Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Alfred Hitchcock
  Starring: Herbert Marshall, Norah Baring, Phyllis Konstam, Edward Chapman, Miles
      Mander, Esme Percy, Donald Calthrop
    
    Hitchcock: The Beginning is a new
      11-disc bluray boxset from Studiocanal featuring 10 of Alfred Hitchcock's early films and a new documentary, Becoming Hitchcock, which explores the legacy of Hitchcock's first sound film,
      1929's Blackmail.
  
  
    In the seventh part of our 11-part review of the boxset, we look
      at Murder!.
  
  
    
    Always preferring his audience to be emotionally rather than
      intellectually engaged, Alfred Hitchcock was never a fan of the
      whodunit mystery format. Hitchcock felt that if a viewer was thinking
      about his movie while watching it they weren't fully engaged. He did
      however make one whodunit early on in 1930's Murder!, a film that provides ample evidence of his disdain for and discomfort
      with such a storytelling format.
  
    While performing with a theatre troupe in provincial England, young
      actress Diana Baring (Norah Baring) finds herself accused of the
      murder of another actress, Edna Druce. Diana was found in a room with
      Edna's corpse, a bloodied poker and an empty glass of scotch nearby, and a
      stench of alcohol on her breath. Having blacked out, Diana has no
      recollection of killing Edna, but she has no way to prove her
      innocence.

    After some deliberation, the jury finds Diana guilty, but one juror
      begins to feel he was cajoled into changing his initial "not guilty"
      verdict. That juror is Sir John (Herbert Marshall), a famed actor
      who was responsible for sending Diana on tour. Feeling Diana is innocent,
      Sir John begins his own investigation with the aid of the troupe's manager
      Ted Markham (Edward Chapman) and Ted's wife Doucie (Phyllis Konstam).
  
    For a thriller to work as a whodunit, a certain number of suspects are
      required. This is where Hitchcock and his co-writers (Walter Mycroft
      and the director's wife Alma Reville) go wrong. Where Agatha
      Christie would introduce a variety of characters and cast the shadow of
      suspicion on each and every party, there's really only one suspect in
      Murder!, other than Diana herself that is, and they're not introduced until the
      final act. This means the audience is denied the fun of figuring out "who
      done it" because we're not given any options to choose from.
  
    If Murder! is a non-starter as a thriller, it's far more
      effective as a comedy. Much of the humour comes from riffing on the
      infamous class divisions of early 20th century Britain, with the
      hoity-toity Sir John forming an uncomfortable alliance with the earthy Ted
      and Doucie. All three feel awkward in each other's company, constantly
      observing their specific class-based foibles and doing their best not to
      cause offence. Sir John's investigation is hilariously half-assed, as he
      quickly regrets leaving the comfort of London for a provincial B&B
      where he's rudely awoken by the children of the landlady (the great
      Una O'Connor) climbing all over him first thing in the
      morning.

    What makes up for the blandness of Murder!'s plodding plotting is how Hitchcock elevates so many potentially
      humdrum scenarios with comedy and clever staging. A policeman's attempts
      to question the members of the performing troupe are constantly
      interrupted by the actors in question having to go on stage, Hitchcock
      finding a way to turn what is essentially an exposition heavy scene into a
      comic romp.
  
    The movie's comedic and dramatic highlight is the jury deliberation
      scene, one of the earliest examples of a trope that persists to this day
      (see the recent Clint Eastwood thriller
      Juror #2). With Sir John initially holding out, the scene plays like a condensed
      12 Angry Men featuring a dozen very British eccentrics. The
      interactions between the characters here and the wonderful actors
      portraying them makes for great entertainment, and you'll likely find
      yourself wishing the entire film had revolved around this scenario. When
      the verdict is read, Hitchcock defies convention by having his camera
      remain in the jury room as a cleaner rifles through rubbish and pockets
      half-smoked cigars while the judge's words are heard offscreen. The scene
      bluntly suggests that the worst day in Diana's life is simply business as
      usual for the justice system (Indian filmmaker Chaitanya Tamhane
      homaged this scene for his 2016 drama
      Court).

    Murder! is also notable for how Hitchcock continues to
      explore the possibilities of sound. A scene in which we hear Sir John's
      thoughts as he shaves while a radio plays Wagner's Tristan & Isolde
      might be the first time voiceover was deployed. The setup seems simple
      today but with no over-dubbing available at the time, Hitchcock had to
      have a 30-piece orchestra perform offscreen while Sir John's thoughts
      played via a pre-recorded gramophone record.
  
    Murder! serves as an example of both Hitchcock's strengths
      and weaknesses, his interests and his dislikes. At this point in his
      career he was still largely at the mercy of whatever material was foisted
      upon him by his employers, in this case British International Pictures,
      who required him to adapt Clemence Dane and
      Helen Simpson's novel 'Enter Sir John'. In the years to come
      Hitchcock would become the master of his own destiny but early efforts
      like Murder! remain worthwhile as documents of a master
      sketching his signature in someone else's sandbox.