Murder Mystery: Who Killed Sleuth?
Sleuth, starring Michael Cain and Jude Law.
On consecutive weeks back in December 1972, the Palomar production company and 20th Century-Fox teamed to release two films: Sleuth and The Heartbreak Kid. Now, on consecutive weekends in October 2007, come remakes of those movies. As it happens, the original Sleuth and Heartbreak were smart and funny and took a fairly brutal view of their main characters. The remakes, though honoring the basic plots of their predecessors, are dumb, witless and humiliating to all parties.
I guess I could spin this coincidence into a mournful essay on the devolution of movie culture over the past 35 years: how moviemakers have jettisoned subtlety in their attempts to appeal to a teen audience, how shades of gray have been coarsened to simple blacks and whites, how everything then was better than anything now, etc. etc. That alterkocker argument might be made to apply to the Farrelly brothers' dumb-down of the Neil Simon-Elaine May Heartbreak Kid, which I was unkind to last week. But it doesn't work on Sleuth, an art-house effort with more modest box office aspirations, a much loftier collection of talent, on and off screen and, you'd think, an unwreckable scenario .
In Anthony Shaffer's 1970 play, which he adapted for the 1972 film, Andrew Wylie is an aging writer of mystery novels, living well but not comfortably in a home whose gadgety furnishings reflect his obsession with game-playing. The reason for Andrew's discomfort: his young wife is having an affair with her hairdresser, Milo Tindale. Enter Milo into Andrew's lair. The older man has an attractive, illegal proposal for Milo that could make them both rich and happy. But that's just a teaser to Andrew's much darker scheme one that will bring a policeman to inquire about a missing body.
In the original movie, directed by Hollywood veteran Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Andrew was played by Laurence Olivier, widely considered the century's greatest actor; and Michael Caine, who came to movie fame as the charming cad Alfie, was Milo. In a promising symmetry, this Sleuth has Caine playing the older man and Jude Law, who starred in a 2004 sequel to Alfie, as his young rival.
At the helm this time is Kenneth Branagh, the actor-director who in his youth was seen as the hope of English-speaking theater "the new Olivier," critics said and who had one-upped Olivier by directing and starring in an acclaimed film of Shakespeare's Henry V while still in his 20s. The new script for Sleuth is by Harold Pinter, the most demanding and honored playwright of the past half-century. Pinter, after all, did win the 2005 Nobel Prize for Literature; and at 77, this imperious Brit is surely beyond the worry of writing scripts for 14-year-old American boys. So his criminal botch of the job can't be attributed to marketplace timidity.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- The Best and Worst of the 2012 Grammys
- 2012 Grammys Red Carpet: Six OMG Fashion Moments
- A History of Kids and Sleep: Why They Never Get Enough
- Why American Kids Are Brats
- It's Alive! The Greatest Space Telescope Ever Built Survives
- Eat like an Italian
- The Walking Dead Watch: Nebraska
- Foo Fighters and Adele Win Big at Grammys
- Whitney Houston: A Life in Photos
- Whitney Houston's Death: Hallmarks of a Battle Against Addiction and Overdose
- It's Alive! The Greatest Space Telescope Ever Built Survives
- The Upside Of Being An Introvert (And Why Extroverts Are Overrated)
- The Greeks Pass Austerity, but Are They Being Priced Out of Their Lives?
- Sentencing Spain's 'Superjudge': Why Baltasar Garzón Is Being Punished
- Friends With Benefits
- Why Is Your Boss Moving to Brazil?
- Eat like an Italian
- What a Real-Time Copy of the Mona Lisa Reveals About Leonardo
- N. Dakota College Shaken by False Degrees
- What Ever Happened To Upward Mobility?




