
The Trouble with Harry
- warm
- brisk
- gentle
- intimate
Warm, kinetic, gentle comedy / mystery, inventive in texture. Ambivalent, intimate, measured, hand-scored across twelve axes of taste.
How every film is hand-scored →The trouble with Harry is that he’s dead. In a quiet Vermont village, a corpse creates unexpected chaos as several townspeople each believe they may be to blame.
Our read · The Trouble with Harry (1955) reads as a warm, kinetic, inventive comedy · mystery entry — gentle in intensity, intimate in scope, measured in temperature, ambivalent in outlook. Hand-scored on twelve axes of taste — mood, pacing, weirdness, hope, stakes, humour, reality, density, warmth, auteur, intensity, and era — with a derived palette drawn from its dominant cinematography.




Availability in the UK · via JustWatch
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The shape of The Trouble with Harry
What watching it is actually like.
“You want a breezy Vermont corpse comedy where romance blooms amid polite panic.”
Skip it tonight — Skip if macabre small-town humor or 1950s pacing feels too quaint tonight.
The reading.
Each axis is hand-scored — not derived from votes or genre averages. The marker shows where this film sits; the gradient fill uses the film's own cinematography palette.
Eight films that read most like this one.
Closeness in the twelve-axis space — how the film actually reads, not “people also liked.”
Discussion
What does your Movie DNA look like?
Rate a few films you've seen. We map your taste across the same twelve axes and find the films you'll actually want to watch tonight.
Calibrate yourself








