The Thursday Murder Club review: Classy septuagenarian comedy

One doesn’t have to think too hard to come up with the elevator pitch for Netflix’s winning comedy The Thursday Murder Club. It’s Only Murders In The Building at an upscale British retirement community, rather than an Upper West Side apartment building; it stars a quartet of classically trained thespians instead of two American comedy legends. And while, yes, The Thursday Murder Club is technically based on a Richard Osman novel that predates the debut of Hulu’s true-crime-inspired series, there’s clearly a bit of a feedback loop in this whimsical adaptation from director Chris Columbus. 

Only Murders and The Thursday Murder Club both trade in twee aesthetics, “cozy” murder mysteries, and jokes about aging. But there’s another key difference beyond their settings. In Only Murders, the comedy stems from Steve Martin and Martin Short turning themselves into lovable buffoons who are far less competent than they think they are. In The Thursday Murder Club, however, it’s the savvy septuagenarians who get the last laugh as the rest of the world underestimates them. As one character puts it: “Many of them were very strong, very powerful in their time.” The Thursday Murder Club suggests their time is still now.

The club is run by a group of friends who want to remain useful to the world as they spend their golden years at the ritzy retirement community Coopers Chase. Their focus: trying to solve cold cases the police have long-since abandoned. Retired psychiatrist Ibrahim Arif (Ben Kingsley) brings an attentive psychological perspective. Former trade unionist Ron Ritchie (Pierce Brosnan) provides working-class gumption. Sweet retired nurse Joyce Meadowcroft (Celia Imrie) is roped in as the group’s newest member, thanks to her lifetime of medical expertise and talent at whipping up cakes. And club leader Elizabeth Best (Helen Mirren) brings the dogged determination of a woman who may or may not have once been an international spy. 

As their latest cold case refuses to warm up, the group stumble upon the ultimate coup for a murder club: They overhear Coopers Chase co-owners Ian Ventham (David Tennant) and Tony Curran (Geoff Bell) arguing, only for Tony to wind up bludgeoned to death in his home. Suddenly they’ve got an active murder case on their hands. And with some insider details from a friendly local cop (Naomi Ackie), they’re determined to solve it—especially since their prime suspect now has free reign to kick the retirees out of Coopers Chase and turn it into luxury apartments instead.

With so many pieces on the board, the plot becomes convoluted at times, and while Columbus is a steady hand at the directorial wheel, the film relies on gorgeous production design to make up for its uninspired cinematography. But befitting the genre, it’s the murderers’ row of actors who are the real reason to watch. The film spins its set-up out into a sprawling tale of intrigue that eventually includes Ron’s famous ex-boxer son Jason (Tom Ellis), a notorious crime lord played by Richard E. Grant, and Jonathan Pryce, who serves up gentle pathos as Elizabeth’s memory-addled husband. Front-and-center, Kingsley, Brosnan, and Imrie know exactly how to play their endearing pensioner archetypes, injecting jolts of light comedy into this tale of death and revenge.

But it’s Mirren who elevates the film beyond the syrupier impulses of other elder statesmen comedies like The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel or Book Club. In her hands, Elizabeth is a whipsmart, determined protagonist worth rooting for—one who doesn’t need to learn a lesson about seizing life by the horns again because it’s clear she never stopped. She’s a character with dignity and self-possession in a way you don’t usually see in the “elder comedy” genre, which often falls back on jokes about old people acting like teenagers. Her performance gives the film a backbone that makes its familiar set-up actually feel fresh.

It’s lovely to see a comedy like this genuinely respect its aging protagonists, even if it still makes jokes about their inability to answer a smartwatch call or open a PDF. If The Thursday Murder Club has a central flaw, it’s that it’s more affable than laugh-out-loud funny or especially clever. In that way, it winds up feeling more like an appetizer than a full meal. In fact, with such an appealing heroine and such an engaging yet underexplored world, you could easily imagine The Thursday Murder Club as a supersized pilot to an ongoing series where the gang solve a new crime each week. Given that Osman has already published three sequels with another installment on the way, there could very well be a film franchise plan in the works too. If so, this debut entry makes the case for keeping your Thursdays free to join. 

Director: Chris Columbus
Writer: Katy Brand, Suzanne Heathcote
Starring: Helen Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, Ben Kingsley, Celia Imrie, Naomi Ackie, Daniel Mays, Henry Lloyd-Hughes, Tom Ellis, Jonathan Pryce, David Tennant, Paul Freeman, Geoff Bell, Richard E. Grant, Ingrid Oliver
Release Date: August 22, 2025; August 28, 2025 (Netflix)


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