Manhattan Murder Mystery Movie Review
Manhattan Murder Mystery Review
"Manhattan Murder Mystery" Overview

Rating: PG
1993
Cast and Crew
Director : Woody AllenProducer : Robert Greenhut
Screenwiter : Woody Allen,Marshall Brickman
Starring : Woody Allen,Diane Keaton,Jerry Adler,Lynn Cohen,Ron Rifkin,Joy Behar,William Addy,John Doumanian,Alan Alda,Anjelica Huston
OK, I like New York. Unless you're from the city, or have ever lived in it, you
probably hate it. But, as the opening song of Manhattan Murder Mystery states,
Woody Allen happens to like New York. Because he likes New York so much, almost
every movie that has him in it, including, although it isn't quite revealed
until the end, Antz completely takes place in the Big Apple. A couple,
Manhattan and Manhattan Murder Mystery, have even taken their titles from it.
Woody Allen fans shoot me here, but I've never seen Manhattan. Going from
Manhattan Murder Mystery, though, you might wonder if he's playing to the
stereotypes. Playing to the stereotypes is my only complain in this bizarre
mystery about a next-door neighbor's plans to murder his wife. It takes the
easy punches at New Yorkers. But, hey, with a place that has as many people in
need of electroshock as New York does, can we blame him?
Manhattan Murder Mystery follows a couple (Woody Allen and Diane Keaton, seen
before in Annie Hall) whose kid has left for college and are now living their
lives out on the Upper West Side. They go to Rangers games and the theatre and
the opera. They hang out with their divorced friends, plan their dreams of
resturaunts, and go to work. Oh, yeah, and this couple suspects their next door
neighbor of murdering his wife.
Although Allen is trepidatious about confronting a murder at first, the bland
urban lives of Allen, his wife, his wife's friend (Alda), and the writer Allen
edits (Houston), get caught up in the Manhattan murder mystery offered before
them. It is a chance for a bunch of paranoid urbanites to have fun: a rare
oppertunity.
Going to Jersey for late-night discussions on how to nab the killer, sneaking
into apartments, faking phone conversations. All of this is in the mix for the
four bland individuals given a chance to be psychotic little children for a
change. It is all a game to these four. There really isn't a concern about
morals, only about having fun.
Also thrown into the mix is an interesting arangement. Woody Allen suspects
that Diane Keaton is in love with Alan Alda. She, in turn, suspects that good
old posterchild for neurotics Woody is in love with Angelica Houston. And, of
course, they're trying to set up Houston and Alda at the same time.
Besides Woody Allen's unique touch, Manhattan Murder Mystery is a fairly normal
and mainstream film. What bothered most critics, but will never bother me, is
Woody Allen's diatribe of neurosis. As always, the compound insanity that he
delivers, the one liners that insult himself and New York, and other things
that convince you that you may not be the craziest person in the world make the
film entertaining.
As far as acting goes, its as solid as you'd expect from such a powerful cast.
When it comes to directing, it's what you'd expect from Woody Allen:
conservative. He takes his camera and will shoot an entire scene with only one
shot.
The script is suprisingly postmodern: it contains wonderful bits of Woody Allen
self-reference. For instance, the title Manhattan Murder Mystery alludes to the
film Manhattan, and you have the wonderfully brilliant scene in which Diane
Keaton decrys wearing a tie with a skirt: the very look that became chic in
1977 with her role in Annie Hall.
Do not expect interesting plot twists. You will not get them. Do not expect
high art, you won't get it either. Instead, expect a film that will delight and
entertain anyone who hates, or happens to love, New York. What a hoot!
Reviewer: James Brundage





