Cinafilm has over 5 million movie reviews and counting …
Sitemap
Search

Last updated: 11 Jun 2026 at 04:21 UTC

Back to movie details

Review of by Caque A — 17 Aug 2011

Share
Tweet

This movie had me in stitches! It's both hilarious and suspenseful. "Manhattan Murder Mystery" is an homage to the old mystery films of the 40s and 50s; Alfred Hitchcock would most certainly be proud.

This isn't one of Allen's classic comedies, but it's certainly close. It's often forgotten in a conversation about great Woody Allen films, but I usually remind people of its existence.

I'm a huge fan of the chemistry between Allen and Keaton and she is by far my favourite of Allen's leading ladies. They're bickering in this movie is absolutely great, but sometimes the relationship drama is unnecessary.

The only problem I had with the film is how Allen tried to balance the romantic side of the film with the mystery side of the film. It kind of gets muddled up and sloppy at points, but the comedy and dialogue is what makes the movie great.

It has a wonderful cast that includes the great Anjelica Huston, Alan Alda, Jerry Adler, "The View" co-host Joy Behar and a young Zach Braff in what is his first acting role. Highly recommended, especially for Woody Allen fans.

The one scene that had me laughing myself into a stupor was when they are playing their doctored message to the murderer over the phone and Allen screws up his tape recorder and ends up fumbling around with the film which gets tangled in his fingers.

I was on the floor. Funny, funny stuff. (B+).

This review of Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993) was written by on 17 Aug 2011.

Manhattan Murder Mystery has generally received positive reviews.

Was this review helpful?

Yes
No

More Reviews of Manhattan Murder Mystery

More reviews of this movie

Reviews of Similar Movies

More Reviews

Share This Page

Share
Tweet

Popular Movies Right Now

Movies You Viewed Recently

Get social with CinafilmFollow us for reviews of the latest moviesCinafilm - TwitterCinafilm - PinterestCinafilm - RSS