The Trouble with Harry

The Trouble with Harry

1955 • Comedy, MysteryPG
When a local man's corpse appears on a nearby hillside, no one is quite sure what happened to him. Many of the town's residents secretly wonder if they are responsible, including the man's ex-wife, Jennifer, and Capt. Albert Wiles, a retired seaman who was hunting in the woods where the body was found. As the no-nonsense sheriff gets involved and local artist Sam Marlowe offers his help, the community slowly unravels the mystery.
Runtime: 1h 39m

Why you should read the novel

Before you watch Alfred Hitchcock’s film, discover the original novel The Trouble with Harry by Jack Trevor Story. The book’s sly wit, sharper satire, and fully sketched characters turn a darkly comic premise into a richly textured reading experience. Readers who enjoy cozy crime, small-town secrets, and dry humor will find the source material irresistible. Story’s prose delivers the nuanced motives, interior thoughts, and moral gray areas that a movie can only hint at—perfect for book lovers seeking depth beyond the screen. Search for The Trouble with Harry in print or ebook and enjoy the classic that inspired the movie. Read the book first to appreciate the film later, and compare how the novel’s voice shapes every twist and revelation.

Adaptation differences

One of the biggest differences between the book and the movie The Trouble with Harry is the setting’s cultural texture. Hitchcock relocates the action to a postcard Vermont village, while Jack Trevor Story’s novel unfolds with a distinctly British small‑community sensibility, influencing speech patterns, social norms, and the flavor of its black humor. Tone and content also shift. The film embraces whimsical, lighthearted farce shaped by the Production Code era, sanding down risqué innuendo and moral bite. The novel’s humor is drier and sometimes sharper, with social satire and ethical ambiguity presented more frankly on the page than in Hitchcock’s genteel, Technicolor playfulness. Characterization changes are notable. The book lingers on interior thoughts and small-town gossip, deepening figures like Captain Wiles, Miss Gravely, Jennifer Rogers, and Sam Marlowe. The movie externalizes characterization through visual gags and deadpan delivery, streamlining backstories and consolidating minor threads to keep the plot brisk and cinematic. Structure and pacing differ, too. The novel’s narrative allows more time for community dynamics and moral debate about responsibility, while the film prioritizes visual set-pieces—the recurring bury‑and‑unbury routine, romantic interludes, and wry timing. As a result, the adaptation feels sprightlier, whereas the book provides a fuller, more reflective exploration of the same macabre predicament.

The Trouble with Harry inspired from

The Trouble with Harry
by Jack Trevor Story