The Trouble with Harry (1955)
John Forsythe: Sam Marlowe
Photos
Quotes
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Miss Graveley : How old do you think I am young man?
Sam Marlowe : Hmm... fifty. How old do you think you are?
Miss Graveley : Forty-two! I can show you my birth certificate.
Sam Marlowe : I'm afraid you're going to have to show more than your birth certificate to convince a man of that.
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Sam Marlowe : When I saw him, he was dead.
Jennifer Rogers : He looked exactly the same when he was alive, only he was vertical.
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Capt. Wiles : Coming home from Madagascar once we had a fireman on board who hit his head on a brick wall and died two days later.
Sam Marlowe : Where did he find a brick wall on board a ship?
Capt. Wiles : Mmmm... that's what we always wondered.
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Arnie : How do rabbits get born?
Sam Marlowe : Same way elephants do.
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Sam Marlowe : I think, Captain Wiles, we're tangled up in a murder.
Capt. Wiles : Murder. If it's murder who dunnit?
Sam Marlowe : Who did it?
Capt. Wiles : That's what I say, whodunnit?
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[Discussing Jennifer's recently deceased husband Harry]
Jennifer Rogers : You can stuff him, for all I care. Stuff him and put him in a glass case, only I'd suggest frosted glass.
Sam Marlowe : What did he do to you? Besides marry you.
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Sam Marlowe : You're not supposed to bury bodies whenever you find them. It makes people suspicious.
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Sam Marlowe : Perharps I'll come back tomorrow.
Arnie : When's that?
Sam Marlowe : The day after today.
Arnie : That's yesterday. Today's tomorrow.
Sam Marlowe : It was.
Arnie : When was tomorrow yesterday?
Sam Marlowe : Today.
Arnie : Oh, sure. Yesterday.
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Capt. Wiles : I fired three bullets. Three! One for the hunting sign, one for the tin can...
Sam Marlowe : ...and one for the little man who's lying in the grave.
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Sam Marlowe : Didn't know you had such a pretty mother, Arnie.
Arnie : You think she's pretty, you should see my slingshot.
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Sam Marlowe : Let's get Harry and pop him in.
Capt. Wiles : With hasty reverence.
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Sam Marlowe : You're beautiful. Wonderful! You're the most wonderful, beautiful thing I've ever seen. I'd like to paint you.
Jennifer Rogers : Was there something else you wanted, Mr. - Marlow, isn't it?
Sam Marlowe : You certainly are a lovely woman. I'd like to paint you nude.
Jennifer Rogers : Some other time, Mr. Marlow. I was about to make Arnie some lemonade.
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Capt. Wiles : She was downright hysterical with delight.
Sam Marlowe : What was she like?
Capt. Wiles : Pretty as a rainbow. Wish I was two years younger.
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Sam Marlowe : Perhaps I've come at an awkward moment.
Jennifer Rogers : If you want to undress me, you have.
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Capt. Wiles : [about Miss Gravely] She's a well-preserved woman.
Sam Marlowe : I envy you.
Capt. Wiles : Yes, very well preserved. And preserves have to be opened, some day.
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Arnie : How come you never came over to visit me before?
Sam Marlowe : I didn't know you had such a pretty mother, Arnie.
Arnie : You think she's pretty, you should see my slingshot.
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Sam Marlowe : All right. If I had my choice, I'd rather be thought a murderer than proved one.
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Deputy Sheriff Calvin Wiggs : Bullets and guns are dangerous. They kill things.
Sam Marlowe : No one around here could hit a freight car with a cannon.
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Jennifer Rogers : This is what happened. I was in the hotel room alone. I put on my best nightie. You understand?
Sam Marlowe : Perfectly.
Jennifer Rogers : Although I had no true feeling for Harry, I had worked myself into a certain enthusiasm because I thought he loved me.
Sam Marlowe : Must have been hard work.
Jennifer Rogers : There was a full moon, and I sat by the window because I thought it would show off my new nightie to advantage.
Sam Marlowe : Naturally.
Jennifer Rogers : I don't know why I'm telling you all this.
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Jennifer Rogers : He was too good to live.
Sam Marlowe : From his looks, he didn't appear to be the kind that was "too good."
Jennifer Rogers : Well, he was. Horribly good.
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Capt. Wiles : What are you thinking, Sammy?
Sam Marlowe : I think, Captain Wiles, we're tangled up in a murder.
Capt. Wiles : Murder? If it's murder, who done it?
Sam Marlowe : Who "did" it?
Capt. Wiles : That's what I say, who done it?
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Mrs. Wiggs : Oh. Mr. Marlow, it's wonderful.
Sam Marlowe : [turns his abstract painting, that Mrs. Wiggs is holding, downside up] I've been in a tortured mood lately.
Mrs. Wiggs : What is it?
Sam Marlowe : Good old Wiggy, my sternest critic.
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Mrs. Wiggs : I don't understand your work. I think it's beautiful. So does Mrs. Rogers.
Sam Marlowe : Oh! You talk about me? She's the pretty woman with the little boy, isn't she?
Mrs. Wiggs : Mmm-hmm. I only brought up your name once when we were talking about strange people.
Sam Marlowe : Huh?
Mrs. Wiggs : That is, strangers. People she hadn't met yet.
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Sam Marlowe : Stands to reason they can't touch you for it.
Capt. Wiles : Nothing these days stands to reason.
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Jennifer Rogers : Harry the handsome hero. Harry the saint. Harry the good.
Sam Marlowe : I didn't catch his last name.
Jennifer Rogers : Harry Worp.
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Sam Marlowe : Whether you killed him or not, you've incriminated yourself. You'll have much more of a job explaining a body you didn't kill and buried than a body that you killed accidentally and buried.
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Sam Marlowe : You're not supposed to bury bodies whenever you find them. It makes people suspicious. Supposed to tell the police or advertise or something.
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Jennifer Rogers : You've got an artistic mind. You can see the finer things.
Sam Marlowe : When I'm lucky.
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Capt. Wiles : I don't want to talk about your affairs. I've got affairs of my own.
Sam Marlowe : You mean my protégée?
Capt. Wiles : Come again?
Sam Marlowe : Miss Gravely. The lady that I renovated down at Mrs. Wiggs' this afternoon. A most remarkable reversion to femininity.
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Jennifer Rogers : It's funny, but, I feel awful comfortable with you, Sam.
Sam Marlowe : You know, I feel the same way, too. It's a good feeling, feeling comfortable with someone who feels that way, too.
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Sam Marlowe : You think we'd do any better on Fifth Avenue?
Mrs. Wiggs : If there's more people there.
Sam Marlowe : Oh, lots of people. Hundreds and thousands and billions of people.
Mrs. Wiggs : Well, might be better then.
Sam Marlowe : But what sort of people, Wiggy? What breed? I'll tell you. They're little people. Little people - with hats on.
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Sam Marlowe : Your conscience is quite clear. You got nothing to worry about.
Capt. Wiles : Sammy, I haven't got a conscience and it's not heaven that's worrying me 'cause I don't expect I'll ever have to face it. And it's none of those noble things you were talking about, no. Nothing like that.
Sam Marlowe : Then what is it?
Capt. Wiles : It's me. It's me that's worrying me. Me and my future life.
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Capt. Wiles : There's nothing like finding yourself in love. No, it adds zest to your work. Zest. Zest.
Sam Marlowe : I think I've had enough zest for a while. Let's sit down and rest, huh?
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Capt. Wiles : She's a very nice lady, Sam. Very nice.
Sam Marlowe : We're all nice! I don't see how anyone could help but like us.
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Sam Marlowe : It'll be better for all of us if he's buried and out of the way.
Capt. Wiles : Nothing doing, Sammy. I'm not burying someone else's bad habits.