The Man Who Knew Too Much

The Man Who Knew Too Much
The Man Who Knew Too Much

Film Details

Year

1956

Duration

117 minutes

Genres

Drama, Thriller

Language

English

UNAVAILABLE TO STREAM

This film is not currently available to stream, and we no longer run a DVD service. Find a different film to stream now.

If you're interested in this film being added to the Into Film+ streaming service, please let us know and we’ll explore adding it. Find out more.

Find out where you can watch this film at findanyfilm.com

UNAVAILABLE TO STREAM

This film is not currently available to stream, and we no longer run a DVD service. Find a different film to stream now.

If you're interested in this film being added to the Into Film+ streaming service, please let us know and we’ll explore adding it. Find out more.

LOGIN/CREATE AN ACCOUNT

Find out where you can watch this film at findanyfilm.com


Synopsis

When a family on holiday in Morocco stumble across the murder of a spy, who tells them of an assassination due to take place in London, the villains kidnap the son in an attempt to keep mum and dad quiet. His folks (Ben and Jo McKenna) have other ideas however, and follow the criminals to London, in a chase that leads up to a truly nail-biting climax at the Royal Albert Hall.

Additional details

UNAVAILABLE TO STREAM

This film is not currently available to stream, and we no longer run a DVD service. Find a different film to stream now.

If you're interested in this film being added to the Into Film+ streaming service, please let us know and we’ll explore adding it. Find out more.

LOGIN/CREATE AN ACCOUNT

Find out where you can watch this film at findanyfilm.com

PG Classification

This film has a couple of uses of mild bad language

Find out more on the BBFC website

Related Films

Rebecca
Film

Rebecca(1940)

Rebecca(1940)

Spine-chilling mystery in which a new bride moves into her husband's mansion only to find it filled with reminders of his dead former wife.

36 Reviews

CertificatePG

11+ years 125 mins

Read More
À Bout de Souffle (Breathless)
Into Film+

À Bout de Souffle (Breathless)(1960)

À Bout de Souffle (Breathless)(1960)

Stream on Into Film+

A classic French New Wave film about a petty thief on the run from the law who hides out in Paris with his American lover.

13 Reviews

Certificate12

14+ years 90 mins

Read More
Rear Window
Into Film+

Rear Window(1954)

Rear Window(1954)

Stream on Into Film+

This Alfred Hitchcock thriller sees a reporter stuck in his apartment with a broken leg, and seeing suspicious activity out his window.

550 Reviews

CertificatePG

11+ years 109 mins

Read More

Rate this film

Club Leaders can rate films! Help other club leaders decide if this film is suitable for use in their film club by giving it a rating.

Rate this film

Your rating

Click a star to rate this film

Ratings guide

  • Worked brilliantly
  • Went down well
  • Had some value
  • Did not enjoy it
  • Would not use again

Member rating

38 Reviews

Members rating breakdown
5 Star
3
4 Star
3
3 Star
8
2 Star
7
1 Star
17
View all reviews

Leader rating

This film has not been rated by a club leader yet. Be the first to rate this film.

Start an Into Film Club or Log in to rate this film

Reviews (38)

Members rating

Sort reviews by

Back to top Load more

Viewing 0 of 0 Reviews found.

Anson Road Into Film Club

Into Film Clubs

Into Film Clubs provide opportunities to watch, review and make films.

Coleg Sir Gar Into Film Club (Do I Need a Licence header)

Do I Need a Licence?

Information on which licences you need to show films in your education setting.

How Do Into Film Clubs Work? header

How do Into Film Clubs work?

Find out more about what's involved in running your very own Into Film Club.

Into Film CPD Training (Bolton)

Training

Learn to use film to raise literacy attainment and engage students.

What our educators say

"We are currently screening The Wizard of Oz, profound film that it is, and the last film Wall-E. It's been rewarding observing the KS1 6 year olds run the gamut of emotions from wonder to sadness to joy. "

- Mark Ellis, Teacher, ChristChurch C of E Primary School, London