Murder, He Says (1945) Poster

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7/10
MURDER, HE SAYS (George Marshall, 1945) ***
Bunuel19763 December 2008
I had always wanted to check out this black comedy – a rare thing for Hollywood during this era (off-hand, the only other one I can recall is ARSENIC AND OLD LACE [1944]). However, it's never been available to me until now…so that, in compiling a list of lightweight titles I most wanted to watch throughout the Christmas season, it's no surprise the film ended up at the top of the list. Even so, this has more of a cult than classic reputation – but it was certainly a delight: incidentally, while I'm usually somewhat queasy watching movies centering around hillbillies, their inherent eccentric nature works perfectly within the context of MURDER, HE SAYS' bizarre plot.

By the way, the greedy/homicidal-family-after-a-sum-of-money involved harks back to the popular 'old dark house'-type comedy-thrillers – which undoubtedly gives the whole added appeal. With this in mind, the location of the loot being hidden within the nonsensical verses of an old ditty is a much-used device in this kind of picture – as is the presence in the house of both a secret passageway and a mysterious assailant (whose identity actually isn't hard to guess). Similarly, the fact that the moribund crone (justifiably) suspects her relatives' motives and opts to confide in a stranger is particularly reminiscent of the wonderful Sir Roderick Femm scene in my favorite subgenre entry – the appropriately-titled THE OLD DARK HOUSE (1932).

That said, the original elements here are no less engaging – with the unlikely albeit effectively-handled 'glowing poison' expedient a recurring motif (which reaches its zenith in the hilarious dinner sequence around an inconveniently revolving table). The most side-splitting visual gags, then, both feature bodily contortions: the hero being tied up in a most awkward position to be grilled by the Fleagles and his own later pretense as a midget in order to conceal one of their two identical sons lying unconscious at his real feet! For the record, there's even an amusing in-joke in the film's reference to THE GHOST BREAKERS (1940) – the marvelous Bob Hope comedy-horror vehicle, also made by director Marshall at Paramount!

Fred MacMurray makes for an ideal lead – suitably bewildered and out-of-his-depth at first, but who eventually contrives to outwit the crazy clan by employing his 'superior' city-slicker ways. Apart from a whip-cracking Marjorie Main (perhaps the quintessential female hick) and mad scientist(!) Porter Hall as the respective heads of the backwoods brood, the remaining cast members were unknown to me – though all enter gleefully into the offbeat spirit of the thing. The twins were obviously played by the same actor and, unsurprisingly, leading lady Helen Walker turns out not to be vicious/demented after all (since she's only impersonating a convicted member of the dysfunctional family, with the real character herself surfacing towards the end).

Maintaining a frenzied pitch virtually for the entire duration (leading to an extended chase finale that's capped by an inventive come-uppance for practically the entire main cast) makes the film seem longer than its 94 minutes – but it's an inspired ride all the way, and great fun to boot. The quality of the copy I acquired (derived from VHS) isn't optimal if still quite passable under the circumstances…at least until Universal (who now owns the film) sees fit to give it a decent – and much-deserved – release on DVD. I guess HD-DVD is out-of-the-question for such an obscure little item and, in any case, I'm not yet willing to give in to the format just yet owing to the undue hassle and expense this would clearly entail!
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8/10
Fred MacMurray standing in for Bob Hope
bkoganbing22 June 2005
I've seen Murder He Says many times and it's a pretty funny film. Fred MacMurray had never done that kind of belly laugh comedy before and I'm sure that Walt Disney must have screened this film and that he was certainly capable of it when he made him Disney's number one male star starting with The Shaggy Dog.

But every time I watch it, I keep thinking this was a property developed for Bob Hope. All of the mixed up adventures with this rube Fliegle family are pure Hope. Imagine Hope instead of Fred MacMurray in the lead and I'm sure you'll agree with me.

My guess is that Hope was busy entertaining the troops and Paramount had this thing ready to go and prevailed upon another of their contract players to step in.

As a pinch hitter though, Fred MacMurray batted in a big old home run with this one.

By the way that tune that is the key to where the buried treasure is will be rattling around in your brain for weeks.
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8/10
"It's like looking for a needle in a slaughterhouse."
utgard1421 January 2016
Classic comedy starring Fred MacMurray as a pollster who shows up at a hillbilly family's house looking for another pollster who went missing in the area. He finds himself knee-deep in trouble with the hillbillies, who are a clan of criminals looking for some money that only their dying grandmother knows the location of -- and she only wants to tell Fred. Things get even more crazy when Helen Walker shows up, claiming to be the Bonnie Parker-esque member of the family who recently escaped from prison.

It's a very funny movie with MacMurray in rare form as the poor guy who stumbles into a weird situation and can't wait to get out of it. The bit where he pretends to talk to a ghost to fool the dumb twins is priceless. At one point in the movie there's a clever gag where MacMurray's character comes upon an idea involving an organ because he saw the same bit in The Ghost Breakers, which was another Paramount comedy directed by George Marshall. Another great scene has MacMurray doing his version of Dorf decades before Tim Conway. Helen Walker is lovely and does a fine job but her part is mostly a straight one with few laughs. Marjorie Main is wonderful as a sort of dark version of her famous Ma Kettle character. Peter Whitney is lots of fun playing a set of dimwitted but violent twins. The rest of the cast includes Porter Hall, Jean Heather, Barbara Pepper, and a scene-stealing Mabel Paige as the grandmother. It's a good comedy with a terrific cast. Probably could've trimmed ten minutes in the middle but it doesn't hurt the pace too much. Definitely worth a look.
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I'm 52...
finedave531 August 2006
I'm 52, and, along with my younger sister and brother, saw this movie, when I was a kid. It remains one of the funniest movies I've ever seen, and I've seen an awful lot of movies. After seeing it the first time, and literally screaming and crying with laughter at much of it, my siblings and I would search the TV Guide as soon as the magazine arrived at our house hoping to find Murder He Says among the listings for the coming week. Once or twice a year, we would be beside ourselves with glee to find it. It was an absolute treat for us.

Many of its scenes are indelibly etched in my memory: Fred MacMurray with Grandma; the scene at the large, lazy-susan dinner table, with everyone trying to move the table one way or another to get the poisoned food away from them; the scenes in the basement toward the end of the movie, and, especially, the scene when Fred MacMurray is caught in the basement coal bin by Bonnie Fleagle (unquestionably, one of the funniest scenes in movie history.

It's a movie that is both frightening and extremely funny. Directed by George Marshall, who also directed several other favorites of mine: Destry Rides Again (Jimmy Stewart and Marlene Dietrich; a 1939 classic); Fancy Pants (Bob Hope) and The Mating Game (Tony Randall, Debbie Reynolds).

Yes, it's improbable and, I'll grant you, silly. It is also, IMHO (in my humble opinion) a great movie. Yes, great...so there!!
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9/10
Pretty dammed funny!
Roman1112 September 2002
So silly that's it's actually hilarious. Holds it's own thru the years. Fred McMurray is totally incredulous thru it all and Helen Walker is his beautiful counterpart. The mystery is good. And of course the topping on the cake is Marjorie Main with that whip! BTW Let's not forget Peter Whitney playing both twins. Super job. The whole cast deserves a good round of applause.
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7/10
wacky beyond belief
blanche-27 January 2016
"Murder, He Says," is a comedy from 1945 starring Fred MacMurray, Helen Walker, Marjorie Main, and Porter Hall.

MacMurray plays Pete Marshall, a pollster who goes looking for another employee who disappeared. He soon finds himself at the mercy of a bunch of inbreds who are looking for money hidden by a relative, Bonnie Fleagle, who is in prison. The matriarch, Ma (Marjorie Main) walks around with a whip to keep everybody in line. Everybody includes twin brothers, Mert and Bert, one of whom has a crick in his neck. This leads to a funny scene later.

Pete can't seem to get away from them, and they make him pretend he's Bonnie's boyfriend, hoping that grandma, whom Ma poisoned with something that makes her glow in the dark, knows where the money is.

Grandma gives Pete a sampler with a song on it, and something to quote for Bonnie. Meanwhile, another relative, Elany, seems to know the song, but the words she sings are nonsensical.

Things become more complicated when Bonnie (Helen Walker) escapes from prison and shows up. Except she's not Bonnie. Her father was accused of helping Bonnie Fleagle steal $70,000, and she wants to find it to clear his name. Pete is all for hightailing it out of there, but she wants to stay and find the loot. Everyone knuckles under to her until the real Bonnie (Barbara Pepper) shows up.

I perhaps wasn't in the mood for this comedy, but it was very funny anyway, if a little long. The scene at the dinner table is hilarious. I just don't understand how this glow in the dark stuff was supposed to work.

Anyway, the house is filled with hidden passages that everyone disappears in and appears from.

Fred MacMurray was perfect for this, a normal guy caught up in complete insanity. Helen Walker, whose career would suffer so badly later on, is terrific. Marjorie Main - off the wall with that whip. Brilliant.

The denouement is clever and a riot.

Helen Walker gave a ride to three soldiers on New Year's Eve 1946, and had a terrible accident where one soldier was killed and the other two injured. The surviving soldiers accused her of driving drunk and speeding, and she was put on trial. She was cleared, but her career was basically over. She died at 47.

In this film, she's on the verge of stardom and after "Murder, He Says," she was cast as the lead in a big film, "Heaven Only Knows," but the producers replaced her.

She's very good here -- if you get a chance to catch this film on TCM, don't miss it.
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10/10
Hilarious, should be much better known
woid2 December 2003
Wonderful comedy, tops my list of movies that deserve to be better known. Funny from start to finish, well written, well directed, very well cast, with veteran character actors like Marjorie Main and Porter Hall nailing all the laughs and then some, plus Peter Whitney as the identical twins Mert & Bert (which one has the crick in his back? I forget) and excellent performances from the cast in general.

Fred MacMurray is at the top of his game (only a year after Double Indemnity), and the pacing is exhilarating, lots of great gags and surreal comedy, and a nutty, over-the-top ending that pays off the whole thing.

I always come away from this movie feeling happy. Only not often enough -- since it's rarely on TV, not on DVD, and in and out of availability on VHS.

This movie deserves much better. It should have a first-class DVD release, and be in the rotation at TCM. Please!

And then there's the music, which mysteriously is note for note the theme to "All Things Considered" on NPR, only 30 years earlier.... "On horse flies is, in comb bees is..."
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6/10
Pollster MacMurray and backwoods mayhem...
Doylenf6 January 2007
For sheer silliness, it's hard to top MURDER, HE SAYS, a largely forgotten comedy that really does provide a lot of laughs if you're willing to succumb to the zany plot.

FRED MacMURRAY does a dandy job as a pollster who ventures into hillbilly territory--a household run by MARJORIE MAIN--and gets into a whole lot of farcical situations in a number of plot twists dealing with buried treasure and a family of kooks who are willing to kill to get their share of the loot.

The only brief respite from all the mad happenings is a slight love interest angle with HELEN WALKER as the pretty gal who's MacMurray's love interest. But the story goes from one slapstick situation to another with murderous intent dangling everywhere to provide a dark element to the comedy. It's the clever combination of mirth and mystery that keeps the plot spinning. The lazy Susan scene with each member trying to avoid the poisoned food is just one of the funniest moments.

MacMurray's role was originally intended for Bob Hope (who had other commitments) but he does a fine job as the man entangled with the backwoods family from hell.
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10/10
MCMURRAY----the comedic actor
renfield5430 April 1999
Don't let My 3 Sons (the tv sitcom) fool you, Fred McMurray was a master of comedic roles and physical comedy. A befuddled McMurray plays off back-woods characters, that make Larry and his brothers Daryl and Daryl (from Newhart) look like society patrons. He made me understand the phrase "running around like a chicken with your head cut off", as he stays one step ahead of his greedy, murderous adversaries.... I first saw this film, in re-runs, when very young, but i still get a laugh out of it... and Fred McMurray shines......
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2/10
Good Start, then fail miserably
tilak3 July 2022
The moment I started watching this movie , I thought to myself, its going to be a fun ride, but no, only after half and hour into it, it turns out to be silly and dumb.

The plot goes nowhere, it had few funny lines ,other dialogue falls flat . Someone compared the lead actor to bob hop which is completely ridiculous. Humour is forced and hence doesn't even make you chuckle. The final scenes were kind of hilarious but one lose interest by that time. The real bonney is completely useless and doesn't add anything to the story.
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10/10
Mert: Do you see him? Bert: Uh, not too plain
brujay-120 December 2006
As a previous comment suggests, Fred MacMurray had the rare talent for both serious drama and comedy that Cary Grant had. (I've always thought James Garner could have been in that circle had he only gotten the right scripts.)

In the late '30s and early '40s Hollywood had fun with hillbillies (remember Judy Canova?). This is an example. The genre seems to have been put to bed with Deliverance, which took all the fun out of the backwoods.

There are too many set comic scenes in Murder, He Says to relate. It's simply a superb comedy-mystery. I guess my two favorite bits are where a desperate MacMurray pretends to see a ghost and the twins aren't just too sure he doesn't see one. Then there's the fall-out-of- your-chair comic turn where MacMurray sits in a box on the groggy body of one of his pursuers--whose protruding legs have a life of their own. You really have to be there. Why isn't this thing televised more often?
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5/10
Time-filler, nothing more
AAdaSC12 November 2016
Fred MacMurray (Pete) arrives at a backwater town to carry out some market research and find out what happened to his predecessor. He is pointed in the direction of the Fleagle family and he basically never leaves their premises. The Fleagles are a murderous bunch who are after some hidden money.

The film is a comedy with plenty of slapstick. It's OK as entertainment but that's all, I'm afraid. There are some genuinely funny laugh-out-loud scenes. Two to watch out for are the Lazy-Susan episode where 7 people sit down to dinner and keep spinning the table around to avoid the plate of poison food. It's funny throughout and ends with a surprise. The second stand-out scene occurs when escaped convict Barbara Pepper (Bonnie) confronts MacMurray and mistakes him for one of her thick cousins. She quizzes him as to where the money is hidden whilst MacMurray is sitting on the real cousin who is inside the chest but whose legs are dangling over the edge making it look like they belong to MacMurray. This scene is hilarious as MacMurray tries to control the legs and throws in a bit of improvisation. I love how MacMurray keeps turning to bash the cousin on the head inside the trunk. MacMurray is good as always taking everything in his stride. Unfortunately, outside of these scenes, the film drags and certain episodes just aren't funny. You end up willing the film to finish and the final chase just drags on.
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Fred MacMurray Is Hilarious
drednm15 December 2006
Fred MacMurray gives his funniest performance as a pollster who gets tangled up in the plots of maniacal hayseeds in search of stolen money.

The plot is beyond description with so many twists and turns it keeps you guessing. The pacing is brisk and the film is filled with slapstick, in-jokes, puns, and references to other films. This is a very modern, very black comedy, and it's totally hilarious.

MacMurray was always a smooth comedy leading man but here he's outright funny and loose. Helen Walker is also very good as one of the Bonnies. Marjorie Main is hysterical as she prowls around with her whip. Peter Whitney is excellent as the twins. Jean Heather has her best role. Porter Hall is always a treat. And Mabel Paige positively GLOWS as Grandma.

A must see film! And remember: honors flysis, income beezis!!
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10/10
Dark and hilarious
hildacrane23 September 2005
This film doesn't get mentioned much, but it is a classic---it manages to be both hilarious and terrifying, and very satisfyingly so. It's a crazy take on the city slicker encountering a clan of inbred backwoods folk. The darkness of the story combined with the frantic pacing and classic farce set-ups really works, and the lack of musical score actually emphasizes the clamminess of the atmosphere.

The goofy and murderous family is of course profoundly dysfunctional (though the term wasn't thought of then), and the classic "old dark house," with its cellars and hidden passages, as almost the sole setting eventually seems like a metaphor for damaged and torturous relationships . Although there are a few disturbing scenes of abuse of a "teched" daughter, somehow within the over-all context of comic hysteria they are appropriate. Much of the film's success is due to MacMurray's impeccable comic timing. There's also great matching of reaction shots for Peter Whitney's turn as twins Mert and Bert.
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8/10
A whip-crackin', moonshine drinkin', rip-roaring good old comic time!
mark.waltz8 June 2013
Warning: Spoilers
If the hicks were nixing styx pix when this came out, they were missing one of the funniest films of the 1940's: a comic romp that outshines the more well known "The Egg and I", of which two stars from that 1948 film appear in this.

Research gatherer Fred MacMurray shows up in the hills to find a missing associate and gets involved in a hillbilly battle to find a hidden $70,000. Warned by the local townsfolk about the Fleagle family, he arrives to no great welcome. Whip-toting Ma (Marjorie Main) seems determined to have as many husbands as Ma Kettle did children, while two gun-toting twins seem to be missing their other brother, Darrel, and Grandma (Mabel Paige in a riotous cameo) truly shines. The rough-and-tough Helen Walker shows up, pretending to be a cousin who had the money hid in the first place by Granny, and all sorts of comic mayhem ensues. The farce-filled conclusion truly is something that will need the entire clan "bailed" out.

Those who know this film well all try to remember the song used as a clue to locate the money, first heard over the credits, and later reprised on an organ with a reference to director George Marshall's previous hit, "The Ghost Breakers". MacMurray's city slicker proves he has what it takes to take on these rough mountain folk, whether fighting with an imaginary ghost or utilizing the family's lazy susan type dining table to prevent Walker from swallowing poison. I began singing "Round and round the table goes, where the poison stops, nobody knows", and found myself shouting all sorts of irreverent cracks in my enjoyment of this film. Barbara Pepper and Porter Hall are also along for the fun, of which there is plenty.
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10/10
I thought I was the only one who heard the ATC connection !
GJValent5 February 2008
Back in the early eighties, I got my first vehicle with an FM radio. It allowed me to 'discover' All Things Considered on NPR. One of the things that I noticed right away, the ATC theme was from the film Murder, He Says. I've never bothered to write them about it. I'll now assume that others have. Sometime in the late eighties or early nineties, they broadcast a report purporting to search for the roots of the theme. A LOT of pieces of obscure classical and pop tunes were played, along with their references, but, not one mention was made of Horses Flies is, In Comb Bees is. Maybe I'll get the ambition to write them. Meanwhile, as Fred says in the film,'In Town, Police is'.
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4/10
Great start and acting but simply too long
Angel_Peter18 July 2015
I was not having any high expectations seeing this movie, but I did initially understand the very high rating it had. I had a very good time watching the first 45 minutes.

Unfortunately as with many comedies they do not know when to stop. So the movie does go on at least 20 minutes too long. If you do enjoy seeing people chase each other around in an old house for half an hour then it will not loose momentum for you and most likely still be hell of a kick. But for me personally I just sat and waited to see what the end would be for a quite long time.

Too bad really as good actors and fair story. It just outstays it welcome in my opinion. Also quite good ending. I just wish it had been there much earlier. For me that was the difference between a gem and something not worth spending your time on.
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9/10
Low priced DVD
patterson-m16 December 2008
Most everyone who has seen this movie agrees that it is VERY funny...one of Fred McMurray's best, and Marjorie Main is really a HOOT. For those who DON'T want to pay an exorbitant price, there is a DVD available from BLOWOUTVIDEO for $14.95 plus $4.95 S&H. I just got one so it is a legit offer. And I received it within a week from ordering. Don't expect HiDef quality; this is probably even a pirated, bootleg copy since the disc has no label although the jewel case has the same poster image as the studio issued copies (and it is sent from Las Vegas)! But if you just like the movie for it's goofy antics, this is probably a good bargain.
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2/10
*1/2
edwagreen13 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This film was an insult to anyone's intelligence.

Fred MacMurray collects statistics regarding rural areas and comes up a bunch of hillbilly murderers who are seeking a fortune buried somewhere.

Helen Walker comes along and pretends to be the head gal of the clan who just broke out of jail. Turns out that she isn't Bonnie and is only there to clear her father's name. Her father was working in the bank on the night of the robbery and was accused of being part of the robbery team.

Marjorie Main is the common old hag with two idiotic sons and a granddaughter who sings constantly. Main walks around with a whip and shoots a gun a lot as well. She is vile as her character is the beginning of a kinder Ma Kettle 2 years later, in 1947, and later.

Bad enough, the film gets even worse with chase scenes, the real Bonnie showing up, people getting hit over the head and choked. The barn scene finale at the end becomes annoying.
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Didn't Do It For Me
GManfred25 September 2013
Sometimes I wish I was as easily amused as most folks. This picture gets almost unanimous high ratings from reviewers, and, honestly, I missed the humor involved. I understand it was played for laughs and was made in a jocular vein, but it wasn't that funny. Here are some reasons for my dissent;

Marjorie Main, the matriarch of the homicidal family, was never funny. She wasn't funny in the 'Ma And Pa Kettle' series and was just a nasty, bad tempered old battle ax in anything she played in. And she doesn't disappoint here.

The twin characters played by Peter Whitney are threatening and not endearing characters, and when called upon to display a humorous side, he couldn't do it. The 'crick-in-the-back deal was semi-funny the first time.

Fred MacMurray, a fine actor and comedian, is reduced here to slapstick and pratfalls, which are best left to the Three Stooges and Laurel & Hardy. He tries gamely to overcome the lame script but the odds are stacked against him.

"Murder He Says" is at best a black comedy, and not a good one at that (Try "Arsenic And Old Lace"). Besides Fred MacMurray the best member of the cast is Helen Walker, a good actress who was great to look at. All in all, an overrated film and a waste of 90 minutes.
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8/10
George Marshall Hits the Funny Bone
wes-connors10 August 2013
Professional pollster Fred MacMurray (as Pete Marshall) arrives in the Ozarks, collecting data for a survey of rural areas. He's replacing another pollster, "Hector P. Smedley", who disappeared after encountering the murderous "Fleagle" family. Led by whip-cracking Marjorie Main (as Mamie), the hillbilly clan abducts Mr. MacMurray. They think he may know how to locate a missing $70,000. Also looking for the money is beautiful Helen Walker (posing as Bonnie), after a jail bust. She arrives with a gun, a cigar and a secret...

Best part of this witty comedy is watching Peter Whitney play twins "Mert and Bert". Other than an early scene where Mr. Whitney's double keeps his back to the camera, you'd think they were real twins. The special effect, by Gordon Jennings and Paul Lerpae, is incredibly well-maneuvered. One highlight has director George Marshall coordinating the twins and MacMurray while the latter converses with an imaginary character. Another great scene occurs when MacMurray knocks Jenkins out and pretends they are one.

******** Murder, He Says (6/23/45) George Marshall ~ Fred MacMurray, Helen Walker, Marjorie Main, Peter Whitney
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10/10
Absolutely hilarious
rgrcpa5 April 2006
Boy, is this movie funny. Of course, you have to like slapstick to enjoy it. Nothing subtle at all. I wish I could get this on a DVD somewhere. I would add to my collection in a New York second! There's a lot of running around by the cast. McMurray is as close to early Cary Grant as possible. He acts overly befuddled and Marjorie Main as the mama is type-cast, of course. The family won't let him leave and his situations are crazy. I was reminded of the three stooges antics. It is hard to believe that this is the same guy who paid the insurance murderer in "Double Indemnity." I heartily recommend this movie to anyone easily led to laughing out loud.
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9/10
Laugh Yourself Silly with Fred & Co.!
JLRMovieReviews16 July 2012
Fred MacMurray is a Trotter poll man. You know, they go out and question people about their living conditions and likes and dislikes. But he's on a different mission of a sort. There's a missing Trotter man out there, who never returned. He was last seen going to the Fleagle residence. But is Fred in for somethin'! What he doesn't know can hurt him. The Fleagles don't take kindly to strangers and are a mean and crazy bunch, headed by Marjorie Main ("Ma Kettle") and her third husband Porter Hall. There's a sweet innocent daughter who keeps singing a tune and a pair of twins that are dumber than dumb. Meanwhile another Fleagle on the other side, "we don't claim no kin," Bonnie Fleagle just escaped from prison and is on the way there. It seems they all know about and are looking for MONEY. Grandma (Marjorie's mother) has a clue and will only tell Fred MacMurray, due to the fact her time is drawing near. Is this getting spookier, creakier, and cantankerous enough fer ya? This really is a hoot and has to be one of the best of its kind. With its ingenious ways of keeping your attention with interesting characters, and I do mean characters, and its inventive devices and plot twists. One particular highlight is the ghost of Smedley, the missing Trotter man. Those who's seen the film know all about it. Yes! So don't be out of the loop. Catch this crazy and outrageous crowd-pleaser and laugh yourself silly.
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8/10
Fred Mac Murray Shines with Veteran Cast
ZorbaLives3 June 2006
I just saw this movie at the LaSalle Bank Cinema, a theater in Chicago where, each Saturday, a film noir movie is shown. This week's movie was Murder, He Said starring Fred Mac Murray. The audience (over 300 people) laughed out loud and were accompanied by a lady (near the front of the theater) who would react with a scream or a warning to Mac Murray whenever trouble would arrive. To say that a film over 60 years old would receive such reactions from a contemporary crowd would testify to the holding power and entertaining qualities of these old films. Mac Murray's comedic timing for the pratfall, wise crack and sarcasm was impeccable. I understand that this movie may have been intended as a vehicle for Bob Hope but Mac Murray did well. Marjorie Main with her whip, Peter Whitney as "the twins", and the beautiful Helen Walker as the heroine/love interest, were superb. Yes, I would recommend seeing this film but, as with many films, its best seen with a crowd with whom you can share in their reactions.
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Pretty Goofy, But Has Some Very Good Moments
Snow Leopard24 September 2004
This is awfully goofy, but it does have some very good moments along the way. Fred MacMurray's likability helps a lot in keeping it from getting too silly to watch. The story is funny at times, but it relies too much on some far-fetched developments to avoid noticing it. Nonetheless, "Murder, He Says" works rather better than do the majority of movies that try this kind of approach.

The story set-up has potential, with MacMurray as a survey-taker who finds himself in an unwelcoming place, where he winds up in the middle of a complicated and hazardous situation. There are several directions that the story could have taken from there. The choice actually made was to exaggerate everything for comic effect, and to play it mostly as low comedy.

Most of the cast members get into the spirit of things, and they give their performances a lot of energy. There are some funny sequences that work well, though there are others that are a little too ridiculous.

This is the kind of movie that works best when you want a few easy laughs without having to concentrate on anything, and when your frame of mind is such that the wackier a movie is, the better. In that case, the story and characters are amusing enough to make it worth seeing.
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