There is no solid proof of any of this, just 'little things': Uncle Charlie's almost hateful view of these widows that he openly expresses, the 'accidents' Charlie is having. Charlie does not want to believe her beloved Uncle Charlie may be a murderer, but as time goes by, the 'little things' start adding up and Charlie becomes convinced Uncle Charlie is indeed a serial killer. One of the detectives, Jack Graham, tells Charlie that Uncle Charlie Oakley may be 'the Merry Widow Killer', a man who marries older widows and then murders them, taking their money with him. That 'survey' was really an excuse for two detectives to go inside the Newton house. There are good reasons for this, as the film progresses, and that Charlie discovers. Little things, like Uncle Charlie's refusal to have his photograph taken as part of a national survey. Little things, like Uncle Charlie feeling tense when Charlie keeps humming a waltz that she can't quite place until she figures it out: The Merry Widow Waltz. Little things, like him tearing up the newspaper of his brother-in-law Joseph (Henry Travers) to hide a seemingly innocuous story. Little details soon suggest that with dear Uncle Charlie, something wicked this way comes. However, things are not all that they appear to be.
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