have afternoon coffee and muffins with
Miss Gravely; Sam stated the first of the film's many double-entendres
or "naughty" lines: "Do you realize that you'll be the first man to, uh,
cross her threshold?"; the Captain added: "(She's) very
well preserved. And preserves have to be opened someday, hmm?";
before leaving, as they started to drag Harry's body to hide it,
they ducked behind a tree to watch as Mr. Greenbow again walked
through the area, tripped on the body, apologized ("Oh, I
beg your pardon"), and then kept going; the Captain returned to the village, and hid
his rifle as he walked by Deputy Sheriff Wiggs
- Sam ventured over to Jennifer's house, where on
her porch, he propositioned her with a bold and unusual request
after admiring her from afar: "You're the most wonderful,
beautiful thing I've ever seen. I'd like to paint you....You certainly
are a lovely woman. I'd like to paint you nude"; she reacted
calmly, offered to serve him lemonade instead, and confessed: "If
you want to undress me, you have"; Sam traded a live frog
with Arnie's dead rabbit that he had found, but then Arnie borrowed
back the carcass - stating: "You
never know when a dead rabbit might come in handy"; a few
moments later, after Arnie had wandered off with the rabbit, Jennifer
revealed that it had been shot by Captain Wiles (it was his 3rd shot)
- the young widow Jennifer entered into a lengthy
conversation with Sam about "Harry, the dead man" - her
husband; she claimed that Arnie's also-dead father was not the
dead man on the path in the woods; she was disdainful of Harry: "He
was too good to live... horribly good...You can stuff him for all
I care. Stuff him and put him in a glass case"; she began
to explain her "life story" - a long time ago, her first
husband (named Robert) was killed shortly
after their marriage and left her pregnant with "little Arnie";
then Robert's older brother Harry (she dubbed him: "Harry the Handsome
Hero. Harry the Saint. Harry the Good") offered to nobly and dutifully
step in and marry her ("because of Arnie"), but she didn't love
him like she had loved Robert
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Jennifer's Explanation to Sam About Her Connection to the Dead Man - Harry
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- on her "second wedding night," Jennifer learned
"a terrible truth, the truth about Harry"; in their hotel
room, she had worn her "best nightie" and was doing her best to
believe that Harry loved her; she sat by the window under a full
moon waiting for Harry, but he never showed up; the following morning,
he called with an explanation; the previous evening in the hotel
lobby, he had bought a magazine and read his Taurus horoscope that
advised: "Don't start any new project that day. It could never
be finished"; repulsed, she broke up with Harry and refused to
be reconciled: ("I left him on the spot, and went home to mother's.
The end"); after Arnie was born, Jennifer
moved to rural Vermont where she thought Harry would never find
her, and she changed her name to Rogers
- the present day's morning - the morning of Harry's
death, the persistent Harry located her, knocked on her door, and
demanded that as his wife, she return to him because of his loneliness;
she recalled Harry's mustache and wavy hair when she saw him dead:
"Yeah, he looked exactly the same when
he was alive, except he was vertical"; refusing
to give in, she hit him over the head with a milk bottle and knocked
him "silly"; she described what happened next - "He went staggering
up towards the woods saying he was gonna find his wife and drag
her home if it killed him"
- the well-dressed Captain marched over to Miss Graveley's
home for fancy afternoon refreshments on her outdoor porch; Arnie
ran up to them with the dead rabbit and presented it to the Captain
as his rabbit: ("It ain't mine...You shot it with your gun"); Arnie
took two muffins with him in exchange; when Miss Graveley mentioned
the problem with Harry, the Captain reassured her: "He'll be comfortably
underground before nightfall" and she was relieved
- at the site of the body in the woods, Sam and the
Captain arrived with a spade and flat shovel to bury Harry's body;
after digging a huge hole and depositing the body inside and covering
it over, Sam mentioned that he had "renovated" Miss Graveley earlier
that morning at the Emporium with "a most remarkable reversion
to femininity" (a make-over) - the Captain responded that he thought
he might be in love with the "nice lady"
- as they sat and rested, it suddenly dawned on
the Captain that he hadn't killed Harry at all - his third shot
had hit a rabbit: ("If I shot the rabbit, I didn't shoot Harry")
- and he wasn't a "murderer"; he urged Sam to help him exhume the
body and examine it to determine the cause of death, but Sam protested
that he had promised Jennifer to quietly bury Harry and keep him
buried - and digging a hole to bury a body without informing the
authorities was definitely suspicious; nonetheless, the Captain
insisted
- once the body was uncovered, upon close examination,
Sam determined that Harry possibly died not from a bullet wound
but from "a blow with a blunt instrument" and deduced that Jennifer
might have killed him with the milk bottle: ("We're tangled up
in a murder"); now to protect Jennifer, Harry's body had to be
reburied: ("It'll be better for all of us if he's buried and out
of the way...We'll file Harry away once and for all. No more nonsense
about it"); they also briefly speculated that Miss Graveley had
acted suspiciously unemotional when she saw Harry's body, as well
as Dr. Greenbow and the Tramp
- later that afternoon, Miss Graveley joined the Captain
in his home where they talked about the death of Harry; he was
grateful to her for being supportive when he felt guilty, and she
was thankful that he had buried Harry: ("I'm grateful to you for
burying my body"); she told how she had first seen the annoyed
and 'wild-eyed' Harry during her morning walk in the woods who
thought she was married to him; as he twice dragged her into the
bushes and swore at her, she fought back and hit him in the head
with the leather heel (and metal cleat) of her sturdy hiking shoes
("I hit him as hard as ever I could") - causing the bullet-like
wound in his forehead; the Captain concluded that Jennifer Rogers
(Harry's real wife) had first knocked him "silly" and then Miss
Graveley had finished him off
- Miss Graveley was glad that the Captain was now cleared:
("For you to go through life knowing
that you had buried a man you didn't kill. You would have my crime
on your conscience") - but now tried to argue that her own crime
was justifiable homicide: ("My action was justifiable, there's
no reason we shouldn't let the authorities know about it"); he
tried to dissuade her: "You let Harry be. Just forget it ever happened.
The same as Sammy and me and Jennifer Rogers are going to do";
she insisted that they go back into the woods and dig up Harry's
body and leave it by the big oak tree
- in Jennifer's home, Sam was again with her - admitting
that after just a short time, they were both feeling "comfortable"
with each other; the Captain and Miss Graveley arrived
from the gravesite after having disinterred Harry's body, and Miss
Graveley said that she was determined to alert the police; Sam
led the group's conversation to conclude that Harry's body needed
to be re-buried, so that Jennifer's private marital life wouldn't
be "indecently" publicized in the papers; by evening, the body
was buried again
- as the foursome returned to the village after the
burial, Mrs. Wiggs greeted them to inform Sam that the Millionaire
had returned to buy Sam's paintings: ("All of 'em and more besides.
He says you're a genius"); in the Wiggs Emporium store, Sam refused
the Millionaire's offer of money: ("Just
decided I can't sell them. Besides, you couldn't afford them");
he asked everyone there what they wanted "most in the whole world", and each responded:
- Jennifer - "Two boxes of fresh strawberries,
first of each month, in season and out of season, from now on"
- Arnie - "One smelly chemical (chemistry) set"
- Mrs. Wiggs - "Cash register, chromium plated, one
that rings a bell"
- Miss Graveley - "A beauty parlor, fully equipped"
and "a hope chest, full of hope"
- Captain - "A good shotgun, plenty of ammunition,
some corduroy britches, a plain shirt and a hunting cap. A
brown one" ("Davy Crockett, the works")
- Sam - whispered his request privately to the Millionaire
- as the Millionaire departed (to return in the morning
to pick up the paintings), he told Sam: "This has been a night
that I shall remember the rest of my life"; Sam replied: "Come
back again. I'll have some more paintings for you next month";
Sam turned to Jennifer and asked for her hand in marriage; she
was surprised and hesitated to accept since the request was so
sudden: "I just got my freedom today"
- Deputy Sheriff Calvin Wiggs entered the Emporium
and held up a pair of stolen shoes that he had found on the Tramp
(with a "wild story about a corpse"); the group listened intently
as he told them: "Said he found 'em on a dead man. Took me to where
he said he found him, and I didn't see any body"; the group quickly
retreated to Jennifer's house; after they left, Calvin noticed
Sam's drawing of the dead man's face (as described by the Tramp),
as he was phoning in his report about the Tramp to the State Police
- once the group arrived in Jennifer's house, Jennifer
consented to marry Sam for a few reasons: ("I'm very fond of you
and I think you'd make a good father for Arnie. And for some other
reasons best left unsaid....); the Captain added: "Marriage is
the comfortable way to spend the winter"; Sam wouldn't tell Jennifer
what he asked for from the Millionaire, although it was hinted
it was something "practical" (probably that he wished to be married
to her?); but then Sam reminded everyone that even after burying
Harry three times, they still needed to prove that Harry was dead
and that Jennifer was free of him; Miss Graveley was particularly
worried that she might be charged with murder; that evening, the
group of four returned to the woods
- while the two men dug Harry up again, Miss Graveley
mentioned hypothetically how both Jennifer and Sam now had their
own motives for killing Harry - so that they could marry; Jennifer
redirected the conversation: 'On second thought, we'd better stick
to the truth"; Sam suggested that they must think up an excuse
about why the police weren't informed earlier; and Miss Graveley
began to think up ways to deny blame focused on herself; as Jennifer
thought it might be wise to first clean up Harry, they were
startled by the voice of Dr. Greenbow, who ambled onto the scene
and saw the body; the group emerged and claimed that they had just
found the body of Jennifer's ex-husband who died as the result
of an "accident"; Dr. Greenbow agreed to examine the body and determine
the cause of sudden death after the body was transported
to Jennifer's house
At the Burial Site, Miss Graveley Suggested that Both Jennifer and Sam Had Motives
to Kill Harry
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After Digging Up the Body, The Group Had to Consider
What To Do Next With the Body
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Dr. Greenbow Appeared and Stood Next to the Body
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The Foursome Hiding, Watching Dr. Greenbow Approach the Body
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- in Jennifer's home, the group washed, dried and
ironed Harry's clothes in front of the living room fireplace, as
the weary Captain slept in a chair with the shadow of
Harry's two feet on the wall behind him; the Captain was startled
and spooked by the living room closet door opening by itself for
no reason (the 3rd time in the film) - he worriedly stated: "I
thought it was Harry"
- the suspicious Deputy Sheriff Calvin Wiggs appeared
at the door and asked for Sam; the group hurriedly concealed
Harry's body in the bathtub and scattered his clothes about, and
then were pretending to play a game of bridge as Calvin entered;
he confronted Sam about his sketch-pad drawing of a face
that the Tramp said resembled the face of the dead Harry he had
found on the ground; Sam claimed the pastel drawing was solely
from his subconscious: ("It just came to me out of the blue...from
my vast subconscious") - a portrait of a sleeping face; he began
to casually alter the drawing and open Harry's eyelids and add
fullness to his cheek, so that it could not be used as legal evidence;
the dim-witted Deputy Sheriff remained dubious: ("Somethin' funny's
goin' on around here")
- as the Deputy Sheriff was leaving, the closet
door opened (revealing a clothes-drying rack) and Arnie loudly
asked at the bathroom door - providing a view of Harry's feet sticking
up from the end of the bathtub: ("Hey, What's he doin' in our bathtub?");
Sam quickly responded: "That's where frogs belong"; fortunately,
at his viewing angle, the Deputy couldn't see Harry's feet; at
the same time, Dr. Greenbow arrived and when he vaguely asked:
"Where is he?" (referring to the dead man), Jennifer astutely answered:
"He's in the bathroom playing with his frog," and further explained
how Arnie was "not very well"; the Deputy heard the horn being
honked on his antique car raced outside, where he reprimanded
the Captain for fiddling with his car before driving off
- the Captain returned
to the house and sheepishly confessed to two things: (1) he had
only been a tugboat Captain on the East River, and never was more
than a mile off-shore, and (2) he revealed
that he had stolen Harry's shoes out of the Deputy's car
The Captain With Harry's Stolen Shoes
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Dr. Greenbow's Diagnosis of Harry's Death: "He
had a seizure"
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Jennifer's Explanations to Dr. Greenbow About the
Various "Complications" of the Day Regarding Harry
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- the film's concluding revelation came from Dr. Greenbow
who had examined the body; he astounded everyone by diagnosing Harry's
death as a heart attack - death from natural causes rather than
foul play: "It was his heart. He had a seizure"; the Captain exclaimed:
"Well, I'll take a trip to the Philippines!"; in a long-winded
segment, Jennifer explained to the befuddled Dr. Greenbow how they
had been cleaning up Harry's body after multiple burials (and exhumations)
and other "complications" during the day, and also told how a number
of them thought that they were responsible for Harry's death; the
group backed Jennifer when she requested that the doctor keep quiet
about everything: ("If you'll just keep quiet about all this, we'll
put Harry back in the morning, nice and clean, and no one will
be any the wiser. And then we'll be rid of all these sticky complications");
the flabbergasted doctor quickly departed: "This is the first nightmare
I've had in 25 years"
- the group decided to return a dressed-up Harry to
his original resting place in the woods, where he had first appeared
- taking things around in a full circle; then, Arnie (who
always confused his days) would be set up to again discover the
body the next morning and report it; the four watched as Arnie
found Harry and rushed off to tell his mother; as the group was
dispersing, the inquisitive Captain (and Miss Graveley) asked Sam
to divulge his whispered request to the Millionaire - and the request
was revealed to be "a double bed," causing some smiles and giggles
The Group Watching Arnie Re-Discovering Harry's Body
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"The trouble with Harry is over."
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- the film's closing text announced: "The trouble
with Harry is over."
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"Directed by Alfred Hitchcock" - Sketch of Harry's Body in the Background
Arnie Rogers (Jerry (the Beaver) Mathers)
The Body of "Harry" Viewed by Arnie
Miss Ivy Graveley (Mildred Natwick), the Town's Spinster, With the Captain
Arnie With His Mother Jennifer Rogers (Shirley MacLaine) Looking Down at the
Body
The Tramp (Barry Macollum) Stealing Harry's Shoes
Deputy Sheriff Calvin Wiggs (Royal Dano), Mrs. Wiggs' Son
Millionaire (Parker Fennelly) in a Chauffeured Car Interested in Paintings Displayed
in Roadside Stand
Miss Gravely's Purchase of a Coffee Cup and Saucer from the Wiggs Emporium
Sam Sketching The Dead Body of Harry in the Woods
Sam to Jennifer: "I'd like to paint you nude"
In the Afternoon, The Captain and Miss Graveley on Her Porch
A Visit by Arnie With the Captain's Dead Rabbit
Sam and the Captain Attempting to Bury Harry's Body in the Woods
Exhuming the Buried Body To Examine It
The Captain and Miss Graveley Conspiring Together
The Foursome of Sam, Jennifer, the Captain and Miss Graveley in Jennifer's House
The Foursome Returning to the Village After Reburying Harry's Body
Sam Negotiating the 'Price' For His Paintings With the Millionaire
Sam Requesting to Marry Jennifer
Deputy Sheriff Noticing Sam's Drawing of the Dead Man's Face
Jennifer Agreeing to Marry Sam - A Confirming Kiss
The Captain Sleeping Next to the Shadow of Harry's Feet, As the Others Cleaned
Harry's Clothes
The Haunted Closet Door Opening
Deputy Sheriff Confronting Sam About His Drawing of the Dead Harry's Face
Sam's Modified Drawing
Harry's Corpse in the Bathtub (Arnie: "What's he doin' in our bathtub?") - Out
of the View of the Deputy Sheriff
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