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Singing Detective, The

Mixed or average reviews
Based on 33 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 5 votes
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Movie Info
Genre(s): Comedy | Drama | Musical | Mystery
Written by: Dennis Potter
Directed by: Keith Gordon
Release Date:
Theatrical: October 24, 2003
DVD: March 23, 2004
Running Time: 109 minutes, Color
Origin: USA
Summary
RATING: R for strong sexual content, language and some violence
Starring Robert Downey Jr., Robin Wright Penn, Mel Gibson, Jeremy Northam, Katie Holmes, Adrien Brody, Jon Polito, and Carla Gugino
The story of a crime novelist (Downey Jr.) who, languishing in his hospital bed, occupies his time by mapping out a screenplay in his head about a cynical private investigator who doubles as a singer in a dance band. (Paramount Classics)
Also On Metacritic
FILM: Waking the Dead
Also On The Web: Internet Movie Database View The Trailer Official Studio Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
ReelViews James Berardinelli
Works not primarily because it's a strange and original brew, but because it accomplishes its goals without seeming to force things. The blending of reality with dreams, memories, and imagination is done flawlessly.
Read Full Review >New York Post Jonathan Foreman
It is worth catching The Singing Detective to see the brilliant Robert Downey Jr. in another extraordinary performance... Unfortunately, the film itself doesn't really work despite its lineage.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
The movie does not propose to be a comedy, a musical, a film noir story or a medical account. It proposes to be a subjective view of suffering, and the ways this character tries to cope with it. Understand that, and the pieces fall into place.
Read Full Review >Chicago Reader David Schwartz
The musical fantasy scenes in the new Singing Detective are raw and purposely amateurish. Although Gordon sometimes fumbles the tonal shifts of the material, the acting is rock solid.
Read Full Review >Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum
Robert Downey Jr. is great in a role no one less magnetically reckless would dare approach.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia Inquirer Carrie Rickey
I had the sense that Gordon's ambitious, if awkwardly assembled, film had so many terrific ingredients that he felt compelled to use them all. In this case, alas, more is less.
Read Full Review >The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen
At one point, Downey's character is asked, "What are you gonna do with all this rage, this hate?" and he snaps back, "I'll probably just write serious literature." On TV, where the material seemed both serious and literate, that bit of black humour felt prophetic. On film, it's just a good joke.
Read Full Review >Chicago Tribune Michael Wilmington
Despite intelligent, sympathetic direction by Gordon, a brilliant lead performance by Robert Downey Jr. and an adapted script written by Potter himself before his 1991 death, this "Detective" pales next to its predecessor.
Read Full Review >Dallas Observer Luke Y. Thompson
Try to forget about Michael Gambon in Potter's original BBC miniseries; Keith Gordon's film is its own thing, full of Brechtian artifice and oddball humor -- Mel Gibson's old man act in particular.
Read Full Review >New York Magazine Peter Rainer
It’s powerful, all right, and Downey’s performance is lacerating, but missing is any sense of lyricism in Dark’s hallucinatory yearnings. Without that leap of transcendence, this new Singing Detective doesn’t sing.
Read Full Review >Variety Dennis Harvey
Potter's genius for wrapping black humor, poignancy and fantasy in utterly original story concepts lends this "Detective" an immediate fascination that doesn't begin wearing off for some time.
Read Full Review >Film Threat Staff (Not credited)
A genuinely brilliant cast--Robin Wright Penn and Katie Holmes are especially notable--distinctive camerawork, and terrific art design all contribute to this unique blend of fantasy and reality that truly transports the viewer to a magical realm.
Read Full Review >The Hollywood Reporter Kirk Honeycutt
Keith Gordon's brave attempt to make cinematic sense of Potter's 1986 BBC mini "The Singing Detective" at least has the advantage of a screenplay finished by Potter before his death. But problems of style and tone bedevil the earnest effort.
Read Full Review >Village Voice Leslie Camhi
The problems come in the shadow world, where everything's a jumble, where Dark's compositional strategy ("all clues and no solutions") eventually becomes wearing, and Gordon's direction can't hold it all together.
Read Full Review >Seattle Post-Intelligencer Paula Nechak
Despite his harrowing real-life experiences, Downey, good as he is, is simply too young for the part. This callow telling begs for a more mature approach.
Read Full Review >Christian Science Monitor David Sterritt
Potter's trademark devices are all present, including the way characters burst into songs lip-synced to vintage recordings on the sound track.
Read Full Review >The New York Times Dana Stevens
Lurches when it should glide, shouts when it should whisper and mumbles when it should sing.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles Times Kevin Thomas
Too flat and academic to come alive. The film's lack of dimension tends to render much of it banal, and Downey's lengthy harangues, as beautifully wrought as they are, are overly literary, which serves to make this intricate film seem all the more contrived.
Read Full Review >Portland Oregonian Shawn Levy
In a way, the film is a kind of experiment: Can you lop off the bulk of a classic work and still have something worth seeing? On this evidence, the answer is, despite the best intentions and some fine work, sadly no.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Ann Hornaday
At once daring and hackneyed, absorbing and off-putting, a triumph of one sort and, more lastingly, a failure of another.
Read Full Review >San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
Admiring The Singing Detective is easy, and so is appreciating the originality of the story's conceit, the artistry of the actors and the directorial intelligence of Keith Gordon. But loving it would take an act of will.
Read Full Review >Time Richard Schickel
Somehow, by a narrow margin, the film doesn't quite make it. Potter recolored his work a little more sunnily, and it is, perhaps, too compressed; it needs TV's room to digress.
Read Full Review >New York Daily News Jami Bernard
You don't mess with perfection. That is the main reason why The Singing Detective, a virtual remake of the brilliant BBC-TV series of the 80s, falls flat on its psoriatic face.
Read Full Review >Boston Globe Ty Burr
The question that has to be asked is: Why? The original six-part BBC ''Singing Detective'' remains one of the signal achievements in the history of television -- really -- and its release on DVD this past spring puts it easily within reach of the curious.
Read Full Review >Empire Damon Wise
Where Gambon made the perfect misanthrope, Downey doesn't quite fit the role. Astonishingly, despite his drug-related crimes and misdemeanours, he actually seems too innocent to be so crabby and vile.
Read Full Review >Austin Chronicle Marjorie Baumgarten
There’s definitely a certain fascination hovering about The Singing Detective, but after seeing the movie, that fascination turns to perverse dread.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Desson Thomson
Unfortunately, apart from Downey's convincing contribution, the movie feels too contrived, stagy and inorganic to draw any pleasure.
Read Full Review >Salon.com Charles Taylor
Gordon's film is an art-house curio, visually ugly and emotionally and narratively dissonant. Its cheapness and poverty of imagination consistently undermines its ambitions and reduces its complexity to by-the-numbers Freudianism.
Read Full Review >LA Weekly Ron Stringer
The problem for director Keith Gordon is that Potter's script pares down to virtual nothing the very narrative threads that allowed us, in the full-length version, to identify with his prickly protagonist, and knocks us upside the head with a hyperkinetic, disorienting first act from which audiences -- especially those approaching this material cold -- are unlikely to recover.
Read Full Review >Charlotte Observer Lawrence Toppman
See not only the original "Detective" but the Steve Martin-Bernadette Peters film "Pennies From Heaven." If you insist on giving Downey and company $8 instead, you'll be getting wooden nickels from Hell.
Read Full Review >The Onion (A.V. Club) Noel Murray
What this Singing Detective really needed was to be reworked top to bottom, preferably by a writer fleeing some demons of his own.
Read Full Review >Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern
Downey is undone by a woefully amateurish production that, sadly and ironically, looks like a cheap TV show.
What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this movie is 7.8 (out of 10) based on 5 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Andrew R. gave it a9:
Crazy mental trip.
Santi P. gave it a7:
Hilarious! wonderful soundtrack!!!
Jim h. gave it a 9:
This is a critically underrated little gem of a movie. Just before seeing it, I reviewed the BBC six hour television version. While Potter's genius for the telly is hards to beat, the film is offbeat and damn good to boot. Robert Downey's performance rivals the great Michael Gambon's and the use of 50's rock for the song track does not diminish the unique way Potter used lipped-sync numbers to propel the plot. All true Dennis Potter devotees ought to see it.
The wise king gave it a 9:
Brilliant, innovative, and hilarious. this extremely offbeat and original dark comedy succeeds on many levels. robert downey is extraordinary, and the cameo performances are a pleasant surprise. although i was at first offput when i heard the haunting, lyrical, surrealistic 1930s popular music was not utilized (as it was in the BBC series and the Pennies From Heaven film) and a 50s soundtrack was used in its place, this in no way detracted from the film. this was an unexpected treat.
