Home > Comedy >

A Shot in the Dark

Watch on
View All Sources

A Shot in the Dark (1964)

June. 23,1964
|
7.3
|
PG
| Comedy Crime Mystery
Watch on
View All Sources

Inspector Jacques Clouseau, smitten with the accused maid Maria Gambrelli, unwittingly turns a straightforward murder investigation into a comedic series of mishaps, testing the patience of his irritable boss Charles Dreyfus as casualties mount.

...

Watch Trailer

Free Trial Channels

AD
Show More

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Linbeymusol
1964/06/23

Wonderful character development!

More
Incannerax
1964/06/24

What a waste of my time!!!

More
Dotbankey
1964/06/25

A lot of fun.

More
Ella-May O'Brien
1964/06/26

Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.

More
aramis-112-804880
1964/06/27

Arguably the best move of both Blake Edwards and Peter Sellers, indisputably their best movie together--before Clouseau became sophomoric in the 1970s.Following hard on the heels of "The Pink Panther" (and the only Sellers/Clouseau film not bearing the "Pink Panther" imprimatur) "A Shot in the Dark" introduced several important elements in the Clouseau mythos: his superior, Dreyfus (Herbert Lom) with his slowly-burning repertoire of twitches; and his manservant Cato (Burt Kwouk, the only person on Earth Clouseau can beat in a fair fight, played on a more sinister note here). And, of course, Clouseau's mangled pronunciation, which was not too important to "PP." Oh, and don't forget Clouseau's penchant for disguise, one of this film's highlights.The story: Oh, something about murders taking place in the household of an uber-rich Frenchie, Ballon, played with remarkable aplomb by George Sanders, who is hilarious doing virtually nothing (we don't hear enough said about how, in a movie set in France, someone like Sanders can play a Frenchman, naturally, without an accent . . . but he can't understand a word Clouseau says). Frankly, the story is nothing but a clothesline to hang Clouseau's antics, and the fact that Sanders' Ballon keeps requesting that Clouseau be kept on the case is itself suspicious. In the end, the murder(s) become incredibly complex (though Clouseau can follow them!) yet virtually unimportant apart from a way to move the plot inexorably forward.Sellers plays Clouseau like a virtuoso on a violin. In "The Pink Panther" Clouseau was a disappointed, fumbling little policeman trapped in a marriage whose unhappiness he closed his eyes to. Sellers was always at his best at a role where he could interject a humorous twist, but he climbed comedy Olympus when he had a humorous role he could tinge with a character's personal sadness, which that character himself refused to admit. This characteristic is vital to Clouseau here. Take this exchange:"Maria Gambrelli: You should get out of these clothes immediately! You'll catch your death of pneumonia! Clouseau: Yes, I suppose I probably will. But it's all part of life's rich pageant."Edwards sometimes lets things get too chaotic. See, for instance, near the start of "What Did You Do in the War, Daddy" or the end of "The Great Race." Here, Edwards keeps everyone on a taut line--sometimes difficult with Sellers, if his biographers are to be believed.Edwards also had the sense to surround Sellers with masterful underplayers. Herbert Lom's Dreyfus can be no less wacky in his way than Clouseau is in his, but he has a wonderful way of using a normal voice to deliver lines like, "I've just cut off my thumb." And one can't overpraise George Sanders. Ironically one of Sellers' own role models in developing a super-suave character for his BBC Radio "Goon Show", Sanders can steal a scene just by silently watching Clouseau destroy a room in his home. It's only later you wonder "Why didn't he try to stop him?"This is not to say Sellers is too much. He ventures near, but never goes over, the top. Sellers has been called the finest physical comedian since the silent days (I think I called him that). He quietly goes about the business of destruction, wreaking even more damage when be believes his ravages can be fixed or hidden. He's even funny when he's cruel, for instance when he breaks his "pointer" and then blames it on his assistant. Yet a few things detract from "A Shot in the Dark" in the twenty-first century. For instance, from Edwards' amazingly long opening shots, the movie moves at a slower pace than comedies we're used to these days. This was years before "Airplane!" or the Farrelly Bros. In the 1960s comedies could unfurl gradually. It's not a "pie in the face" comedy (but that didn't really work in "The Great Race", did it?) Then, there's . . . Elke Sommer. She was a very popular actress in the 1960s and made lots of comedies. She was extremely pretty, and I admit as an adolescent I only tuned into this movie because commercial previews showed Sommer running around in a nudist camp (you can't see anything you wouldn't see on a beach, and probably less then than you can see on a beach today). The camera loves Sommer and she delivers comedy lines better than lots of actresses chosen for their attractiveness. But her genuine German accent is sometimes as bizarre as Sellers' pidgin French. Still, she livens every scene she's in, and that's why she's here. As with George Sanders' stillness in watching Clouseau devastate his home, we don't question the weirdness of the German maid's very existence until afterward.The original "Pink Panther" introduced two great comic icons, Inspector Clouseau and the cartoon Pink Panther himself. "A Shot in the Dark" has a cartoon credit sequence, not using the Pink Panther but a Sellers-like character who became "The Inspector" in his own cartoon series attached to "The Pink Panther"--who, with the Pink Panther, became indispensable to future cartoon-credit sequences in the sequels. I grew up watching this movie on television repeats and have a fondness for it from an early age, before Clouseau became a franchise, that has not faded now I can revisit the whole thing on uncut on widescreen by the miracle of DVD, probably looking fresher than it did in the theaters. It's slowness doesn't bother me. But then, I also enjoy watching Keaton and Lloyd slowly build their silent movie bits. I don't judge comedy by its slowness to build, but by its payoff. Here, it all works."A Shot in the Dark" is one of the best comedies ever made, ranking with, say, "The Producers." But because of modern comedy expectations it hasn't worn as well as Mel Brooks' 1967 masterpiece (for which Brooks sought Sellers at one point). And for Sellers, Clouseau was a blessing and a curse. If Sellers felt trapped by Clouseau, it was a snare of his own invention. His Clouseau (not Alan Arkin's or Steve Martin's) is the slapstick icon, and he made it that way by his own amazing, much-missed physical and vocal talents. A few years after "A Shot in the Dark" Sellers nearly ego-tripped himself out of his career by his off-screen antics on "Casino Royale." After a handful of rotten movies he was saved from film oblivion and the comedy gutter by . . . Clouseau, with Edwards' "Return of the Pink Panther." After that until his final film (well, we Sellers fans all blind ourselves to "The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu" and pretend it was "Being There"), Sellers remained a star until his death.An odd star. A character-actor star. But he was recognized as being at the head of his profession.Reportedly, Sellers and Edwards had a rocky relationship. Yet the rocks sparked when they worked together. And while this is their most tightly controlled mutual comedy, it's also their apotheosis. Of the big comedies of the 1960s, this one has more laughs per capita than "It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World." Nevertheless, it's like a wine that should be sipped and savored rather than guzzled. The laughs come when they come . . . yet they do come, and they're worth the wait.

More
gridoon2018
1964/06/28

Leonard Maltin gives "A Shot In The Dark" 4 stars and calls it "gaspingly hilarious", but it's really quite leisurely by today's standards. It's often funny (especially when Clouseau discusses the case with his assistant Hercule), Sellers is tops, Elke is one of the major screen goddesses of the 1960s, but the whodunit resolution is weak and rushed. The "nudist colony" sequence is a surprising tease for the period, but it takes place in what is all too obviously a soundstage, which is a little distracting. **1/2 out of 4.

More
mike48128
1964/06/29

Adapted from a stageplay and not originally written for the screen. Elke Sommer was a fabulous, smoldering, blonde bombshell. This is perhaps her most famous film role ever, as the "French Maid" who appears incredibly guilty of committing a series of murders and is arrested repeatedly. Only bumbling Clouseau believes her to be innocent because she is so beautiful! Without a doubt the best of the so-called "Pink Panther" series and there isn't a single Pink Panther or Pink Diamond in sight! The most famous "clean nudity" scenes of all time, from the tour bus peering down into their little car to the famous guitar and air mattress for Peter Seller's front and rear-end modesty. Besides strategically-placed fluffy-blonde hair, not much else covers Elke's "assets" at all. A wonderful conclusion as it turns out that several people are guilty of the multiple murders as they are all "acts" of passion. Hint: Enjoy the movie, and be aware that the ending is a big bomb!

More
jfarms1956
1964/06/30

Great movie for those who love the typical 1960s style of movie. Peter Sellers is always entertaining. Typical Peter Sellers and predictable movie. I do enjoy the Inspector Closseau character and his fumbling. Elke Sommers is refreshing. Comical movie with stereotypic characters. Good movie for the over 50's crowd. Younger movie buffs will be turned off since the movie doesn't contain enough action nor intrigue to keep them interested. Works OK for a family movie for those who have graduated past the smurfs for their family's entertainment. The movie is probably 20 min longer than what it needs to be, however a typical length for a 1960 type movie.

More

Watch Now Online

Prime VideoWatch Now