"Alfred Hitchcock Presents" The Orderly World of Mr. Appleby (TV Episode 1956) Poster

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8/10
By the Book!!!
kidboots12 June 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Robert H. Harris seemed to be typecast as fidgety antique dealers (I saw him in a very similar role in a "Peter Gunn" episode) and in this "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" episode he plays Mr. Appleby, an orderly antique dealer who is going broke because he would rather collect the rare and exquisite items than sell them. One of his clients is after money he owes for a highly prized collection of Indian artifacts and he is desperate. He turns to his wife but his fussy ways have driven her to the other extreme, so, in spite of having money of her own, she lives like a slob and won't part with her money!!

He doesn't care, he has been studying a book called "Murder or Accident" and thinks he has the perfect plan!! He does collect his wife's inheritance but it doesn't last long, only long enough to pay the bill to the businessman (Ansara) for the Indian relics but he now has other plans - a rich spinster who seems to like antiques almost as much as him....

This is one of the better episodes of the series with a logical but satisfying ending. Michael Ansara became so identified with his character Cochise from "Broken Arrow" but he did play a variety of roles and play them well.
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6/10
"Your time is up!"
classicsoncall27 July 2021
Warning: Spoilers
It seems with most of these Alfred Hitchcock Presents episodes, I can come up with an alternate version that didn't have to end so horribly for the principals involved. Considering the fact that old Appleby (Robert H. Harris) loved his antiques and curios so much, why couldn't he have simply closed down his shop and moved all that stuff into his new wife's home? It's not like he was making any money there, because he refused to sell anything. Doing away with his first wife (Louise Larabee) was a prime example of having the rug pulled out from under you, and it's a wonder he got away with it. But the moneyed next wife Martha (Meg Mundy) was a collector herself, and the marriage could have been made happy by combining the antiquities of both and living happily ever after, which is what Martha aspired to in the first place, if you can take her word for it. In the final analysis, maybe Hitch was right, this episode probably did more than it's fair share to inspire viewers to go for wall to wall carpeting.
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7/10
Mr. Appleby is quite a jerk!
planktonrules19 February 2021
Mr. Appleby owns an antique store. But he really shouldn't, as he;s obsessed with the items in his store...so much that he refuses to sell many of them...and there's no way you can stay in business that way. When one of his consignors threatens to remove their items from his shop since they aren't being sold, Applyby comes up with a novel solution....he murders his wife and uses her small fortune to pay for the items in question. But this won't last long, not if he wants to keep most everything, and soon he's looking for a rich wife...in case he needs to arrange an 'accident' once again in order to keep his things.

This is an interesting show about a truly awful person. And, like in most of these tales from "Alfred Hitchcock Presents", he gets his in the end...making for a wonderful and fitting finale.
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7/10
He Pulled the Rug Out From Under Her
Hitchcoc20 October 2008
If this weren't so blatantly tongue-in-cheek, this would be a terrible episode. I'm always amazed how easily people die in television shows. What is odd is that Hitchcock, in his movies, never made dying a routine thing. Oh well, he was just the host here. The man in question kills his wife by luring her to a rug and then pulling it violently out from under her. I have to be quite honest. If I did this, they would most likely fall on their rear and get up and punch me in the nose. There is a subplot of the man trying to hang on to treasures in an antique/curio shop; an obsession not shared by his spouse. He needs money to continue buying all this junk and this becomes a sore point. Eventually, he hooks up with a woman who is obviously his equal and the sparks fly. Take this for what it is. Far fetched. If you accept it on those terms it's not so bad.
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10/10
IF YOU BREAK IT ---YOU BOUGHT IT!
tcchelsey3 November 2022
One of the BEST.

Robert H. Harris, a regular on Alfred Hitchcock's series, is perfectly cast as milk toast Mr. Appleby, the reserved owner of a prize antique shop. His unique problem is that he's slowly going broke because he simply refuses to sell anything. Otherwise, he would probably be a wealthy man. If we all could be in that predicament!

A customer with money (well played by Meg Mundy) stops in one day, accidentally breaks something, writes a fat check --and its love at first sight, or at least somebody to pay the rent. In typical Hitchcock fashion, he soon weds the lady -- after killing his own bickering wife --only to find she's even worse? Poor chap! Bottom line; they deserve each other.

This is another classic tale that has to be seen and you'll be hooked, principally for the fine performance of Harris. He was a specialist at playing little guys with secret motives, also a master of makeup. Harris sometimes wore a hairpiece and became a totally different character at times. Also watch for Michael Ansara as a hard as nails bill collector and old timer Gage Clarke as Mr. Gainsborough. Gage was in several campy 50s films and has become a cult hero of sorts.

Masterfully directed by James Neilson, who headed 12 episodes for Hitch. Later behind ADAM 12 for years. A real late night treat. Best of SEASON 1 remastered Universal dvd box set. 2005. 4 dvd box set.
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6/10
Watch Your Step.
rmax3048231 April 2012
Warning: Spoilers
The balding, middle-aged, colorless Mr. Appleby likes a well-ordered life. He gets it in his antiques shop, where he's become so fond of these ancient artifacts that he keeps turning away customers. Then he's visited by one of his Turkish suppliers who wants twelve thousand dollars immediately. Disaster looms large in Mr. Appleby's future.

And that well-ordered life? He certainly doesn't get it at home. His wife is a sloppy, loud-mouthed nag.

So he murders her for her insurance money by pulling a rug out from under her feet, and good riddance.

Then he remarries. This is a bad mistake for Mr. Appleby, as it is for so many of the rest of us. I'm telling you, you can't trust anybody, especially a spouse.

But the viewer can't help noticing, if he or she pays any attention at all, that much less effort went into episodes like this than went into feature films, even the cheapest. For instance, the love of Mr. Appleby's life is his antiques. Yet we're never given a chance to see him appreciating them, fondling them, or even talking about them. He rushes to a customer saying, "I wish you wouldn't handle the item." And that's it.

I want the guy to be obsessed with those antiques, willing to commit murder to keep them. It wouldn't have taken much more in the way of time or money to give the point a few second of screen time, but the writers didn't bother.
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6/10
Handling obsession
TheLittleSongbird23 March 2022
After making quite a good first impression with his debuting 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' episode "Help Wanted", James Neilsen returns for his second (of twelve) with "The Orderly World of Mr Appleby". The premise wasn't too exciting, but 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' did more than once prove that it could make something interesting out of premises that are nothing special so hopes were almost certainly not dashed by any stretch.

"The Orderly World of Mr Appleby" turned out to be quite decent, but not great let alone exceptional. It could have done more with the premise and not much wows, but it still turned out to be worth watching and has enough to like. "The Orderly World of Appleby" is not one of the best episodes of Season 1 or 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' in general. At the same time, it is also not one of the worst. Personally put it somewhere in the middle.

Good things are certainly here. Robert H. Harris does a great job in the lead role and is the main reason to see "The Orderly World of Mr Appleby", suitably fidgety but also suitably easy to hate. Perfect for his jerk-ish character. The ending is another strength and elevates what is otherwise not the greatest of stories to a better level, it's plausible and surprising.

Supporting cast are pretty good if never outstanding. Hitchcock is wonderfully droll as is the humour and irony in the bookending. Neilsen directs with competence if not with complete distinction, while the episode is well made visually. Especially the photography. Still love the main theme.

However, the story didn't strike me as too great. It came over as on the far-fetched and thin side, and really could have done with a tighter pace and more suspense. Without those it did come over as bland. The script also could have been tighter.

Despite the supporting cast being pretty good, the supporting characters are not particularly well written with them not being gone into more depth.

Overall, quite decent but there was something missing. 6/10.
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7/10
Interesting Character
mandolorian-2907431 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Mr Appleby is an interesting character and I enjoyed seeing how he handled all the unpredictable parts of the episode. At first he is shown to be attached to the objects of his antique shops and very protective of them. Particularly when the Lady broke one of the objects. Next we see his life at home, he is in bad terms with his wife and the shop if failing. Out of anger and possibly fear he trips her up using a rug, killing her. He labels her death as an accident and moves on to another wife quickly. This wife is more willing to spend time with him and he is still not too happy with his wife and her convent phone calls. We find out he married her for the money to help his failing antique shop. And when she refuses to pay the amount of money to keep the shop afloat he attempts the same trick he tried on his previous wife. But she is smart and avoids this, she informs him that she knows all about his previous wife because of her friends documents. She is lonely so decides to stay with him, which ends with tragedy because she falls to her death. The episodes ends there. I portrayed the lesson of this episode to be: Never place objects before people. I enjoyed this episode because of its intriguing story, interesting characters, unpredictable twists and easy to follow dialogue. The downsides of this episodes are: I think they could have showcased Mr Applebys emotions with a longer runtime, The death of the second wife was a little silly, and the rich man could have had a more important role in the story.
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1/10
The Orderly World of Mr. Appleby
bombersflyup12 March 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Why, why, why, why? No reasonable reasons are given... in this depthless disappointment.
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