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Sleuth

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Sleuth - 1972 | 138 mins | Thriller, Mystery | Colour

The Production Team

Director: Joseph L. Mankiewicz.
Producer: Morton Gottlieb.
Script: Anthony Shaffer. (from the play by Anthony Shaffer)
Cinematography: Oswald Morris.
Film Editing: Richard Marden.
Production Design: Ken Adam.
Art Direction: Peter Lamont.
Costume Design: John Furniss.
Makeup Department: Tom Smith and Joan White.
Sound: Ken Barker, John W. Mitchell and Don Sharpe.
Original Music: John Addison.

The Cast

Laurence Olivier - Andrew Wyke
Michael Caine - Milo Tindle
Alec Cawthorne- Inspector Doppler
John Matthews - Detective Sergeant Tarrant
Eve Channing - Marguerite Wyke
Teddy Martin - Police Constable Higgs

Plot Synopsis

Anthony Shaffer’s elaborate role-playing stage play is adapted by its author into this gripping thriller from director Joseph L. Manciewicz that never lets go of the viewer. Laurence Olivier and Michael Caine are two British actors at their best who were nominated for Academy Awards for their powerful performances. Sleuth is a curious film, essentially a two-man show with plenty of dialogue but very little action.

Andrew Wyke (Laurence Olivier) is regarded as one of the world's foremost authors of mystery novels. Wyke is also a fanatic game player who has converted his magnificent 16th century manor into a gallery of robots, performing dolls, dartboards, chess sets and mazes. One afternoon Wyke invites Milo Tindle (Michael Caine) to join him for cocktails. Milo is a former hairdresser who now owns a chain of hair salons, and is having an affair with Wyke’s estranged wife Marguerite.

At first, Milo enjoys his visit – until Wyke reveals that he's aware of Milo's affair with his wife, and draws his guest into a web of intrigue and gamesmanship that spirals out of both men's hands. Rather than being angry, Wyke advises Milo that he will need a significant source of income to keep Marguerite happy, and suggests Milo steal an assortment of his wife’s jewellery, then fence the belongings for cash. To Milo, it sounds like the perfect plan, but is in effect merely the beginning of an escalating game of one-upmanship between the two men. Milo's revenge is acted out ever so courteously, but from psychological sparring it soon becomes a game of deadly cat-and-mouse between the two protagonists. The film has so many plot twists that it is suffice to say that the viewer is kept guessing right up until the very end.