Clue
Clue

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- 72/100 based on 103,805 votes

This is a movie about seven guests, a butler, and a maid, who are all involved in a series of murders. The guests all meet at Hill House, where you learn that Professor Plum (Christopher Lloyd) works in Washington, D.C., where everyone else lives. Colonel Mustard (Martin Mull) is a client of Miss Scarlet (Lesley Anne Warren), who is the ex-employer of Yvette (Colleen Camp), the maid, who had an affair with the husband of Mrs. White (Madeline Khan), et cetera. Blackmailer Mr. ... (Full plot summary below)

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Full Plot Details

This is a movie about seven guests, a butler, and a maid, who are all involved in a series of murders. The guests all meet at Hill House, where you learn that Professor Plum (Christopher Lloyd) works in Washington, D.C., where everyone else lives. Colonel Mustard (Martin Mull) is a client of Miss Scarlet (Lesley Anne Warren), who is the ex-employer of Yvette (Colleen Camp), the maid, who had an affair with the husband of Mrs. White (Madeline Khan), et cetera. Blackmailer Mr. Boddy (Lee Ving) gives each guest a weapon and tells him or her to kill butler Wadsworth (Tim Curry) to avoid being exposed. Add in Mrs. Peacock's (Eileen Brennan's) craziness and Mr. Green's (Michael McKean's) clumsiness, and meet a whole group tangled in a web of murder, lies, and hilarity.

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Movie Reviews

Slashfilm - 9/10 by Eric VespeOn paper, this movie should not work, but what we got was an instant classic that is eminently rewatchable and assembled one of the best funny casts ever. The energy levels of the movie are off the charts, keeping it wildly entertaining even in today's short attention span world.
Slant Magazine - 8/10 by Chris CabinClue is comfortable with its pedigree, even giddily enthused by it, which gives its creators freedom to produce not a nostalgic entertainment, but a sustained and sincerely old-fashioned entertainment, laced with wicked miscreancy.
Antagony & Ecstasy - 7/10 by Tim BraytonMostly successful and entirely strange... a comic [mystery] that doubles as a parody and triples as an ironic deconstruction of the form.
Time Out - 7/10 by Trevor JohnstonThe 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.
Groucho Reviews - 6/10 by Peter CanaveseIf 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]
Chicago Tribune - 6/10 by Gene SiskelLots of sight gags and one-liners are attempted, but few of them succeed. The cast is talented but stranded in weak material.
Cinema Sight - 5/10 by Wesley LovellLike a well-oiled machine, "Clue" uses slapstick and situational humor to tell a rather pointed story.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) - 5/10 by Jay ScottThe first half-hour (or so) of Clue is enjoyably witty but, after that, it’s a downhill mudslide.
Los Angeles Times - 4/10 by Kevin ThomasEasily one of the most gimmicky films of all time, Clue must be the only movie in history to be adapted from a popular board game.
Chicago Reader - 4/10 by Dave KehrThe murder-mystery board game becomes a frantic, unfunny spoof (1985) under the direction of British TV writer Jonathan Lynn. The script recycles Agatha Christie's Ten Little Indians, with six guests invited by a mysterious host to spend the night in a creepy mansion, but instead of parodying the material Lynn simply surrounds it with extraneous pratfalls and wisecracks.

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