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Movie review / ‘See How They Run’

“See How They Run” (MA) *** and a half

IN this comical who-dunnit spoof of Agatha Christie’s long-running play “The Mousetrap”, during a backstage party in the London West End theatre celebrating its 100th performance in 1953, a faceless antagonist murders visiting American film director Leo Köpernick (Adrien Brody).

Mark Chappell’s screenplay imagines that Scotland Yard, its hands full of serious crime in the search for the 10 Rillington Place serial killer, sends its B team to investigate. 

Liquor-loving Insp Stoppard (Sam Rockwell) and enthusiastic cop-in-training Constable Stalker (Saoirse Ronan) interview a long list of suspects. 

Could the murderer be playwright Mervyn Cocker-Norris (David Oyelowo), film producer John Woolf (Reece Shearsmith), grand dame Petula Spencer (Ruth Wilson) or even actor Richard Attenborough (Harris Dickinson)? There are plenty of other suspects and as time runs out, the killer strikes again.

“Maybe it’s all of them?” hopefully suggests Stalker. “See How They Run” leans heavily on comedy mainly expressed as wordplay linking “The Mousetrap” to the play from which it takes its name (“Hamlet” – remember those strolling players come to entertain the Danish court with a performance of “The Murder of Gonzago?) and the basic plot leading to a remote English country house where the killer is finally identified.

Director Tom George and writer Mark Chappell deliver laughs and intrigue in equal measure. Rockwell and Ronan display admirable timing as the investigators. 

Constable Stalker’s over-eagerness to identify the killer might reflect the filmgoer’s eagerness for resolution. “See How They Run’s” light touch and genial nature compensate filmgoers with a taste for the absurd against a background of a grimy, post-war London (to date more than 10 million people have paid to watch “The Mousetrap”, which is still running). 

In the film, that pint-sized acting powerhouse Shirley Henderson plays Agatha Christie. 

At all cinemas

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Dougal Macdonald

Dougal Macdonald

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One Response to Movie review / ‘See How They Run’

Peter Graves says: 2 October 2022 at 2:53 pm

It is a hoot and a laugh a minute, as the English sense of irony and wit comes through so very well. Especially as a spoken film that repays listening to the content of the dialogue. However, this film does require some prior knowledge of the real Mousetrap and Tom Stoppard (the playwright – especially his quick style of dialogue).

And some passing knowledge of Agatha Christie’s style helps. By contrast, she wrote in a deliberately slow style, so those expecting guns and murder immediately will be disappointed. Listen to what the American Kopernick wants to turn her play into and there are many clues within his inanities to the differences between US and UK humour. And why the British “actors” are so appalled.

And the exterior shots seem to have been filmed at the real London theatre where the real “Mousetrap” is currently playing – St Martin’s. Another in-joke.

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