Home > Thriller >

The Mirror Crack'd

Watch on
View All Sources

The Mirror Crack'd (1980)

September. 19,1980
|
6.2
|
PG
| Thriller Crime Mystery
Watch on
View All Sources

Jane Marple solves the mystery when a local woman is poisoned and a visiting movie star seems to have been the intended victim.

...

Watch Trailer

Free Trial Channels

AD
Show More

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Lumsdal
1980/09/19

Good , But It Is Overrated By Some

More
ChicDragon
1980/09/20

It's a mild crowd pleaser for people who are exhausted by blockbusters.

More
Usamah Harvey
1980/09/21

The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

More
Dana
1980/09/22

An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.

More
mark.waltz
1980/09/23

Fun, star filled mystery, this cut off from the Hercules Poirot films went back to an already familiar Agatha Christie character, Miss Jane Marple. Less "tweedy" than Margaret Rutherford who played the part in several well remembered 1960's films, Angela Lansbury is every bit as clever as her predecessor if less snoopy, only sticking her nose in if she happens to smell a clue.This entry has Miss Marple's town a agog over the arrival of a film crew and its major stars, filming "Mary Queen of Scots". Playing the leading role is the still gorgeous Elizabeth Taylor whose director husband Rock Hudson is trying to protect her allegedly fragile state. Taylor's old rival (Kim Novak) shows up to play Queen Elizabeth and this begins a series of amusing bitch fights between the two divas, interrupted on occasion by murder. Who would want to murder la Liz, and accidentally kill an over zealous fan and her assistant? While the local police zoom in, it's up to Miss Marple to really dig deep to figure it all out.Among the suspects are Tony Curtis as a crass producer, Geraldine Chaplin as a blackmailing secretary, the nasty Novak (who wants to change history to increase her part at Taylor's expense) and Taylor or Hudson for mysterious reasons of their own. The witty and calculating script will keep you guessing, and long after you have seen it, you'll want to revisit what lead its star to T.V. immortality as a New England variation of the same character. The ending is tragically heart wrenching.

More
ma-cortes
1980/09/24

The film is set in 1953 - hence the Saturday village fête being thrown in aid of the Coronation fund , referring to the Regal Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II on 2nd June that year . Beautiful and veteran film star Marina Gregg (Elizabeth Taylor , being final lead starring role in a cinema movie for this actress) is attempting to make a comeback after being off-screen for many years due to an emotional breakdown and substance abuse. She is supported by her fifth husband and director of the movie, Jason Rudd (Rock Hudson) . They rent a manor house in St. Mary Mead and host a reception for the villagers . Then, there appears another famous actress Lola Brewster (Kim Novak,though Natalie Wood was the first choice but turned the role down after disagreements over cast billing and the portrayal of the character itself) , a real contender to Marina and producer's (Tony Curtis) wife . Marina Rudd (Elizabeth Taylor) and Lola Brewster (Kim Novak) in the period costumer they are shooting within this film were Mary, Queen of Scots and Elizabeth I respectively . At the reception for the fading film star making a screen comeback , a gushing, pushy fan is poisoned by a drink apparently meant for the actress . There she met Gregg briefly before her breakdown and being poisoned by a drink apparently meant for the film star . Because of Gregg's celebrity status, Police Superintendent assigns one of his most skilled and discreet investigators, Inspector Craddock, (Edward Fox) who happens to be Miss Marple's (Angela Lansbury who was only 54 when she played the elderly Miss Marple) nephew . Together they set about investigating the murder , death threats and jealousy associated with the case . This movie was made and released about eighteen years after Agatha Christie's source novel of the same name was first published in 1962. The film is a detective story in which you are the detective . In the picture there is mystery , emotion , suspense , actors's interpretations are acceptable and wonderful outdoors from Shoreham, St. Clere Estate, Heaverham, Kent, England, UK . The picture eventually arrived fourth in the Brabourne-Goodwin series after Murder on Orient Express , Death on the Nile and Evil under the sun . Nice acting by the great Angela Lansbury , though she stated that playing Miss Marple was 'terrific' and that she 'enjoyed' it very much but thought the film was 'dreadful'. The support cast is pretty good such as Tony Curtis , Geraldine Chaplin , Charles Gray , Nigel Stock and the last feature film of both Anthony Steel, Charles Lloyd and Dinah Sheridan. And one of the first films by Pierce Brosnan at a brief role .The movie gets a lush costume design by Phyllis Dalton and adequate production design by Michael Stringer . Colorful and sunny cinematography by excellent cameraman Christopher Challis . Sensitive and atmospheric musical score by John Cameron . Passable performances from all-star-cast , a number of the cast had appeared in the earlier'producers Brabourne-Goodwin Agatha Christie movies . Being remade (TV) with Agatha Christie's ¨Miss Marple: The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side¨ by Norman Stone with Joan Hickson , Claire Bloom , Judy Cornwell and Barry Newman . With this film, Angela Lansbury became the second actress to play Miss Marple on the big screen after Margaret Rutherford had made the role famous during the 1960s. Lansbury was the fourth if one counts TV where Gracie Fields and Inge Langen also played Marple. Subsequently in TV was starred by Joan Hickson who played a successful series . And finally Agatha Christie's Marple series starred by Geraldine McEwan and Julia McKenzie as Miss Marple . This film was professionally directed by Guy Hamilton though contains some flaws , poor edition and sometimes results to be slow moving as well as boring . Guy Hamilton also directed ¨Live and let die¨, ¨the man with the golden gun¨ with Roger Moore and the best Bond : ¨Goldfinger¨ with Sean Connery . Being final Agatha Christie adaptation directed by Guy Hamilton , his first was Evil under the sun . The two pictures were back-to-back consecutive movies for Hamilton who prior to this movie had not been "totally enamored" by the Christie books . Rating : passable and acceptable , well worth watching . The flick will appeal to suspense lovers and Agatha Christie novels buffs .

More
michaeljayallen
1980/09/25

Enjoyable as a period piece, but more like the period it was set in - a title card says 1953 - than 1980, when it was made. With some really uneven or just plain consistently bad or mediocre performances, plus some baffling directorial choices and a clichéd script. Kim Novak doesn't just show up in a car from 6 years later, but the most recognizably 1959 car possible, a white Cadillac convertible with the top down making the famous garish fins look even bigger. The only thing campier than the Cadillac is Kim Novak's performance. Her portrayal of a preening bitchy Hollywood star isn't remotely believable. Liz Taylor's version is less bad, being not very believable (but not was wildly ridiculous as Novak) when the character is in public and at least sometimes not bad when the character is in private. Angela Lansbury is sort of passable, but plays the character in as broad and clichéd a way as the nearly identical lady detective (except of course a Maine rather than British accent) she later did on TV. British actor Edward Fox is fine of course. The real surprise is Tony Curtis. He's the only American actor in the film who is natural and relaxed and motivated. He plays the producer as a somewhat comic character, as obviously they were all directed to do, but he's the only one who really seems otherwise like a real guy, Bronx accent included. And as others have mentioned....whose idea was it for Miss Marple to light up? Not even a line justifying it, like maybe "Nothing like sucking on a fag after a hard day sleuthing and deducing, I always say." Followed by blowing a couple of nice smoke rings.But its an interesting film. Probably the script writer(s) is way better than the truly terrible director. First, it's Agatha Christie and even better, a Miss Marple mystery. Second, there's this whole meta thing going on on several levels. It opens with (spoiler alert, sort of) a black and white 50's style British mystery film which we find out is being shown to the village by the vicar when the film breaks. Then the color "real" stuff starts. But it's about a film being shot in the same illage - an American film featuring American actors but about British historical monarchy subjects. The American stars of the film portrayed by Liz Taylor and Kim Novak are supposed to be sort of has-been American film stars, who of course are more known for star quality than acting chops, kind of like the actual actors cast in the roles. The very British inspector is such a fan of the films starring the character portrayed by Liz Taylor he has seen them multiple times and thinks she is a great actress. The local girl, grown up, is star struck and had an encounter back in the 40's with the character portrayed by Liz Taylor which was the greatest thing that ever happened to her in her whole life and her story of the encounter is pivotal to the plot. It's the director who screwed all this very promising stuff up. The fake black and white film at the opening seems really fake. A real period British film would feature non-method but in its own way very intelligent acting, which this does not. Liz Taylor and Kim Novak, as I mentioned above, are not very believable (Liz) or absurdly unbelievable (Kim) as stars out in public. Kim Novak is also quite unbelievably bad when shown being shot in scenes for the film they are shooting. Oh,also any film using a built set for some scenes would have been shot on a British or American sound stage anyway, not at a nonexistent sound stage in the village. Like in some earlier American films, reality is sacrificed for some idea of reality. A good director would have not violated reality for hackneyed ideas of what the script is about. Here's how to direct famous American actors portraying famous American actors: get them to act as well as they can in any scenario, not portray the meaning of the scene or how they think the character should act. Being there and listening and allowing and being vulnerable and are the only things that ever work, in something semi-satirical or whatever.

More
bkoganbing
1980/09/26

Lord Brabourne who produced The Mirror Crack'd as he did a few other films adapted from Agatha Christie's work was lucky to have produced this at all. He was the son-in-law of Lord Louis Mountbatten and when the IRA blew up the yacht they were on, Brabourne's mother and son were killed on the vessel as well as Mountbatten. Brabourne, his wife and a younger son survived. This all happened a year before The Mirror Crack'd filmed and was released.This film is right in keeping with the high standard of pictures Brabourne made of Christie stories like Murder On The Orient Express and Evil Under The Sun. As the story involves an American film crew over in Great Britain in 1953 Brabourne was able to get a quartet of top Hollywood names in support of Angela Lansbury as Jane Marple.Producer Tony Curtis and Director Rock Hudson are collaborating on a film about Mary Queen of Scots that will star Hudson's wife Elizabeth Taylor in the title role. Curtis's wife Kim Novak plays what would be billed as a cameo in the film as Queen Elizabeth. Taylor and Novak are rivals in the tradition of Bette Davis and Joan Crawford and get off some truly bitchy lines at each other. Maureen Bennett who is one of the villagers and who met Taylor years ago in passing when she was a WREN and Taylor was entertaining troops is poisoned at a gathering of the villagers and the film crew. Someone spiked Bennett's daiquiri and who could possibly want to murder this ingenuous fan. Later on Hudson's secretary and girl Friday and trenchant observer of the whole Hollywood scene Geraldine Chaplin is also poisoned when her inhaler is similarly spiked. When Lansbury figures out the who in the film it all becomes deceptively simple. The motive however is an incredibly complex and obscure one involving a trivial passing incident that brought to life a great tragedy suffered by one of the visiting Americans.The film is a reunion of sorts with Hudson and Taylor as co-stars of the classic Giant from the Fifties, a personal favorite of mine for both its stars. Also back in those days Rock Hudson and Tony Curtis were both the leading contract stars at Universal studios, but they never starred together in anything. They did appear in Winchester 73 as featured players but had no scenes together. I really liked Curtis the best in this film with him doing a wonderful satire of Darryl F. Zanuck in the producer part. I'm sure Agatha Christie must have met Zanuck sometime because she had him down great and of course Curtis knew him as well.Definitely The Mirror Crack'd is a must for Agatha Christie fans and for fans of the stars. And considering what its producer went through we are lucky to have it at all.

More

Watch Now Online

Prime VideoWatch Now