Fireworks Logo

Latest Gay Additions...

  • Crime Scene Berlin: Nightlife Killer
  • Young Royals
  • RuPaul's Drag Race UK vs the World
  • Toll
  • High & Low - John Galliano
  • Feud: Capote vs. the Swans
  • Since the Last Time We Met
  • Bill Douglas - My Best Friend
  • Rupaul's Drag Race
  • Meet Me Outside
  • Shoulder Dance
  • After Shave with Danny Beard (The)
  • Our Flag Means Death
  • Boy Culture: Generation X
  • RuPaul's Drag Race UK
  • Boys on Film 1-24
  • Golden Age of the American Male (The)
  • Queen of the Universe
  • Willem & Frieda
  • 1946: The Mistranslation That Shifted Culture
  • Cooler Climate (A)
  • Eismayer
  • Burning Days
  • All Our Fears
  • American Horror Story
  • Mr. Leather
  • Jacked
  • Interview with the Vampire
  • Tom Daley: Illegal to Be Me
  • Passion
  • Unlearning to Sleep
  • BROS
  • My Policeman
  • Iguana Like the Sun
  • Why Not You
  • Big Proud Party Agency (The)
  • Adonis X
  • Law of Love (The)
  • It Runs in the Family
  • Queer as Folk

Sleuth

Country: UK, Language: English, 86 mins

  • Director: Kenneth Branagh
  • Writer: Harold Pinter; Anthony Shaffer
  • Producer: Kenneth Branagh; Simon Halfon

CGiii Comment

This screams of arrogance.

Jude Law takes on the young Michael Caine mantle (again) – in this souped-up re-make.

And...it just doesn’t work in the slightest, Law really doesn’t do a very good job at all.

The dialogue is laboured and definitely out-of-date – being Pinter’s last script, it’s a sad farewell.

Branagh’s direction is non-existent, the homo-undertones are too pronounced and, frankly, beyond belief.

This is a re-make that should never have been re-made – or made.

The main impact is lost because (1) the camera is just too close and, (2) Law couldn’t pull it off.


Trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

Two extremely clever British men are in a game of trickery and deceit. Andrew Wyke, an aging famous author who lives alone in a high-tech mansion, after his wife Maggie has left him for a younger man; and Milo Tindle, an aspiring actor, equipped with charm and wit, who demonstrates both qualities once again. When Wyke invites Tindle to his mansion, Tindle seeks to convince the former into letting his wife go by signing the divorce paper. However, Wyke seems far more interested in playing mind games with his wife's new lover, and lures him into a series of actions he thoroughly planned in seeking revenge on his unfaithful spouse.

Cast & Characters

Michael Caine as Andrew;
Jude Law as Milo;
Harold Pinter as Man on T.V.;
Carmel O'Sullivan as Maggie;
Kenneth Branagh as Other Man on T.V.