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Who Killed Aunt Maggie?

Who Killed Aunt Maggie? (1940)

November. 01,1940
|
7
| Crime Mystery

When a much-despised matriarch is murdered, or apparently murdered, all of her relatives and "friends" fall under suspicion. Sheriff Gregory is the official investigator, but most of the clue gathering is done by amateur sleuths Kirk Pierce and Sally Ambler.

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Reviews

TrueHello
1940/11/01

Fun premise, good actors, bad writing. This film seemed to have potential at the beginning but it quickly devolves into a trite action film. Ultimately it's very boring.

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ChanFamous
1940/11/02

I wanted to like it more than I actually did... But much of the humor totally escaped me and I walked out only mildly impressed.

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Kaydan Christian
1940/11/03

A terrific literary drama and character piece that shows how the process of creating art can be seen differently by those doing it and those looking at it from the outside.

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Rexanne
1940/11/04

It’s sentimental, ridiculously long and only occasionally funny

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gridoon2018
1940/11/05

No, no, I'm kidding. The butler didn't do it, in fact there is no butler in this movie - in his place there is a stereotypically easily-scared-out-of-his-mind black errand man (he didn't do it, either). You could argue that everything about "Who Killed Aunt Maggie?", from the dark and stormy night and the old house with possible but still undiscovered secret rooms to the disappearance of the dead bodies and the family of suspects, is stereotypical, but at least it's done in a rather self-aware way. The movie doesn't seem to aim any higher than just being a fast-moving, instantly forgettable mystery programmer, and at that it succeeds. One particularly funny scene has a character trying to find the secret room behind a bookcase - only to have the entire bookcase fall on him! ** out of 4.

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dbborroughs
1940/11/06

Call me bewildered, this one gets a 8.9 out of 10 by the people rating the films here at IMDb. All I have to say is what version did they see? Its good but it's not that good.The plot of this film has a writer of radio show and the sponsor in love and fighting on the wedding day. He can't believe that anyone would buy into the old dark house radio show she's written. She bails on the wedding and heads home where strange things are going on much like her radio show. Her beau eventually arrives and thinks its all a joke, except its not.Good old dark house spoof ala haunted honeymoon or similar films suffers from way too much comedy (there is no tension) and a way too knowing attitude (there is no tension). Its not bad, but it isn't a 9 out of ten, think more like six, maybe seven out of ten.

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1940/11/07

I'm a fan of "Old House" movies and, when i heard about THIS one, i tried to get it for a long time.When i finally DID, i was very disappointed. It's easy to spot the murderer, but that's not what makes it so disappointing.This film has a top-notch cast - Eliz Paterson, Willie Best, Joyce Compton, Milton Parsons, Wendie Barrie, etc -- ALL veteran "Old House" actors. AND, a screenplay by the fantastic Stuart Palmer!But, the movie drags on & on, with the usual "cut phone wires", "cars put out of commission", etc.....it would've benefited from some real SCARES.It drags along, to an ending that doesn't make much sense. Don't waste your time on THIS one, unless you're a die-hard fan!

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cinema_universe
1940/11/08

"Who Killed Aunt Maggie?" is very typical of the B-movie mystery. It takes place in a remote and spooky old house. And most of the action takes place on a dark and stormy night.All the clichés of this type of film are used. Secret passageways, cut phone lines (so no one can call the police), disabled cars (also, so no one can fetch the police). It has three murders, disappearing corpses, a secret diary written in code, and even a black cat thrown in for good measure.Sounds like a lot of tripe? Well it is, but it's handled with great skill by a veteran cast of character actors. Elizabeth Patterson as Aunt Maggie is wonderful. Willie Best, typecast as the terrified black butler, does a great job with his material (and he was given some pretty good lines). In fact, his comic talent does much to carry this story. Edgar Kennedy as the sheriff does his usual "slow burn" routines, Wendie Barrie is her at her best, and the staid Walter Abel is typically poker-faced. The rest of the cast does a great job as well.It's fairly easy to figure out who the killer is, but who cares? I always enjoy watching this programmer and I recommend it to anyone who can find it! (It's not easy digging up a copy of this film). I'm a fan of B-movie spooky-house mysteries, and was delighted to see this film. I rated it 9.

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