When done right, the murder mystery is among the most enjoyable subgenres. It’s great fun trying to piece together clues and guess the twists, especially when the protagonists are likable and the suspects are eccentric. Murder mysteries are also great vehicles to put a bunch of great actors together and let them go wild.
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That said, because the genre elements are a little rigid, it’s hard to find truly great modern murder mysteries. Nevertheless, the last half-century has produced more than a few bangers for fans to enjoy. This list ranks the finest of them, from sprawling conspiracies and serial-killer hunts to cheeky parodies and ingenious locked-room mysteries.
10
‘The Fugitive’ (1993)
“I didn’t kill my wife!” Though perhaps not a murder-mystery movie in the traditional sense, The Fugitive is still incredibly effective at what it does. Harrison Ford leads it as Dr. Richard Kimble, a man who is wrongly convicted of murdering his wife (Sela Ward). Escaping custody during a prison transport accident, he sets out to prove his innocence while simultaneously being hunted by relentless U.S. Marshal Samuel Gerard (Tommy Lee Jones).
The dual narrative structure works really well. The movie is both manhunt and detective story, with Kimble simultaneously investigator and suspect. Kimble painstakingly follows leads, examines records, interviews witnesses, and pieces together a conspiracy step by step, and it’s fun to try and solve the puzzle alongside him. It’s also cool that Gerard is more complicated than your typical antagonist. Rather than being a baddie, he’s just a guy doing his job, but his intelligence and persistence make him a genuine threat nonetheless.
9
‘The Name of the Rose’ (1986)
“The Devil is not the Prince of Matter; the Devil is the arrogance of the spirit.” Based on Umberto Eco‘s brilliant novel, The Name of the Rose blends philosophy, historical drama, and murder mystery into a unique package. We follow Franciscan friar William of Baskerville (Sean Connery) and his young novice Adso (Christian Slater) as they arrive at a remote medieval monastery where a series of mysterious deaths begins occurring.
The setting is the main thing that sets this movie apart. We’re immersed in a remote fourteenth-century monastery where knowledge, religion, and politics are deeply intertwined. The place is richly realized, filled with secret passages, forbidden books, theological disputes, and endless intrigue. The mystery itself is exceptionally well constructed, too. The deaths initially appear supernatural, leading many characters to believe divine forces are at work. The film gradually reveals clues without making the solution obvious, so every revelation feels earned.
8
‘The Usual Suspects’ (1995)
“The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn’t exist.” The Usual Suspects nails its trickery and narrative misdirection with total confidence, which is now practically synonymous with plot twists. The film begins after a deadly explosion destroys a ship in San Pedro Harbor. Federal agents attempt to determine what happened by interrogating small-time con artist “Verbal” Kint (Kevin Spacey). What follows is a story within a story, where nothing is as it seems.
Verbal recounts how he and four other criminals became involved in a dangerous scheme connected to the legendary crime lord Keyser Söze. This premise could have been run-of-the-mill for the crime genre, but the script gets unusually layered with it. Every scene raises new questions about motives, loyalties, and hidden agendas. The audience is constantly re-evaluating previous assumptions as fresh information emerges. When it hits, the ending is shocking yet totally justified.
7
‘Who Framed Roger Rabbit’ (1988)
“I’m not bad. I’m just drawn that way.” Beneath its groundbreaking visual effects and zany sensibility, Who Framed Roger Rabbit is fundamentally an entertaining detective story. Private investigator Eddie Valiant (Bob Hoskins) is enlisted to uncover the truth after cartoon star Roger Rabbit (Charles Fleischer) is accused of murdering businessman Marvin Acme (Stubby Kaye). Eddie’s searches bring to light a dark conspiracy involving corporate greed and destructive urban development.
The movie has gleeful fun with noir and cartoon tropes alike. Eddie is a classic cynical detective, complete with personal demons and a distrust of the world around him. Jessica Rabbit (Kathleen Turner), likewise, serves as a variation on the femme fatale archetype, and the plot itself is loaded with secrets and powerful figures operating from the shadows. The big third-act reveal is great, perfectly sold by Christopher Lloyd‘s absurd performance.
6
‘Gosford Park’ (2001)
“I suppose one should always know one’s place.” A later-career masterpiece from director Robert Altman, Gosford Park transforms a traditional country-house murder mystery into a sharp examination of class. Set during a weekend gathering at an English estate in the 1930s, the film follows an enormous ensemble of aristocrats and servants whose lives intersect before and after a wealthy host is murdered.
All these narrative plates spin in perfect harmony thanks to Altman’s assured touch and the talents of the stacked cast, including the likes of Michael Gambon, Maggie Smith, Charles Dance, Emily Watson, and Helen Mirren. Characters who seem insignificant at first gradually emerge as crucial figures, while supposedly important people often prove less influential than they appear. The script by Downton Abbey‘s Julian Fellowes is witty and entertaining, without skimping on the juiciness of the murder mystery itself.
5
‘Hot Fuzz’ (2007)
“Nobody tells me nothing.” Another banger that mocks murder mystery conventions while also nailing them. In the second installment of the Cornetto Trilogy, Simon Pegg plays Nicholas Angel, an exceptionally competent London police officer who is reassigned to the seemingly idyllic village of Sandford. Once there, Angel begins noticing a suspicious pattern of fatal “accidents” occurring around town.
The mystery gradually expands from isolated deaths into something far larger and more absurd. The film is endlessly rewatchable because seemingly throwaway lines often turn out to be important pieces of the puzzle, and the suspense and silliness coexist perfectly. At the same time, Hot Fuzz is just awesome as an action-comedy, anchored by the chemistry between Pegg and Nick Frost. They’re assisted by equally charming supporting work from Jim Broadbent, Timothy Dalton, Olivia Colman, and Paddy Considine.
4
‘Zodiac’ (2007)
“I need to know who he is.” Most murder mysteries promise answers; Zodiac is a classic precisely because it cannot provide them. This dark David Fincher gem chronicles the real-life hunt for the Zodiac Killer, who terrorized Northern California during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Rather than focusing solely on the crimes themselves, the movie examines the journalists, detectives, and investigators (led by Jake Gyllenhaal, Mark Ruffalo, and Robert Downey Jr.) who become obsessed with identifying the murderer, their lives gradually stabilized by the puzzle they cannot solve.
The movie’s commitment to realism is impressive. Fincher gets granula with the investigation, capturing how exhausting it is, how the characters are demoralized by dead ends and conflicting clues. This approach applies to the protagonists’ psychology as well. All are affected by the case; you can only stare into the abyss so long before it starts staring back into you.
3
‘Knives Out’ (2019)
“The family is truly desperate.” In an era dominated by franchises and reboots, Knives Out was a nice reminder of how entertaining an original murder mystery can be. Rian Johnson‘s smash hit begins after wealthy crime novelist Harlan Thrombey (Christopher Plummer) is found dead shortly after his eighty-fifth birthday celebration. Although authorities initially suspect suicide, renowned detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig, replacing his Bond suave with a colorful Southern drawl) believes something more sinister may be occurring.
The tale that follows strikes a neat balance between old and new. Johnson clearly loves the works of Agatha Christie, and the movie is filled with eccentric suspects, hidden motives, family secrets, and clever clues reminiscent of her best work. Yet the screenplay constantly finds fresh ways to surprise audiences without betraying the rules of the genre. Audiences responded; Knives Out was a success and spawned a franchise on Netflix.
2
‘Memories of Murder’ (2003)
“As long as all the evidence points to him, he’s our suspect.” Memories of Murder is Bong Joon-ho‘s procedural masterpiece. Based on South Korea’s first documented serial murder case, it follows two detectives (Song Kang-ho and Kim Sang-kyung) investigating a series of brutal murders in a rural province during the 1980s. Their work drags on, becoming increasingly desperate and psychologically draining.
The detectives have very different approaches, and that clash produces a lot of drama, but both are human and three-dimensional, not simply archetypes or plot devices. Plus, as with Zodiac, the story is less concerned with delivering a satisfying solution than with exploring the emotional consequences of uncertainty. It’s a damning social commentary on top of being a crime tale, with a lot to say about the human cost of institutional failure.
1
‘Se7en’ (1995)
“What’s in the box?” Fincher strikes again. This grim, philosophical noir follows detectives William Somerset (Morgan Freeman) and David Mills (Brad Pitt) as they delve into a series of murders inspired by the seven deadly sins. Each crime scene reveals another horrifying piece of a larger design orchestrated by the elusive John Doe. Somerset’s weary cynicism clashes with Mills’ idealism, creating emotional and intellectual tension throughout the investigation.
What makes Se7en the greatest murder mystery of the last fifty years is the way it combines procedural investigation with psychological, even existential horror. The clues do not merely point toward a suspect, but rather reveal a fatalistic worldview. Even Somerset cannot claim that the world is a good place. This mood comes through in the aesthetics, too: the city feels permanently drenched in rain and decay. All in all, a bleak, depressing masterpiece.











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