Murder by Death (1976) Poster

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8/10
Crazy comedy-mystery
jhaggardjr26 February 2001
"Murder by Death" is a comic murder-mystery done in absolute lunacy. I mean this is one screwball comedy that made me laugh out loud quite often. And yet, there are so many confusing moments that I didn't know what on earth was going on. It seems that writer Neil Simon was trying to complicate moviegoers with his screenplay to this movie which pays homage to detectives of old classic movies such as Charlie Chan, Miss Marple, Sam Spade, and Hercule Poirot. In "Murder by Death", a mysterious man invites the 5 greatest detectives to his home for "dinner and a murder" as he describes it. An all-star cast is featured here and all of them are very funny. The best: Peter Sellers in the Charlie Chan take-off. Sellers is of course best known for playing the inept Inspector Clouseau in the "Pink Panther" movies, but his role here as Chinese detective Sidney Wang is a hoot. He made me laugh the hardest. Just looking at him made me laugh. The way he talked made me laugh. He's naturally funny everytime he's on screen. Also funny: the great Sir Alec Guinness as a blind butler. I thought he was supposed to be a serious actor! I don't think I've ever seen Guinness in a movie comedy, but he makes the most of his character here. He comes second behind Sellers in the laugh department in "Murder by Death". Two other funny performances are turned in by James Coco and James Cromwell ("Babe" and "L.A. Confidential") as the Hercule Poirot sendoff and his chauffeur. It's funny to watch a younger Cromwell here speaking with a bad European accent. David Niven, Maggie Smith, Peter Falk, Eileen Brennan, Elsa Lanchester, and Nancy Walker also register laughs too. But the most downright goofiest character in "Murder by Death" is the host orchestrating this crazy game, played by Truman Capote. He's very funny too. Another major factor in the film are the sets of the old mansion the movie takes place in. They're marvelous. But at times the story gets real complicated and seems to get parts dislocated. It bothered me a little the first time I saw this. Now I just sit back and let the movie play on. Neil Simon intended on this to be a crazy comedy and in that way he succeeded. "Murder by Death" is all-in-all a very enjoyable movie.

*** (out of four)
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7/10
Five known private eyes undertake an investigation and a millionaire offers a million dollars to the one who can solve the murder
ma-cortes8 May 2012
This popular charade deals with a fistful of famed stars incarnating notorious detectives . By the time the world's greatest detectives work out whodunit, you could die laughing! Five famous literary detective characters and their sidekicks are invited to a bizarre mansion full of secret passages and spinning rooms to solve an even stranger mystery , as James Coco as Milo Perrier who looks like Hercules Poirot (by Agatha Christie), as Peter Falk as Sam Diamond who looks like Sam Spade , Elsa Lanchester as Jessica Marbles similarly to Mistress Marple , David Niven as Dick Charleston as Nick Charles (created by Dashiell Hammett, whose Nick Charles and Sam Spade were the basis), Peter Sellers as Sidney Wang or Charlie Chan (written by Earl Derr Biggers). They are received by a blind butler played by Alec Guinness as Bensonmum and the eccentric millionaire Lionel Twain performed by Truman Capote invites them to dinner , offering one million to the one who can resolve the night's killing . As the popular characters must unravel a night of murder at a spooky country house , including a blind butler, a deaf-mute maid (Nancy Walker) . Exactly at midnight, a killing is going to take place.

This rendition of a Neal Simon's novel in an entertaining and fun spoof of Agatha Christie , specially from books titled ¨Ten little Indians¨and ¨And then there were none¨ . Neil Simon remained on the set to take care of re-writes, as he did with this picture's sequel, The Cheap Detective. Simon took such a shine to Alec Guinness during the picture's production that he told him if he did not like anything in the film, he'd immediately rewrite it for him, but Guinness assured him it was great fun for him. The screenplay is funny and high quality in which it's not difficult to work out on which murder-solvers each of them is modeled ; furthermore , stands up Alec Guinnes as a botcher and hyperactive blind butler and a suitable eccentric James Coco as Poirot lookalike and Nancy Walker's last movie , ironic in that she does not utter a single word throughout the entire film. In the opening credits, each character's eyes move except for Peter Falk's (which may be an in-joke reference to his glass eye), and Alec Guinness's blind butler . It is in fact an amusing imitation of Crime Story including enjoyable and sympathetic performances by the entire cast . Well-known actors have the famous sleuths at large in a sinister country mansion , then appears amusement and entertainment , as all of them running around and taking place murders , who's the killer? . The entire cast seems to be subsisting on sugar with wild eyes and frenetic movements the order of the day . You'll enjoy enormously the impersonations of legendary detectives of cinema and fictions . Lively and fun musical score by Dave Grusin . Evocative and colorful cinematography by David Walsh. The motion picture was well directed by Robert Moore . Rating : Better than average . Followed by another hammy spoof titled ¨Clue¨(1985) a pale imitation of the earlier parody , being directed by Jonathan Lynn with Tim Curry , Christopher Lloyd , Lesley Ann Warren and Madeline Khan .
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8/10
A hilarious whodunit spoof
TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews23 January 2004
This is an utterly hilarious parody, spoofing detective stories. Much of the humor is verbal, some of it relies on stereotypes and such related (mainly) to the crime story genre. Some of the humor is a tad dirty, and a bit of it is quite dark. Personally, I loved it, but if you have anything against such humor, you may want to skip this one. It doesn't try too hard to make you laugh. The laughs roll in quite naturally, as it parodies a few of the most well-known fictional detectives; Agatha Christie's Mrs. Marble, among others. The setting is one typical to detective stories, and the atmosphere is simply perfect. The plot is very good, and develops nicely while still remaining interesting. The pacing is mostly flawless, but it seemed to lose momentum some, around the last third. The acting is all good, especially from Alec Guinness, Peter Falk and Peter Sellers. One wouldn't expect particularly good performances in a comedy, but this manages. The film is well thought out and equally well-executed. The only thing I didn't like, was that the ending, or maybe the entire third half of the film seemed a bit anticlimactic. At this point, all the action is done, and we're just waiting to find out who's behind it all. The very end is quite good though, a very funny and entertaining twist to say the least. And everything leading up to it is incredibly funny. The characters, while admittedly based somewhat on stereotypes, are all entertaining and each have their own shtick; among them are Milo Perrier, the perpetually hungry and ridiculously sensitive Frenchman, and the *very* British Dick Charleston, played to perfection by David Niven, and last but most definitely not least, Sam Diamond(Peter Falk, doing his Columbo thing), borrowing from noir and Bogart, complete with nonsensical, lengthy rants. I recommend this to anyone into detective movies and/or spoofs. Do keep the humor I mentioned early in the review in mind when considering whether or not to watch. 8/10
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Great Comic Ensemble Piece
fx_gent13 June 2004
This movie is a wonderful example of what you can achieve when you combine a great script with a fantastic cast. It is one of the great comic ensemble films, ranking up there along with Its a Mad, Mad, Mad World and Clue. I have loved this film since I first saw it back in the 70s and still find it just as funny today. I had hoped for sometime that a special DVD would be released to mark this film and allow us to know more about how it was made and hear comments from the surviving cast. Sadly, the DVD does have a great interview with Neil Simon, but nothing else. I was also disappointed to see absent missing scenes, especially the one showing Sherlock Holmes showing up at the end. Still, it was great to retire my dogeared video tape.
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7/10
I Love This...
smithtyler196323 May 2015
Amazingly funny, witty and intriguing throughout. I loved Miss Marbles and the Maid provided the funniest moment in the entire film. I loved the ending, it didn't make sense but it was still awesome!!!

The characters were amazing, especially Milo Perrier and Jessica Marbles but I can't stop laughing about how amazing the character of Inspector Wang was. If you ever see this on TV, WATCH IT because it will leave you feeling so good about everything.

This is probably one of the best movies of the '70s and needs more recognition, because everything about it was funny and clever.

Lionel Twain was good but evil but confusing.....Aggh I don't know what to say about his character, but the butler creeped me out and cracked me up from the moment I saw him.
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10/10
A Comedy-Suspense Masterpiece!
BrandtSponseller18 January 2005
Eccentric millionaire Lionel Twain (Truman Capote) invites five of the world's greatest detectives, each allowed one guest, to dinner and a murder. Can the detectives, who turn out to be even more eccentric, stop the murder before it happens, and solve it if it does?

I first saw this film as a kid in 1976 with my parents at the theater. Although I could remember I liked it at the time, I hadn't seen it since, and it was at best a vague memory. I certainly didn't remember it being so hilarious and entertaining. Written by Neil Simon and directed by Robert Moore, Murder By Death is a very funny spoof of some of literature/filmdom's most famous detectives, set in a beautifully designed, creepy mansion, and at times, becoming a fine mystery film in its own right.

The jokes fly by very quickly and range from subtle to over-the-top, so attentiveness is required, and multiple viewings are rewarded. The cast is incredible, as you should expect by combining such luminaries as Peter Sellers, Peter Falk, Alec Guinness, James Coco and David Niven.

A comic masterpiece--10 out of 10 from me.
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7/10
an unusual 70s creation
ganymedes198523 October 2019
The jokes don't quite land and the twists seem obvious, but it's still a decent watch thank to the actors and creativity of the plot.
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9/10
What A Hoot
Lechuguilla19 August 2006
An all-star cast, superb dialogue, effective lighting and editing, great production design, and interesting costumes rev up the technical quality of this cinematic spoof of literary whodunits. An eccentric genius named Lionel Twain (Truman Capote) invites the world's five greatest fictional detectives to a dinner party, at which time someone will be murdered. The detective who solves the crime first gets $1 million.

Everything in this film, from the acting to the sound effects to the plot ... is deliciously exaggerated ... hence the humor. For example, mystery readers accept that Hercule Poirot and Charlie Chan are so observant as to spot the most obscure clue, which conveniently points to the solution of the puzzle. In "Murder By Death" writer Neil Simon exaggerates that gambit. A guest detective draws the most outlandish conclusion from the most irrelevant fact, which in turn is shot down by another guest detective who points out the flaws, and then proceeds to do exactly the same thing.

The dialogue is marvelous. In one scene the blind butler serves non-existent soup from an empty bowl, to which Miss Marbles (Elsa Lanchester) protests: "Murder by starvation, maybe that's his game". In another scene, Inspector Perrier (James Coco) reads from a list, and then concludes: "Everything here has been rented for tonight". Miss Marbles responds in a melodramatic voice: "You mean?" "Yes", answers Perrier momentously: "this entire murder has been -- catered".

And then there's the scene wherein Sam Diamond (Peter Falk) ruminates: "I don't get it; first they steal the body and leave the clothes; then they steal the clothes and bring the body back. Who would do a thing like that?" To which Dick Charleston (David Niven) responds in a serious tone: "Possibly some deranged dry cleaner".

The film's casting is wonderful. Truman Capote may not be much of an actor, but he brings to the film a personality that is appropriately eccentric. My only problem is that the amount of screen time for the cast is uneven ... too much for Peter Falk and Peter Sellers, and not enough for Elsa Lanchester, who arrives late.

"Murder By Death" is a wonderful film classic that still holds up thirty years after it was made. The film conveys no heavy-duty political or social "message", no great insight into the human condition. But when you're in the mood for lighthearted, escapist entertainment that provides some laughs, this film is a great choice.
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7/10
invitation to murder!
goya-417 October 2000
An eccentric millionaire (Played brilliantly by Capote) invites the world's greatest detectives to a dinner and offers $1 million to the one who can solve the murder. An entertaining though somewhat uneven comedy that exposes the things about the mystery novels that drive its readers crazy A great ending also On a scale of one to ten..7
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10/10
One of my all time top 10 films
LauraAS13 March 2004
An amazing ensemble cast who must have all had their tongues most firmly planted in their cheeks to produce their performances in this highly amusing murder mystery spoof.

By incorporating plots and characters from your favourite classic crime genres and gently poking fun at them all it is both funny and comfortingly familiar.

So if you want great visual gags (blind butler, deaf maid), superb one liners (especially from Maggie Smith & David Niven) and to escape for 90 minutes back into the gentler, less realistic Golden Age of Crime then you need look no further.

If only there were outtakes.
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7/10
Murder by Laughing to Death
sean-57628 September 2005
Peter Sellers as an old wise-guy Chinese man already has me laughing. 'Murder by Death' is a brilliant spoof of murder/mystery. I was at first reluctant to sit down and watch it because I am not a fan of mystery, but when it was finished my sides were still hurting. It was so over-the-top ridiculous you can't help but laugh. Between the blind butler, deaf and mute cook, and disgustingly confusing conclusion I think I will always think of this film when I hear the words murder or mystery. It is appealing on so many levels as well. There is physical comedy, witty remarks, incredibly stupid traps and escapes, and hilarious characters. I would recommend this film to anyone and everybody, those who like mystery and those who don't because everyone can laugh at it.
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10/10
Silly Films
otm___shank24 December 2004
I will make myself out to be a lover of films with absolutely no point, i especially love this film. The cast alone should make this a film on everyones watch list, never before has so much quality been brought together on one screen. Peter Sellars, at the height of his comic brilliance. Sir Alec Guiness, brilliant in any role, a credit to English acting, possibly the greatest ever actor. David Niven is a brilliant actor, then there are the other roles filletted out with the likes of Dame Maggie Smith, James Coco, Peter Falk, i could go on but i am running out of superlatives to describe the talent on view.

The film itself is a pastiche of great detectives brought together to prove, who is the greatest? Added to the good script the talent of the actors, i am surprised the IMDb has rated this film so low, but i must accept that there are people on this earth, though inferior to me who are allowed to vote.

Watch it, it is worth it.
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7/10
This Murder Has Been Catered!
gftbiloxi10 June 2007
For a time during the 1970s writer Neil Simon was so hot that his name alone was enough to ensure box office success--and one of the results of that fame was MURDER BY DEATH, a parody of murder mysteries of earlier decades.

The concept is quite clever, bringing together celebrated detectives of fiction and film: Dick and Dora Charleston (based on Nick and Nora Charles of the celebrated THIN MAN films); Milo Perrier and Jessica Marbles (Hercules Poriot and Jane Marple of Agatha Christie's celebrated novels); Sidney Wang and son Willie (Charlie Chan and son of the fondly remembered film series); and Sam Diamond (Sam Spade of THE MALTESE FALCON.) Each has been invited for an overnight party at the home of the eccentric Lionel Twain--but upon arrival their hosts seals the mansion and informs them that a vicious murder will occur at midnight. Can the world's greatest detectives solve their way out of this one? The casting is inspired, particularly so re Lionel Twain, who is played by Truman Capote, an individual every bit as eccentric as the character he plays. David Niven and Maggie Smith do the honors as Dick and Dora; James Coco and the ever-memorable Elsa Lanchester appear as Perrier and Miss Marbles; Peter Sellers dons Asian attire for Inspector Wang; and Peter Faulk runs wild as tough-talking Sam Diamond. Alec Guiness, Nancy Walker, Eileen Brennar, and Estelle Winwood also offer memorable support. The dialogue is quite clever, referencing the various source material of the characters, and is quite often laugh-out-loud funny in its absurdity.

What is not particularly interesting is the plot. After a certain point the film becomes distinctly one-note, and to describe the conclusion as unfortunate would be an understatement; indeed, it would be difficult to say that the film has any conclusion at all. Even so, the performers make it a fun affair, and it will particularly appeal to murder mystery fans who recall the original characters fondly. The DVD offers a choice of pan-and-scan or widescreen, trivial notes, and more interestingly a brief interview with Simon himself. Don't expect too much of it and you'll enjoy it quite a bit.

GFT, Amazon Reviewer
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3/10
Stellar cast, lame movie
sqeaston92 February 2008
With such a distinguished cast I had reasonable expectations for this one, but on the whole it's just not funny. The jokes involve a blind butler, a deaf maid, racial stereotypes etc. Most of it made me groan rather than laugh.

The main characters are send ups of classic detectives, including Ms. Marples, Chan, Poirot, the hard bitten American PI and an English upper class type. The performances are reasonable as you'd expect from such an ensemble, but the script is poor in the extreme. It's saddening to see such a cast wasted on such drivel.

If you enjoy watching simple send ups being stupid, you might get something out of this, but Clue was better, and that's not saying much. Not recommended.
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Flippin' brilliant!!!
duntrune2 May 2004
They don't make movies this funny any more....now a guy getting it on with a pie is considered high comedy, but THIS is what truly funny is all about, then again, with so few of the actors in this being alive still, maybe it's not too surprising that current films mostly suck. Who else can be as funny as Peter Sellers? (certainly Steve Martin won't be) Who else can deliver a line as smoothly as David Niven? ("Saved only by the fact that I am INCREDIBLY well bred") Who could be as twisted as Capote? (THE COW, THE COW! Use your god damn personal pronouns and prepositions!) And of course, Alec Guiness being gone makes such a role unplayable by anyone acting these days!!! Great actors, at the height of their skills, a great script, great direction, and Maggie Smith at her hottest ("I want my Dickie! My husband.") Too bad they can't make movies this good anymore....
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7/10
A guilty pleasure....
planktonrules23 December 2012
"Murder By Death" is a very silly and often stupid film. Now this is NOT meant as criticism--just an observation about the type of humor in the film. So, if you are looking for an arty or sophisticated film, then you should definitely not watch this film! But, if you can simply watch and accept it as it is, then you probably will have a nice time watching.

The film begins with several detectives being invited to Mr. Twain's house. All the guests are caricatures of literary and movie detectives--such as Miss Marple, Sam Spade, Charlie Chan and the like. All are played rather broadly--again, this WAS the intention of the filmmakers. Their host (Truman Capote) then enters in a VERY dramatic fashion and challenges them all to solve a murder that is ABOUT TO HAPPEN! What's next is, naturally, nonsensical and silly....but who cares? Overall, the film is filled with bad jokes, puns and a few genuine laughs. It's not brilliant by any means but it will most likely make you laugh. And, for that reason, it's well worth your time provided you can enjoy such a fantastically stupid film!

By the way, the ultra-politically correct might blanch at some of the film's humor--such as the blind butler (Alec Guinness) and the Chinese detective (Peter Sellers). It's all in fun but with today's changing sensibilities, you may want to avoid showing it to your friends and family members as there is a lot to potentially offend.
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9/10
Sellers Shines In This Wild Spoof
ccthemovieman-110 January 2006
One of the most fun movies I've ever watched but I liked it better 20 years ago, frankly, than today. In a recent viewing, it seemed a bit sleazier than I had remembered. Nonetheless, it still has tons of laughs.

This film has one of my all-time favorite characters: Sidney Wang, played by Peter Sellers. The late English actor did a fabulous job of imitating Charlie Chan. He is the highlight among a very talented cast that includes Peter Falk, David Niven, James Coco, Elsa Lanchester, Alec Guinesses, Maggie Smith, Nancy Walker and Truman Capote.

Today, the character oddest for me to view is a young Cromwell who speaks with a French accent! I've never seen him in any role remotely resembling this. The other actors play roles typical of them, such as Niven and Smith's dapper "Thin Man" couple and Falk's, Columbo/Mike Hammer-style American detective.

This a spoof of all the great detectives and the story has a purposely exaggerated amount of twists, particularly at the end....but, despite some of the typical crude 1970s type sexual innuendos, it provides entertainment start-to-finish with absolutely no lulls. It's a classic!
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7/10
What an odd and goofy film
jesusfreak-0088111 March 2021
Loved it. So weird and quirky. Probably helps that I've read a lot of the mysteries they're mocking. Is it PC? No. It's from the 70s. Almost nothing pre 2010 is PC. Calm down.
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10/10
When murder can really be funny
SimonJack4 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
"Murder by Death," is the best and funniest parody of mystery movies ever made. Neil Simon's premise is simple, yet ingenious. The world's greatest detectives – from movies, of course – come together to compete to solve a murder that has yet to occur. The plot has many twists. The cast is exceptional. Major stars of the past and present imitate major stars of the past and present (in 1976). It plays on words in the names of the characters. It has witty dialog and very funny lines throughout. I'll have more on the cast below. The direction is superb. And, the set for this film is marvelous. Columbia built the castle on a huge stage.

Simon threw into the mix of the five super sleuths and their companions, three other characters. Truman Capote plays Lionel Twain, the host for the farce, and he does it quite well. Nancy Walker plays the temporary kitchen maid hired to cook the dinner. She is a deaf-mute. Alec Guinness is a blind butler who has worked for Twain for a time. Watch for all the fun over his name, Jamesir Bensonmum. Simon devised a plot with the butler at the center. And, Guinness provides more laughter than anyone else in this laugh fest.

The opening has Twain writing the invitations to his murder-mystery dinner. No date is given, but it's to be Saturday at 7 p.m. The invitations are addressed to the super sleuths in New York, Catalina, Brussels, San Francisco and Sussex, England. So, in less than a week the five sleuths all receive their mail, book their travel reservations and make it to 22 Lola Lane, wherever that is. The invitations don't give the city and state. And then, the blind butler licks Eisenhower 8-cent stamps to put on all the invites, including those to Belgium and England. But, wait! He misses the envelopes and pounds the stamps on the desktop. Twain says nothing to him as he walks off to post the invites. It just gets better and better from there on.

Outside, the house number is "22 Twain." This is a loaded play on words. First, Samuel Clemens' pen name was Mark Twain (for two). Second, it's a parody of Lionel toy trains -- the host's name is Lionel Twain. Third, when Charlie Wang and his adopted Japanese son pull up in their car, Charlie asks, "What number of house?" His son says "two, two." Charlie says, "Correct. Two-two Twain's house." I laughed so hard as Peter Sellers said the line that resembled a little child saying "choo-choo train." A very funny scene is the arrival of the deaf-mute maid. The Butler can't see her, and she can't hear him or speak. She holds up a note for Guinness to read while he says, "Speak up woman. Oh, a little shy. Well …" and he hands her a menu and tells her to get cooking. Her note gives her name, Yetta, and says she can't read English. So, she sits down at the kitchen table and just waits – to the end of the movie. This will be the source of much more humor when it comes time for Guinness to serve the dinner.

Another great scene has Guinness escorting Dick and Dora to their room. Bensonmum, "Ah, here we are. The late Mrs. Twain's room. She died in here." Dora, "Oh, dear." Dick, "Died of what?" Bensonmum, "She murdered herself in her sleep, sir." Dick, "You mean suicide?" Bensonmum, "Oh, no. It was murder all right. Mrs. Twain hated herself. We keep this room locked." Dick, "Why is that?" Bensonmum, "Mr. Twain loved her very much. He's kept her room just as it was the night she choked herself nine years ago."

Many people today may not know some of the parodied characters. So, here's a brief rundown. Peter Sellers plays Sidney Wang and Richard Narita plays Willie Wang. Wang is a parody of Charlie Chan, a Chinese- American detective created by American novelist Earl Derr Biggers. And, Sidney Toler was one of 13 actors who played Charlie Chan. He had the most roles -- 22 of the 58 films. Charlie Chan held the record for films based on his character until the late 20th century when Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot overtook him.

Peter Falk plays Sam Diamond, a parody of Sam Spade. (He might have been named Sam Heart or Sam Club.) Dashiell Hammett created him in "The Maltese Falcon." Falk parodies the character that Humphrey Bogart played in the movie. Eileen Brennan plays Sam's sidekick, Tess Skeffington. David Niven and Maggie Smith play the roles that parody the Thin Man series of films in the 1930s and 1940s. William Powell and Myrna Loy starred as Nick and Nora Charles. Here, the sleuths are Dick and Dora Charleston. James Coco plays Milo Perrier, the parody of Hercule Poirot, and his sidekick is James Cromwell as Marcel. The last sleuth is Jessica Marbles, a double parody in hindsight. Jane Marple was another Agatha Christie creation, and Jessica is the name of a later sleuth, Jessica Fletcher. She was the TV character from the 1980s series, "Murder She Wrote.," that starred Angela Lansbury. How could Simon know her name so far in advance? Elsa Lanchester plays Jessica Marbles, and Estelle Winwood plays her nurse Withers. That's a spoof of yet another famous female detective of the early 1930s, Hildegarde Withers. She was created by novelist Stuart Palmer.

This is a wonderful comedy, but it's not for the whole family. Kids – even most teens won't get the witty lines. Most won't recognize or be able to appreciate the parodies. And, some of the language toward the end is unsuitable, including profanity, disrespect, and crudity. Most adults can tolerate the small amount of off-color language for the overall humor of the movie.
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6/10
Better than average takeoff on detective mysteries
rcraig628 June 2003
I saw "Murder by Death" recently, in a back-to-back with "The Cheap Detective", both Neil Simon scripts that were written directly for film and both spoofs of particular film genres. "Murder by Death" is the superior of the two, although considering my low opinion of Neil Simon, superior here means watchable on a rainy day.

This is a sendup of the distinctly styled Agatha Christie whodunits, the sort on which the game of Clue was based (Colonel Mustard did it in the kitchen with a revolver). The five greatest detectives in the world (Sam Spade, Charlie Chan, Nick and Nora Charles, Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot) are invited to the home of Lionel Twain (get it?) to solve a murder that has not been committed but will be before midnight. Twain is out to prove that he, and not they, is the greatest detective in the world and tries to stump them all. The price to the winner: one million dollars. But when Twain himself turns up as the victim, the game is really on.

Peter Falk gets to do his Bogart imitation again (although this movie precedes "Cheap Detective") and comes off a lot better. Simon writes Sam Spade with a twist- he is a crude lout, openly rude and insulting to the other guests. ( Twain: "I'm the greatest detective in the world. I'm number one!" Spade: "You look a little like number two to me, if you know what I mean.") It's a subtle shade in characterization that goes a long way in getting laughs. Peter Sellers is terrific as the Charlie Chan character, spouting off absurd proverbs and profundities, David Niven and Maggie Smith are acceptably droll as Nick and Nora, and Alec Guinness does a nice turn as a blind butler. Falk and Sellers absolutely steal the movie, as does Truman Capote, in his one and only film, as the redoubtable Twain, he has one great scene that nearly brings the film to a halt. The weak link in the cast is Jimmy Coco as Poirot, who is just plain ham-acting instead of bringing out a natural humor from within the character. His pathetic comic French makes Inspector Clouseau sound like DeGaulle.

The screenplay has the requisite twists and turns, and then some, until the murderer is finally revealed, or is he? It's an amusing ride, although some great performances beat Neil Simon's jokes by a country mile. And, by the way, why wasn't Clouseau invited? It's not like Peter Sellers hasn't played multiple roles in a film before. 3 *** out of 4
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10/10
One of My Favorite Movies
yuga218 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I know, it was bombed by both critics and box office. But it is right up there on my favorites list. Where else can you see Peter Sellers, David Niven, Alec Guiness and Peter Falk together? True, there are some stereotypes but, don't you get it? They are supposed to be! This is satire. Sometimes all I have to do is think of a scene or line and I can't help but laugh. "It's the cat sir, Mr. Twain had him fixed and he didn't want to be" And if we ever eat buns of any kind.. "Buns!! You have buns and you didn't tell me??" And the immortal "White Wang." Oh sure, some juvenile jokes, but pros delivering them. I can't say enough about the cast. I adore the old nurse as played by the dear Estelle Winwood. So many of the cast are gone now which makes viewing somewhat bittersweet. It's great to see James Cromwell has gone from comic sidekick to distinguished actor - Oscar winner, no less! (Have you noticed how many times he's played a President?) I make no apologies. This is a damn funny movie and nostalgic at the same time. Neil Simon and a great cast -- you can't go wrong!
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7/10
This'll Kill You
writers_reign19 August 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Not for the first time it appears that I watched a different film to the majority of those who posted comments here and found Peter Sellars funny when he is by a country mile the weakest link and gets by on a Wang and a prayer. As a young man Neil Simon o'd on Hollywood 'hard-case' fodder and it does tend to show in his work although in truth there are worse influences out there. Because Hercule Poirot and Jane Marple are still very much with us - at least on British television their send-ups, James Coco and Elsa Lanchester respectively will be the most recognizable followed closely by Peter Falk's Bogie/Sam Spade leaving Nick and Nora Charles (to say nothing of Asta) a bad nowhere yet William Powell and Myrna Loy's sophistication was light as a soufflé from which David Niven and Maggie Smith snatch a suet pudding effortlessly. Of Sellars' Charlie Chan the less said the better. Simon's screenplay is very much a scatter-gun spraying so many gags both verbal and visual that some sixty-to-seventy per cent find their target. Take away Peter Sellers and you'd have an almost perfectvmovie.
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10/10
Words fail me, no single word can describe how funny this is!!
Sleepin_Dragon10 August 2015
This is arguably one of my all time favourite films. A dream cast, a hilarious script and a cracker of an idea make for what is utter comedy gold! When you have Peter Falk, Peter Sellers, Alec Guiness, Maggie Smith, David Niven how could you fail?? Every member of the cast delivers their lines with slick brilliance. Which detective will prevail as the best, and who will solve the crime? It is impossible to pick out the funniest bits as there are so many. Estelle Winwood is sensational as Jessy Marble's Nurse and has some side splitting moments, incredible to think she was nearly 90. Nancy Walker's silent screaming too, brilliance. If I had to pick standout performance it would be Sir Alec Guiness, he is utterly sensational, when he takes on the different persona's at the unravelling of the murderer scene he is a true joy to watch, genius.
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6/10
Enjoyable spoof
no-skyline2 June 2006
Murder by Death is a spoof of the detective murder mystery, 5 famous detective are challenged to solve an impossible murder. The detectives are played by some very famous faces David Niven, Peter Falk and Peter Sellars star and Alec Guiness makes an appearance to. The film in itself is a fun piece of entertainment but I cant help feeling with the stars involved it should have been better. Some of the gags are signposted a mile off and the resolution is a bit sudden for my liking. But it's still very enjoyable and a fun watch.

As a note if you enjoyed this you may well enjoy another murder mystery comedy called Clue.

7/10 - Good but with the stars involved should have been better.
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1/10
Terrible, just terrible
straker-11 June 2012
Warning: Spoilers
On paper, this should have been a comedy smash. A cast to die for (pun intended), comic legend Neil Simon in the writers' chair, and a set up that offers many funny possibilities. Sadly, this promise is wholly squandered. Do not believe the stories you have been told about Murder By Death - it's HORRIBLE. Clearly, 99% of the small budget went on hiring Peter Sellers and David Niven, leaving nothing for anything else. The story - the world's greatest detectives assemble at a spooky mansion to solve a murder that has yet to be committed - should have been the springboard for great fun poked at the sleuth genre. But, instead...nothing happens. The cast sit in a room and talk, then split up and talk somewhere else, and then reassemble to talk some more. NOTHING HAPPENS. I actually had to check the timer on my DVD player when the closing credits mercifully spelled the end of this atrocity - I couldn't believe that just 90 minutes had passed or that in those 90 minutes the cast has effectively *not done anything*.

A fascinating cast, to be sure...David Niven, Alec Guinness and Peter Sellers (who had starred alongside one another in the past but had never been a trio in one film) together in one film is noteworthy in any case. Niven is his usual elegant and genial self, Guinness is fine, but Sellers seems oddly subdued. Perhaps it is the character he is playing, the serene mystic detective Sidney Wang (Charlie Chan), but my money is on him merely sulking because he's just one star among many for once. Elsa Lanchester, the Bride of Frankenstein herself, appears as Jessica Marbles aka Miss Marple - and she's pretty bloody awful. Stick to Man From UNCLE guest spots and mute roles, Elsa, you have all the screen presence of a goat cadaver. James Coco, who is never anything but HUGELY annoying in any film, overacts like crazy as Milo Perrier (aka Poirot), while th4e normally great Peter Falk as Sam Diamond (Spade) is just flat out offensive. A worryingly young James Cromwell plays Perrier's assistant, and as a character is just as redundant and pointless as Wang's Japanese 'Number 3' son. Said son has the negative honour of delivering the worst of all the film's many ghastly lines - "Holy Shanghai!". This is symptomatic of a movie that is racist towards Asians in general, as well as homophobic and misogynistic...basically everything Sam Diamond says ticks one or more of those bigoted boxes. Eileen Brennan, whom director Robert Moore seemed to believe was very attractive, is wasted in a pointless role in which she has maybe eleven lines...as is Nancy Walker, whose role as the deaf and dumb maid gives us one of the movie's few genuine laughs - the silent scream. Truman Capote, bizarrely cast as the host of this murder mystery dinner, seems to have done all his scenes in an hour and then fled the set. The same seems to apply to Alec Guinness, who doesn't bother to disguise his boredom with the terrible script. I don't blame them. Talk about a voyage of the damned! This film was a ponderous trial to get through...ideas such as the shifting house rooms are brought up and then are not actually dealt with. The murder's twists and turns make no sense on any level, and you are left wondering at the end what the point of it all was. Every time it seems as if the story will actually start going somewhere, it immediately shuts down and goes back to the cast talking in the dining room. (No money, you see) And it's just NOT FUNNY. There are literally about six good lines in the whole thing, and even they aren't great. It's hard to believe Neil Simon, creator of such comedy classics as The Sunshine Boys, thought this drivel was worth filming. Robert Moore's direction swings between competent and inept with dizzying speed, and his job is not helped by the fact that all of the movie's very fake-looking sets appear to have been erected on one tiny soundstage.

Avoid this movie like the plague...do not trust anyone who says this film is funny. It's not. It's absolute garbage. A complete waste of the talent on screen, and any Peter Sellers movie that makes Where Does It Hurt? look like Blazing Saddles in terms of jokes must be bad. The pits. You have been warned.
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