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3[[quoteright:329:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/murder_by_death.png]]
4
5->''"You are cordially invited to Dinner and a Murder."''
6
7''Murder by Death'' is an American comedy-mystery film released in 1976. Written by Creator/NeilSimon and directed by Robert Moore, the film employs a [[AllStarCast star-studded cast]] to parody the MysteryFiction genre in general as well as several famous writers (chiefly Creator/AgathaChristie) and characters in particular.
8
9Five of the world's greatest detectives are each accompanied by an associate to a dinner party held by the enigmatic multi-millionaire Lionel Twain (Creator/TrumanCapote), who challenges the whole group to solve a murder that will take place at midnight. If any of the detectives can figure out who committed the murder, they will earn the reputation as the single greatest detective in the world -- and win a million dollars, to boot. Once the murder occurs, each detective stumbles around trying to gather clues that will help them solve the case, and hilarity ensues as they all compete for the ultimate bragging rights (and all that cash).
10
11The detectives themselves are {{pastiche}}s based on various famous fictional sleuths:
12
13* Inspector Sidney Wang (Creator/PeterSellers) is based on Earl Derr Biggers' Chinese police detective Literature/CharlieChan.
14* Dick and Dora Charleston (Creator/DavidNiven and Dame Creator/MaggieSmith) are modeled after Creator/DashiellHammett's socialite detective couple, Nick and Nora Charles, from ''Film/TheThinMan'' series.
15* Milo Perrier (James Coco) parodies Christie's Belgian detective Literature/HerculePoirot.
16* Sam Diamond (Creator/PeterFalk) is a take on another Hammett character, namely the HardboiledDetective Sam Spade from ''Film/{{The Maltese Falcon|1941}}''.
17* Jessica Marbles (Elsa Lanchester) is a parody of Christie's Literature/MissMarple and the associated LittleOldLadyInvestigates trope by extension.
18
19Simon, Moore, and several of this film's cast members collaborated again two years later on the FilmNoir spoof ''Film/TheCheapDetective''.
20
21----
22!! ''Murder by Death'' contains the following tropes:
23
24* AcmeProducts: Yetta's notes are written by the Acme Note Writing Company.
25* ActuallyThatsMyAssistant: When Jessica Marbles and her nurse are introduced, everyone assumes that the old lady in the wheelchair is Jessica and the spry and energetic woman pushing her is the nurse. It's the other way around.
26%%* AffairHair: Spoofed.
27* AdaptationalAlternateEnding: Depending on whether you think a murder actually happened in the film (other than of a good weekend). There was a novelization of the movie released at the time. It backs off some of the film's absurdist elements, for example showing that the butler's name was James Benson and the whole Jamessir Bensonmum exchange was just him messing with the detectives on Twain's orders. In the same vein, it changes the film's GainaxEnding by [[spoiler:having both the butler and the maid walk into the room following Twain's TheReasonYouSuck speech, revealing that all of the Twain household are alive and well, so no one actually died and it was all a con on the detectives]].
28* AffectionateParody: The film is affectionate toward the genre and its icons...in its own odd way. Neil Simon said he wrote the film pretty much as his revenge against mystery stories that [[AssPull introduced new information]] or otherwise used impossible cheats in their solutions; he rather identified with Twain. But the affection varies: while Twain never gets around to a TakeThat against the plot in the Film/CharlieChan or HardboiledDetective stories, he takes every opportunity to [[LampshadeHanging hang a lampshade]] on Sydney Wang's racist speech patterns (Wang is a brilliant detective who speaks in AsianSpeekeeEngrish style ''and'' is a ''Chinese'' man who is [[JapaneseRanguage unable to pronounce R's]]). Similarly, Sam Diamond is the only detective who comes close to solving the mystery, but he's depicted as a despicable racist [[spoiler:and an ArmoredClosetGay]].
29
30* AmbiguouslyGay: Lionel Twain is rather camp--he is played by Truman Capote, after all.
31** [[spoiler:At least until the ending reveals "him" to be Yetta.]]
32%%* AnimalAssassin: A snake and a scorpion.
33* ArmoredClosetGay: [[spoiler:Sam Diamond]], although he never did anything to a man that he wouldn't do to a woman. And he didn't kiss nobody, neither.
34* ArsonMurderAndJaywalking: Twain explains he's OlderThanTheyLook due to a complete vegetable diet, 12 hours sleep a night and lots of makeup.
35* ArtisticTitle: Which was [[http://www.artofthetitle.com/title/murder-by-death/ designed]], along with the original poster art, by Creator/CharlesAddams.
36* AsianSpeekeeEngrish: Sidney Wang to a T. This is apparently Lionel Twain's BerserkButton:
37-->'''Perrier:''' What do you make of all of this, Wang?\
38'''Wang:''' Is confusing.\
39'''Twain:''' ''It! It'' is confusing! Say your goddamn pronouns!
40* AssholeVictim: [[spoiler:Lionel Twain]] was an abusive boyfriend, a racist, an animal abuser, and an overall creep. [[spoiler:And yet, it was someone he hadn't mistreated that did him in!]]
41* AssPull: InUniverse, this is what [[spoiler:the real culprit]] feels about how the writers end their stories.
42* AstonishinglyAppropriateInterruption: When Dick Charleston approaches Sidney Wang's car to ask for his dog:
43-->"I say, you don't happen to have seen a little white...''(recognizes Wang)''...Wang!?
44* AuthorFilibuster: At the end of the movie, Twain delivers a scathing rebuke against lazy mystery writers who use cheap tricks in order to make sure [[CluelessMystery the audience does not figure out the mystery]] before the detective has a chance to explain it.
45* BackhandedApology: When called on his racism toward Sidney Wang, Sam Diamond apologizes by way of saying, "Sorry, slanty." And of course, Wang is played by a white actor in the first place to add another level to the gag.
46* BedmateReveal: After Milo Perrier gets into bed, he looks across and sees his male chauffeur Marcel Cassette in bed with him.
47* BeleagueredAssistant: Willie Wang, Marcel Cassette, and Tess Skeffington. All of whom also qualify as ButtMonkey.
48* BerserkButton:
49** For Lionel Twain: Sidney Wang's AsianSpeekeeEngrish.
50** For Milo Perrier: Being called a Frenchman.
51--->'''Milo Perrier:''' I'm not a Frenchie, I'm a BELGIE!
52* BigBeautifulWoman: Sam Diamond randomly asks Dick Charleston if he's ever slept with a fat waitress.
53%%* BigEater: Milo Perrier
54* {{Bizarchitecture}}: This is played for laughs. Sam Diamond investigates the house while everyone else is waiting in the dining room, but the rooms keep shifting around to Sam's confusion.
55* BlindDriving: Discussed. Dora Charleston doesn't want the blind butler to park their car for obvious reasons.
56* BlindMistake: The blind butler Jamesir Bensonmum does this a lot.
57%%* BrutallyHonest: Sam Diamond is pretty outspoken.
58* BunnyEarsLawyer: All of the detectives are extremely eccentric since they're over-the-top parodies of characters who were eccentric to begin with. That doesn't stop them from being clever at their work, though.
59* TheButlerDidIt: This is parodied and subverted. [[spoiler:While the man who introduced himself as the butler appears responsible, all explanations past the first involve him clearly not being the butler, including the final one that none of the cast sees. Since this is a DeadUnicornTrope, the real joke is that Neil Simon has ShownTheirWork.]]
60%%* CallingYourBathroomBreaks: Sam Diamond, fully two times. What a charmer.
61* CaptainErsatz: Dick and Dora Charleston are [[Film/TheThinMan Nick and Nora Charles]], Sidney Wang is Film/CharlieChan, Milo Perrier is Literature/HerculePoirot, Sam Diamond and Tess Skeffington are [[Film/TheMalteseFalcon1941 Sam Spade and Effie Perine]], and Jessica Marbles is Literature/MissMarple.
62* CastingGag: Peter Falk had started playing Series/{{Columbo}} five years before.
63** Even though his character doesn't spoof Columbo, before he changes into his white tuxedo jacket, Falk wears the same trench coat he wore when playing Columbo.
64* CasualDangerDialogue: Dick and Dora Charleston have an extremely nonchalant--indeed, emotionless--conversation about the deadly scorpion on their bed which will force them to remain perfectly still, quite possibly for the rest of their perhaps short lives. Later, when the killer asks Dick how they escaped:
65-->'''Dick Charleston:''' ''(breezily)'' We didn't; it stung Dora. The poison's in her system right now. We have fifteen minutes to get to a hospital. ''Cue hilarious ecstatic expression on killer's face''
66** [[spoiler: Fortunately it proved to be a nonlethal type of scorpion. That, or a fake scorpion.Though afterwards, Dora quite adamantly asks Dick if he's sure it was fake.]]
67* CluelessMystery: [[spoiler:Anger at the detectives writing stories like this is the true reason for all the events of the night.]]
68-->'''Willie Wang:''' I don't get it, Pop! Was there a murder or wasn't there?\
69'''Sidney Wang:''' Yes. Killed good weekend! [[JapaneseRanguage Dlive]], please.
70* CobwebJungle: The suite for the Charleston's is full of cobwebs. Turns out they are props made of candied sugar.
71* TheCoronerDothProtestTooMuch: The butler [[PunnyName Jamesir Bensonmum]] has the following conversation with Dick and Dora Charleston.
72-->'''Bensonmum:''' Here we are. The late Mrs. Twain's room. She died in here.\
73'''Dora:''' Oh, dear.\
74'''Dick:''' Died of what?\
75'''Bensonmum:''' She murdered herself in her sleep, Sir.\
76'''Dick:''' ''(confused)'' You mean suicide?\
77'''Bensonmum:''' Oh, no, it was murder alright. Mrs. Twain ''hated'' herself.
78* CorruptedCharacterCopy: All of the detectives are NominalHero takes on classic detective characters, reimagined as selfish, nasty [[ManChild Man (and Woman) Children.]]
79* CutPhoneLines
80-->'''Dick:''' It sounded as though somebody snipped the wire.\
81'''Dora:''' Really? What did it sound like?\
82'''Dick:''' "Snip".
83%%* DeconstructionCrossover
84%%* DeconstructiveParody
85* DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment: The title.
86%%* DescendingCeiling: Used in an attempt to kill Perrier.
87* TheDogWasTheMastermind: After Twain tells off the sleuths and they leave, completely chagrined, the killer then rips off another mask to reveal [[spoiler:the mute cook]], who then starts [[EvilLaughter laughing hysterically]].
88%%* DramaticUnmask
89* DunkingTheBomb: Sam Diamond and Miss Skeffington face death by TimeBomb in their room. As we later learn, Miss Skeffington dumped it down the john in an OffscreenMomentOfAwesome.
90* EekAMouse: Dora screams when she sees a mouse in the bedroom. Dick assures her it's fake but finds that it is very real after he picks it up.
91* EmptyPilesOfClothing: At one point, the butler is found dead, sitting in the kitchen. Then he's missing but his outfit is still there. Then he's back, but his outfit is gone, leaving the detectives to puzzle over a naked (and dead) butler.
92* TheEndingChangesEverything: And how!
93-->"I don't get it, Pop: was there a murder, or wasn't there?"\
94Yes. Killed good weekend.
95* EveryoneIsASuspect: All guests had reasons to kill the host, which come up during the course of the film.
96* EvilLaugh: At the end, [[spoiler:The maid]] laughs like this after [[spoiler:fooling all of the detectives]].
97* FaintInShock: Moments after her boss Sam Diamond is apparently crushed to death by a falling gargoyle (he gets better), Tess announces she's going to faint and orders the butler to catch her. The butler (who's blind), misses her completely and she thuds to the floor.
98* FakeMystery: [[spoiler: What the detectives have all concluded by the end of the film.]]
99* FakingTheDead: [[spoiler:Twain]] fakes his death in order to demonstrate the inferiority of the methods used by his guests, and his ability to outsmart them all.
100* FluffyFashionFeathers: Tess has a feather-trimmed nightgown.
101* GainaxEnding: PlayedForLaughs.
102-->'''Willie:''' I don't get something, Pop: ''Was'' there a murder, or ''wasn't'' there?\
103'''Sidney:''' Yes. Killed good weekend!
104* {{Gasshole}}: Jessica Marbles' nurse is implied to be one. When Jessica smells poison gas, her nurse apologizes and says "I'm old, I can't help it."
105* GrammarNazi: Twain, as noted above. ''"Say your goddamn pronouns!"''
106** Also [[HypocriticalHumor Sidney Wang himself]]:
107--->''(dog barks)''\
108'''Sidney Wang:''' Listen.\
109'''Willie Wang:''' I don't hear nothing. What do you hear?\
110'''Sidney Wang:''' Double negative, and dog.
111%%* HardboiledDetective: Sam Diamond
112* HiddenVillain: There are several shots of the villain from an angle that hides his/her face. Sometimes we only get a close-up on their ConspicuousGloves.
113* HurtFootHop: Wang does this when Jessica runs over his foot with her nurse's wheelchair.
114* IceCreamKoan:
115** Many from Sidney Wang. He never does finish his "dangerous road like fresh mushroom" one, though, at least audibly and onscreen. Perhaps it was something like "must always be careful which to pick since even ordinary-looking ones can be deadly"?
116** Jessica Marbles has one too, and it sounds really neat and literary: "The chain is stronger if the links are unbroken." (Yeah, well, that's rather the point of the thing, isn't it?)
117*** It's probably a garbled version of "A chain is only as strong as its weakest link".
118* IncorrectAnimalNoise: The cat of the house is making barking sounds offscreen. Wang wonders if they fed it too much dog food.
119* InsaneTrollLogic:
120** Sam links a girl walking off with his money in 1940s Paris with the German invasion of France that, by chance, occurred two hours later. Of course, it's played for laughs--and it's also a ShoutOut to ''Film/{{Casablanca}}'', another film Creator/HumphreyBogart is famous for.
121** While all of the solutions offered by each detective at the end are superficially plausible--as is the one given by the mastermind in his MotiveRant, which they accept to be the truth--it nonetheless requires that every one of the detectives accept the fact that [[spoiler:the maid was actually an animatronic mannequin the whole time]].
122%%* TheJeeves: Jamessir Bensonmum, memorably acted by Alec Guinness.
123* LadyLooksLikeADude: Twain's daughter Rita, who is actually [[spoiler:the butler. Only not, since he's Twain himself. Or is she?]]
124* LampshadedDoubleEntendre:
125-->'''Twain:''' No, don't look at each other! Look at me! I?m the greatest! I'm number one!\
126'''Sam:''' To me, you look like [[ToiletHumor number two]]. Know what I mean? \
127'''Dora:''' ... What ''does'' he mean, Miss Skeffington?\
128'''Miss Skeffington:''' I'll tell you later. It's disgusting.
129* LargeHam: Truman Capote as Lionel Twain. He turns it [[ExaggeratedTrope up to eleven]] in this performance.
130* LatexPerfection: [[spoiler:The maid is wearing a mask of the butler's face over a mask of Lionel Twain's face. This is doubly humorous thanks to the height differences between the three actors.]]
131%%* LittleOldLadyInvestigates: Jessica Marbles.
132* LoadBearingHero: Marcel saves Perrier from the DescendingCeiling, "being one of the world's strongest men".
133* MindScrew: "Just what the hell was going on?" is a not uncommon phrase uttered by viewers as the movie ends.
134* MotiveRant: [[spoiler:Lionel Twain delivers his at the end when he rips into the detectives--and, effectively, the authors who created them--for the way their adventures are handled.]]
135* MsFanservice: Dora Charleston and Tess Skeffington both wear sexy dresses.
136* MultilayerFacade: The villain is hidden behind two layers of masks.
137* NeverSplitTheParty: While the sleuths are aware of this trope, they still manage to get themselves isolated from time to time.
138* NoodleIncident: Apparently happened while Perrier was away
139-->'''Perrier:''' Don't ask me.
140-->'''Charleston:''' What are you doing in the butler's uniform?
141-->'''Perrier:''' I said don't ask me!
142* OccamsRazor: Used by Mrs. Charleston. The other detectives ask Twain if he knows who is murdered, when it will be committed, the location of the crime, and what time it will occur. Twain confirms that this is all true. Dora then remarks that this would mean that Twain is the murderer. Quite oddly, Twain does not deny this only saying that he will not listen to the wife of a detective. When Dick pushes the issue, Twain immediately changes the subject by offering a reward and the rights to the story to be published.
143* OffscreenMomentOfAwesome: We are only told how the guests solved the DeathTrap in their rooms.
144%%* OldDarkHouse
145* OlderThanTheyLook: [[DiscussedTrope Discussed]] when the 76 year old Twain (played by Truman Capote in his early 50s) explains how he manages to look so young.
146-->'''Twain:''' How do I look so young? Quiet simple, a complete vegetable diet, 12 hours sleep a night, [[MundaneSolution and lots and lots of makeup]].
147* OneSizeFitsAll : 5' 10" Alec Guinness' character pulls off his mask to reveal...[[spoiler: 5' 3" tall Truman Capote]], who also had a rather thicker build as well as a completely differently shaped skull.
148* PetTheDog: Sam Diamond is horribly rude and abrasive to everyone--except Jessica Marbles, who he seems quite fond of.
149* PoisonIsCorrosive: When poisoned wine is poured onto a cloth napkin, it burns holes through it.
150* PortraitPaintingPeephole: Surprisingly noticeable; at least one painting has the mouth cut out, with accompanying wagging tongue hanging out. Also Stuffed Animal Head Peephole:
151-->'''Wang:''' Shhh... Voice come from cow on wall.\
152'''Twain:''' ''Moose!'' Moose, you imbecile!
153* PreciousPuppies: The Charlestons' dog Myron.
154* PrecisionFStrike: "''Jesus H. Christ.''" Itself a Lampshade of Mssr. Perrier's previous line, which has the same meaning but sounds [[SophisticatedAsHell polite because it's in French]].
155* PrettyInMink: Tess has a few furs.
156* ProverbialWisdom: Parodied with Sidney Wang, see IceCreamKoan.
157* PunnyName: Lionel Twain's is a reference to the famous toy train manufacturer Lionel--and on top of that, his address is "22 (Two-Two) Twain".
158* RedRightHand: Twain has no pinkies -- still a total of ten fingers, but they're all too long to be pinkies.
159* TheReveal: This trope is parodied to the point where it becomes TheUnreveal.
160* RightForTheWrongReasons: In the ending, each detective team claims to have solved the case, and each one makes a series of deductions that are plausible on their face. The villain plays along, too. But each solution is subsequently proven wrong.
161%%* RopeBridge: One, in desperate need of repair, leads up Twain's mansion.
162* RubeGoldbergDevice: The [[spoiler:mansion]], and it's implied that the [[spoiler:maid]] is, too. Despite both of these, the suggestion that the murder weapon may be one is derided as stupid.
163* RuleOfFunny: The ending wouldn't work without it.
164* RunningGag:
165** The French phrase "N'est-ce pas?" being mistaken for "Nestlé". As in the following exchange:
166--->'''Perrier:''' Now, I require a cold compress for my chauffeur, and a cup of hot chocolate for me, n'est-ce pas?\
167'''Bensonmum:''' I'm afraid we don't have any Nespa, sir, just Hershey's.
168** Lionel Twain correcting Sidney Wang's lack of personal pronouns and articles.
169* SamusIsAGirl: It's subtly implied by the TwistEnding that Lionel Twain never actually existed, and was in fact Yetta the cook the entire time. If this really is the case, then she not only somehow managed to outwit the [[TooDumbToLive greatest detectives in the world with a fake mannequin of herself]], but she may have actually murdered her blind butler Jamesir Bensonmum in cold blood just to humiliate the eccentric sleuths even further...'''and got away with it in the end'''!
170* ScaryScorpions: The AnimalAssassin scorpion that stings Dora Charleston, which "can kill instantly" and gives her only minutes to live.
171* SecretPath: Wang suspects one of these after finding the dining room empty and the door locked from the inside. Twain assures him that there is no such thing.
172%%* ShapedLikeItself: The title.
173%%* SherlockScan: Parodied.
174* ShootOutTheLock: Sam shoots the lock of the dining room to get it to open up.
175* ShutUpGunshot: At one point, Sam shoots in the air to get everyone to shut up.
176* SomeonesTouchingMyButt: The main characters are seated together around a table. Suddenly the room goes dark.
177-->'''Dora Charleston:''' Dickie, don't! You know how I get when you touch me there!\
178'''Dick Charleston:''' Not me, darling. I got my hands in my pockets.\
179'''Sam Diamond:''' I'm afraid they're my pockets.\
180'''Dick Charleston:''' Oh. Sorry about that.\
181'''Dora Charleston:''' Dickie, behave yourself!
182* SpiritualSequel:
183** ''Film/TheCheapDetective'', also written by Neil Simon and directed by Robert Moore and also featuring Peter Falk and Creator/EileenBrennan in the cast, which spoofs FilmNoir and was released two years later.
184** There was also a MadeForTVMovie called ''Murder Can Hurt You!'', which spoofs TV detectives like Series/{{Kojak}}, Series/{{McCloud}}, and Series/{{Columbo}}. (Though, alas, Peter Falk doesn't appear in that one.)
185** Later, the movie adaptation of ''Film/{{Clue}}'' is extremely similar to ''Murder by Death'' in its themes and comedy, and also features Eileen Brennan.
186* StockScream: The doorbell. The scream is actually Fay Wray's from ''Film/KingKong1933''.
187%%* StrangerBehindTheMask: This is done multiple times in a row to debunk the trope in general.
188%%* SummationGathering: {{Parodied}}, naturally.
189* TakeThat: To mysteries that use AssPull endings.
190* TaxidermyIsCreepy: The walls of the dining room are decorated with stuffed animals.
191* TenLittleMurderVictims: The trope is subverted when it turns out the villain isn't really interested in killing the sleuths off, but in embarrassing them instead.
192* WeatherControlMachine: Creates an isolating thunderstorm.
193* WhenTheClockStrikesTwelve: Lionel Twain says that the murder will take place at midnight.
194* WhosOnFirst: The butler's name is Jamesir Bensonmum. Cue the confusion-based exchanges.
195-->'''Dick:''' How odd.\
196'''Butler:''' My father's name, sir.\
197'''Dick:''' What was your father's name?\
198'''Butler:''' Howard. Howard Bensonmum.
199** Then lampshaded as an OverlyLongGag by Dora Charleston with "Oh, let it go, Dickie."
200* WrongInsultOffence: Milo Perrier objects to being called a Frenchie. He's a BELGIE!
201* YellowFace: Peter Sellers's role as Sidney Wang is used to underscore how racist Charlie Chan is as a character... Or least as portrayed in adaptations. The original character in the books is at least FairForItsDay.

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