Details

Movie Description Accompanied by an original organ score, THE MANXMAN was Hitchcock's last silent British film, marked by sharp characterization and suspense. On the Isle of Man, a lawyer and a fisherman, best friends since childhood, fall in love with the same woman--with disastrous consequences. This adaptation of a novel by Hall Craine was the last collaboration between Hitchcock and screenwriter Eliot Stannard.
Synopsis THE MANXMAN follows Pete (Carl Brisson), a poor fisherman, and Philip (Malcolm Keene), a lawyer, who are best friends, but their friendship is about to be seriously tested. Pete is in love with Kate (Anny Ondra), the manager of an inn called the Manx Fairy, but what he doesn't know is that Philip is also infatuated with Kate--and that Kate shares his affections. In order to please Kate (and her father), Pete goes to Africa to earn his fortune. Later, Kate and Philip receive news of their friend's death, freeing them to be together. But Pete is actually still alive, and upon his return Kate, faithful to her promise to him, agrees to marry him. But Pete's return is the impetus for a bizarre and tragic sequence of events that will change their lives forever. THE MANXMAN is an adaptation of a Hall Craine novel evoking such later Hitchcock films as UNDER CAPRICORN.
Film Notes DVD Features:
Region 1 Keep Case Pan & Scan - 1.33 Additional Release Material: Musical Score Interactive Features: Interactive Menus in English, Spanish, Chinese, and Japanese.
Theatrical release: January 23, 1929.
THE MANXMAN was shot in Cornwall, England.
This was Hitchcock's last silent film.
When the film was originally finished in 1928, the producer was disappointed and kept the film on the shelf for several months. When it was finally released, it received critical and audience acclaim.
THE MANXMAN was based on a Hall Craine novel originally published in 1894.
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