Recently deceased mystery writer Alexander Penn Arlington gets permission from the recording angel to relive his last day on earth, so that he can find out who murdered him.Recently deceased mystery writer Alexander Penn Arlington gets permission from the recording angel to relive his last day on earth, so that he can find out who murdered him.Recently deceased mystery writer Alexander Penn Arlington gets permission from the recording angel to relive his last day on earth, so that he can find out who murdered him.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Hitch's pal, John Williams, makes a return appearance as a dead man? They must have had a chuckle over this peculiar role. He plays a mystery writer who is now in Heaven, believing he died of natural causes. WRONG. The poor guy was murdered.
Accordingly, the chief angel (played by Alan Napier) gives him a chance to return to earth and expose the killer. Fantasy material, yes, even for Hitchcock, however there's something more to this as you will see.
Amanda Blake (GUNSMOKE), makes a fitting poker-face suspect, and his wife, quite naturally. Supporting cast includes series favorite Philip Coolidge as Talbot and Ruta Lee, playing an angel, in an early role. Comedian and tv director Jerry Paris plays Wally. Fun to see future BATMAN butler Alan Napier playing an angel. That's a gas.
Don't miss this. John Williams a must see.
SEASON 1 EPISODE 20 remastered Universal dvd box set. Collectors first season box. Released 2005. 3 dvds. The purple box edition.
Season 1 had some very good and more episodes. The very difficult to rate and review "Whodunnit" to me is not one of them though. It is not a terrible episode by all means and has its moments, but it didn't really click with me to be honest. 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' was no stranger to changes of pace and mostly did them well, but "Whodunnit" doesn't really do its premise justice and doesn't live up to its initial promise. As far as Season 1 goes, this is one of the weaker entries.
"Whodunnit" does have good things. Napier brings a lot of class and intrigue to his role. Also enjoyed the ironic and droll humour, along with the sophisticated and witty kinds when done well ironic and droll humour is great (less keen on the cruder type, which comedy today is full of). Hitchcock's bookending is typically fun.
It does start very well, intriguingly and humorously. It looks pretty decent. Did like the chemistry between Williams and Napier.
However, Williams is not at his best and this is one of his weaker guest appearances in a role that does not suit him. He does try definitely, but his character's pomposity is very overdone in the writing which made him impossible to connect with. Actually ended up not caring enough about the identity of the murderer. Have seen mixed views on the ending, to me it is more conclusive than has been said but it did feel rushed and took a while for me to get the head round.
Despite starting off promisingly, this promise is not kept all the way through. The rest of the story felt too over-stretched and it also came over as silly and muddled. The sets are on the sparse side and the direction is pretty run of the mill, getting the job done in an alright way but it doesn't ever feel distinguished or inspired.
Concluding, an odd one. 5/10.
Some Hitch favorites are in the cast, including Williams, Napier, and the sour-looking Coolidge. But I did expect Marshal Dillon to stride in and rescue Miss Kitty, oops, right era, wrong series. But it was unusual seeing Blake in a role outside of Dodge City. Frankly, I didn't think the rather listless payoff measured up to the opening. Plus, the suspects' portrayals are colorless, probably so that the culprit will be hard to detect. Anyhow, if heaven is anything like Hitch's version, I'm ready, especially if Ruta Lee is my angel escort.
Did you know
- TriviaActor John Williams's character said that he was 52 years old. In real life, he was. Amanda Blake, who played his wife, was, in real life, a mere 27 years old.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Alfred Hitchcock - Host: Quiet, please.
[Hitchcock bangs a gavel on a narrow desk which has a pitcher of water and glass on a tray on one side, and a row of books within bookends on the other]
Alfred Hitchcock - Host: Good evening, fellow necromaniacs. I'm glad so many of you could come. I should explain that the word has nothing to do with necking. I'm awfully sorry I haven't time to explain it now. You'll just have to look it up in the dictionary. As you know, we are not allowed to present our play unless we have a quorum. Tonight, we are concerned with those three little words: Who Done It. When our story opens, the more sordid details are safely out of the way. For the hero of tonight's Grand Guignol is already quite dead.
- SoundtracksFuneral March of a Marionette
Written by Charles Gounod
Details
- Runtime30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1