Clue

62% of critics liked it

85% of users liked it

In theaters Dec 13, 1985
PG, 1 hr. 36 min.

Movie Info

Director: Jonathan Lynn
Rated: PG
Running Time: 1 hr. 36 min.
Genre: Drama, Mystery & Suspense, Comedy
Theater Release: Dec 13, 1985
DVD Release: Jun 27, 2000
Synopsis: In this spoof of McCarthy-era paranoia and 1950s wholesomeness, the characters and plot are drawn from the popular Parker Brothers board game of the same name. On a dark and stormy night in 1954, six individuals with ties to Washington are assembled for a dinner party at the swanky mansion of one Mr. Boddy (Lee Ving). Boddy's butler, Wadsworth (Tim Curry), assigns each guest a colorful name: Mr. Green (Michael McKean), Col. Mustard (Martin Mull), Mrs. Peacock (Eileen Brennan), Professor Plum

Critic Reviews

  • It's not the least bit scary or suspenseful but instead quickly grows tedious. The more you struggle to keep track of the constantly multiplying plot developments, the harder it gets to care who did it. More...
  • Only Lesley Ann Warren, as a tough-talking madam, finds an effective level of stylization, using her leggy physique and wildly expressive features to create a cartoonish figure that's funny within its own boundaries. More...
  • The characters are less credible than their plastic counterparts, the puerile humour is dispiriting, and the plotting pulled this way and that by the conceit of releasing the film in the US with a trio of alternate endings. More...
  • One ending is more than enough. More...
  • Though it takes only 87 minutes to arrive at one of its three different solutions, it has long since worn out its welcome by the denouement. More...
  • Easily one of the most gimmicky films of all time ... More...
  • If Clue falls a bit short of the mark, it remains a likeable artifact of talented people giving a ridiculous task the old college try... [Blu-ray] More...
  • Mostly successful and entirely strange... a comic [mystery] that doubles as a parody and triples as an ironic deconstruction of the form. More...
  • The board game is a lot more fun. More...
  • the endings are almost intended to be seen sequentially, and they are the funniest when viewed in that manner More...