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Anthologized

Alfred Hitchcock Presents, S1E31, "The Gentleman from America"

More like "The Gentlemeh from Amehrica."

This is a case where I was familiar with the source material going in: Iโ€™d read Michael Arlenโ€™s โ€œThe Gentleman from Americaโ€ in The Valancourt Book of Horror Stories: Volume Four.1

We have another historical piece here, with the bulk of the episode playing out in 1940 and the epilogue picking the thread back up in 1945, but the WWII atmosphereโ€“part of the urgency in the first act stems from the fact that Sir Stephen Hurstwood (Ralph Clanton) is about to be called upโ€“is smoked out by the Gothic. We may open in an upper-class club, with horse races on the radio and England in peril, but weโ€™re soon plunged into a cobwebby manor lit by one guttering candle.

This is a classic horror tale setup: the superficial, โ€œgentlemanlyโ€ rationality of one period slipping into the dark, dank, and still-present horrors of the past (with their โ€œfeminineโ€ hysteria). โ€œThe Gentleman from Americaโ€ gains critique but loses punch by having its โ€œpresentโ€ also set in its original audienceโ€™s past.

Sir Stephen and his friend2 Derek (John Irving) overhear a wealthy American, Howard Latimer (Biff McGuire), winning a bundle on the same horse race thatโ€™s putting Sir Stephen further in debt โ€ฆ and further in danger of losing his family home (though, in a good bit of historical color, itโ€™s about to temporarily pass out of his hands anyway, to serve as a rest home during the war). They need little conversation to hatch a plan to bilk this arrogantly, blithely naive American for enough cash to keep Hurstwood limping on for another year. They stage a โ€œfriendlyโ€ conversation with Latimer in which Sir Stephen isโ€“in the weary fashion of English gentryโ€“positively oppressed by the financial responsibilities of maintaining his familyโ€™s legacy: โ€œThe death tax people and the mortgage holders can fight it out with the ghost for possession.โ€

Oh? Is there a ghost? โ€ฆ Why, if Latimer doesnโ€™t believe in it, then he wonโ€™t have any problem staying in the most haunted room in the house and coughing up a thousand pounds if he leaves before dawn.

The first stretch of the episode gains much of its interest from the transatlantic culture clash. At least to start with, Latimer comes off worse: gullible enough to be easily conned, not well-mannered enough to be a skeptic without being a poor sport at the same time. As soon as he suspects the joke might be on him, he canโ€™t get in on it. This is a very British episode, and Latimer is very American: blithe and superficially easygoing, but essentially a child in the ways of the world. He has money but no responsibilities, or at least no legacy to maintain. The episode complicates the thrust of that criticism later on, but in the early stages, itโ€™s easy to see the British characters as sharper and worldlier. 

Alone in his room at Hurstwood, Latimer reads the story of the famous Hurstwood ghost. The episode generates some decent atmosphere hereโ€“itโ€™s nice to have a change of scenery, at leastโ€“but that comes second to the power of a well-constructed little horror tale. The Hurstwood ghost story works, especially in its pacing: the deliberateness that leads us from Geraldineโ€™s relief at touching Juliaโ€™s nightgown to the slow reach up to the warm, bloody emptiness up above is a masterful bit of mini-story construction, establishing tension, resolving it just long enough to create a false sense of security, and then immediately undermining it again for a glide towards an inevitable horror.

I can see why it gets in Latimerโ€™s head, but thatโ€™s no excuse for him not realizing how obviously heโ€™s being tricked here. Of course they gave you a gun with one real bullet and a bunch of blanks, Latimer! Get your shit together! Youโ€™re embarrassing your fellow Americans!

Latimerโ€™s screaming faint at the headless ghost approaching himโ€“undissuaded by the โ€œbulletsโ€ heโ€™s wildly firing at itโ€“takes us to the 1945 epilogue, which trades the gaudy horror of Gothic for the quiet, aching loss of the post-war period. Itโ€™s been five years, and Derek and Sir Stephen have trouble even recalling the name of the โ€œgentleman from America.โ€ Theyโ€™ve had a whole war between the start of the episode and its conclusion, and he, they realize, probably has too. When he unexpectedly arrives on the heels of this conversation, with lampshaded good timing, theyโ€™re prepared to reconnect with him in a friendly way. No hard feelings, right?

This is another episode that simply doesnโ€™t do it for me. Thereโ€™s little here thatโ€™s actually badโ€“some bits are farfetched to the point where I roll my eyes, but theyโ€™re deliberate stretches of plausibility, not infuriating failures of logicโ€“and much that is interesting, but it all feels stuck in a lower gear. Just not lively enough, and only briefly scary enough.


The Twist: Latimer did not go home and have his own war. The prank shattered him, and heโ€™s been in the local sanitarium ever since, convinced that Julia is his sister and he must avenge her murder.

I am sometimes happy to go with a twist utterly unfounded in basic human psychology if itโ€™s cool enough, but this one is not, so Iโ€™ll just say that while I can buy Latimer having lasting trauma from his night at Hurstwood, I donโ€™t buy it looking like this.

That being said, the ending does pick up some emotional resonance through McGuire and Clantonโ€™s performances. Iโ€™d even go so far as to say McGuire doesnโ€™t really hit his stride until this last scene, when he shows a deft touch with Latimerโ€™s new vagueness and slight disconnection from reality: itโ€™s like all the things Derek and Sir Stephen say to himโ€“until Juliaโ€™s nameโ€“land on him like soap bubbles and pop harmlessly away, leaving no impression. Heโ€™s less good at the screaming breakdown, unfortunately, so it winds up feeling stagy rather than uncontrolled.

That leaves Clanton with the major emotional beatโ€“the crushing realization that he ruined a manโ€™s life to trick a thousand pounds out of himโ€“and he carries it off pretty well (โ€œMay God have mercy on usโ€); now heโ€™s haunted, those last seconds say.

Itโ€™s all layered in an interestingโ€“if undevelopedโ€“way with the post-war trauma we see a few hints of: the 1945 Sir Stephen has acquired a limp, and heโ€™s selling his ancestral home (an overhaul that feels like an acknowledgment of some of Britainโ€™s laudable post-war social changes). Thereโ€™s a quiet melancholy to it; the world has changed, and characters like Derek and Sir Stephen are facing all that with a stiff upper lip, but they canโ€™t help being nostalgic about whatโ€™s gone before. That gives a certain force to the reveal that whatโ€™s gone beforeโ€“their โ€œinnocentโ€ world of all-in-good-fun maintenance of a certain family wealth and style at the cost of other people, to get obnoxiously pointed about itโ€“had lasting, ruinous consequences. (For a rich American, the last person theyโ€™d affect in real life, but hey.) All of this can reward thought, but it still feels contrived and somewhat weak. Itโ€™s easy to dissect a dead frog. I prefer the AHP stories that work, Graham Greene-style, as straightforward โ€œentertainments,โ€ and only then invite and yield to analysis. This one is a little too limp.

Directed by: Robert Stevens

Written by:ย Michael Arlen (story), Francis Cockrell (teleplay)

Up Next:ย โ€œThe Babysitterโ€

  1. I will miss no opportunity to praise Valancourt Books, which does exceptional work with horror and queer reprints in particular. This anthology also includes John Peyton Cookeโ€™s โ€œLetโ€™s Make a Face,โ€ which is cruel and funny and highly recommended. โ†ฉ๏ธŽ
  2. Or โ€œfriend,โ€ since Irving gives Derek a slightly fey quality: he reads as gay to me, which further substantiates why heโ€™s been willing to spend years helping Sir Stephen resolve his financial difficulties and why the two are rarely seen apart. Iโ€™m curious if this implication came about through the direction or if Irving contributed it all on his own, perhaps to make up for having an underwritten role. โ†ฉ๏ธŽ