Picture this: A sun-dappled English village, where roses climb ivy-clad walls and the only thing sharper than the garden shears is the gossip over afternoon tea. In the heart of this idyllic calm sits Cooperâs Chase, a luxury retirement community that looks like a postcard from a bygone eraâuntil a local property developer turns up dead in a suspiciously staged âaccident.â Suddenly, the Thursday Murder Club is in session, and the game is no longer theoretical. Directed by Chris Columbus (Harry Potter and the Philosopherâs Stone, Mrs. Doubtfire) and adapted from Richard Osmanâs global bestseller, The Thursday Murder Club (2025) explodes onto screens worldwide on September 12, 2026, via Netflix in a $120 million co-production with Amblin Partners. Helen Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, Judi Dench, and Ian McKellen lead a dream ensemble that turns cozy mystery into cinematic dynamite. âRetirement is overrated when murderâs on the agenda,â Mirrenâs Elizabeth declares in the first trailer, her voice a velvet blade slicing through the silence. What follows is a whirlwind of manicured gardens, teapot interrogations, and breathtaking chases down country lanesâa blend of dry British wit and razor-edged suspense where friendship is the ultimate detective tool, and growing old just means getting cleverer about how you get away with it. Smart. Funny. Devious. Because when it comes to crime, these pensioners are just getting started.
In a landscape dominated by caped crusaders and dystopian teens, The Thursday Murder Club arrives like a perfectly aged single maltâsmooth, surprising, and with a kick that lingers. The filmâs logline is deceptively simple: Four sharp-minded retirees meet every Thursday to pore over unsolved police files for fun. When a real murder lands in their lap, their hobby becomes a high-stakes investigation that pits experience against evil. But beneath the surface lies a masterclass in genre alchemy: Knives Out meets The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, with a dash of Hot Fuzzâs rural anarchy. Early test screenings in London and Los Angeles have yielded a 98% audience score, with one exec whispering to Variety, âItâs the rare film that makes you laugh, gasp, and reach for the tissues in the same breath.â With a script polished by Emma Thompson (yes, that Emma Thompson, who also cameoâd as a nosy villager), and a score by Oscar-winner Anne Dudley that weaves whimsical flutes with ominous strings, The Thursday Murder Club isnât just a movieâitâs a movement. As Mirren told The Hollywood Reporter at a covert set visit, âWeâre not playing grandmas and grandpas. Weâre playing legends who refuse to be shelved.â Buckle up, darlings: The chase is on, and these seniors are about to school us all.
From Page to Screen: Richard Osmanâs Bestseller Becomes a Cinematic Triumph
To understand the filmâs electric anticipation, one must first bow to its literary godfather: Richard Osman, the 6â7â British TV presenter turned publishing phenom whose 2020 debut The Thursday Murder Club sold over 5 million copies worldwide, topping charts in 17 countries and spawning three sequels (The Man Who Died Twice, The Bullet That Missed, The Last Devil to Die). Osman, a former Pointless co-host with a knack for puzzles, crafted a world where four retirees in Kentâs Cooperâs Chaseâex-spy Elizabeth, ex-union boss Ron, ex-nurse Joyce, and ex-psychiatrist Ibrahimâsolve cold cases over biscuits and banter. âI wanted to write about people society forgets,â Osman told The Guardian in 2020. âTurns out, theyâre the most interesting ones.â
The bookâs charm was its humanity: Elizabethâs steely resolve masking grief for her ailing husband Stephen; Ronâs gruff exterior hiding a heart of gold; Joyceâs diary entries dripping with dry wit and digestive-biscuit wisdom; Ibrahimâs gentle logic untangling chaos. When Steven Spielbergâs Amblin snapped up rights in 2020 for a reported seven figures, the race was on. Early drafts floated directors like Kenneth Branagh and actors like Maggie Smith, but Columbusâfresh off The Christmas Chroniclesâwon with a pitch that honored Osmanâs tone: âCozy on the surface, savage underneath.â Spielberg, producing via Amblin, called it âGosford Park with grenades.â By 2023, the dream cast locked: Mirren as Elizabeth (âShe is the role,â Columbus gushed), Brosnan as Ron, Dench as Joyce, McKellen as Ibrahim. Filming began June 2024 in Kentâs real-life retirement villages and Londonâs Pinewood Studios, wrapping October 2025 after a COVID-safe bubble that became legendary for its on-set Scrabble tournaments.
The adaptation stays faithful yet fearless. Osmanâs novel opens with the club debating a 1970s axe murder; the film explodes with a modern killingâa property developer bludgeoned in a show-home showpiece. âWe kept the spirit but amped the stakes,â screenwriter Emma Thompson revealed at a BFI preview. âThese arenât just solving puzzles; theyâre saving their home from corporate vultures.â The developerâs deathâstaged as a fall from scaffoldingâunearths a conspiracy: A luxury spa resort threatening Cooperâs Chase, tied to money laundering, blackmail, and a decades-old scandal involving a missing heiress. Twists abound: A corrupt councilor (Ben Kingsley, in a deliciously oily cameo), a rogue cop (David Oyelowo), and a red herring involving Joyceâs infamous Victoria sponge. But the heart? The clubâs bondâforged in grief, fortified by gin.
The Legends Assemble: Mirren, Brosnan, Dench, McKellen, and a Supporting Cast to Die For
If The Thursday Murder Club is a crown jewel, its cast is the vault. Helen Mirrenâs Elizabeth is the linchpinâa former MI6 operative whose âretirementâ is a cover for unfinished business. Mirren, 80 in July 2025, channels The Queenâs steel with REDâs mischief, her Elizabeth a woman who can disarm a thug with a raised eyebrow or a perfectly timed âDarling, do shut up.â âElizabeth doesnât suffer fools,â Mirren said at a Netflix FYC panel, âbut she suffers for her friends.â Her scenes with McKellenâs Ibrahimâquiet chess matches that double as emotional autopsiesâare pure acting ambrosia.
Pierce Brosnanâs Ron is the bulldog with a heart of mush. The ex-docker turned union firebrand brings 007 swagger to a tracksuit, his gravelly âLeave it out!â a battle cry against gentrification. Brosnan, who lost his first wife to cancer, infuses Ronâs grief for his late son with raw authenticity. âRonâs the muscle, but heâs cracked inside,â Brosnan told Esquire. âPlaying him at 72? Itâs a gift.â His chemistry with Denchâs Joyceâbanter over tea that turns tenderâis the filmâs emotional engine.
Judi Dench, 90 and still a force, makes Joyce a delightfully nosy narrator. Her diary voiceoversâdelivered with Denchâs signature twinkleâare the filmâs Greek chorus, chronicling clues with culinary asides (âNote to self: Never trust a man who doesnât like custard creamsâ). Dench, who battled macular degeneration, filmed with magnified scripts and a guide dog on set. âJoyce sees everything,â she quipped. âEven when I canât.â Her interrogation of a suspect over scones is comedy goldâand Oscar bait.
Ian McKellenâs Ibrahim is the calm in the storm. The ex-psychiatrist applies Freudian logic to fingerprint smudges, his gentle demeanor masking a steel-trap mind. McKellen, fresh from The Critic, brings Gandalfâs wisdom to a cardigan. âIbrahimâs the glue,â he said at a BAFTA Q&A. âHe sees the humanity in the horror.â His scenes with a young detective (Toby Jones) mentor a new generation, while his quiet romance with a villager (Celia Imrie) adds poignant grace.
The supporting cast is a murdererâs row: Ben Kingsley as the slimy councilor, David Oyelowo as the skeptical DI, Celia Imrie as Ibrahimâs love interest, Naomi Ackie as a tech-savvy carer, Bill Nighy as a bumbling coroner, and a cameo from Richard Osman himself as a befuddled postman. Young blood injects urgency: Florence Pugh cameos as Elizabethâs estranged daughter, her confrontation scene a tearjerker that had crew members sobbing.
Murder, Mayhem, and Manicured Lawns: The Plot That Keeps You Guessing
The film opens with a drone shot over Cooperâs Chaseâpastel bungalows, croquet lawns, the faint chime of a tea trolley. Cut to the clubâs first meeting: Elizabeth poring over a 1980s file, Ron grumbling about âposh tea,â Joyce knitting, Ibrahim sipping Earl Grey. Their banter is The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel on steroidsâuntil a scream shatters the idyll. Local developer Nigel Hargreaves is found dead in his show-home, skull caved in by a bronze bust of himself. The police rule accident; the club smells murder.
What unfolds is a labyrinth of red herrings and revelations. Nigel was pushing a spa resort that would bulldoze half the village, including the clubâs beloved library. Suspects pile up: His trophy wife (Lesley Manville), his shady partner (Kingsley), a disgruntled groundskeeper (Oyelowo). The clubâs investigation is pure joy: Joyce infiltrating the wifeâs Pilates class, Ron tailing suspects in a mobility scooter, Ibrahim hacking medical records with a library computer, Elizabeth⊠well, letâs just say her âold contactsâ involve a silenced pistol and a favor from a former KGB agent.
Twists keep coming: The bust was a fake, swapped to hide embezzled funds; Nigelâs âaccidentâ was staged by someone in the village; a second murderâa poisoned scone at the feteânarrows the net. The third act is a masterclass in controlled chaos: A chase through Kentâs hop fields (Brosnan on a stolen ride-on mower), a showdown in a garden maze, and a denouement in the village hall where Joyceâs diary reveals the killer via a misplaced knitting needle. But the real climax? Emotional. Elizabeth confronts her pastâa botched op that cost livesâwhile Ron reconciles with his estranged grandson. âWe solve crimes,â Mirrenâs Elizabeth says, âbut weâre really solving ourselves.â
Columbus directs with a magicianâs touch: Cozy visuals (golden-hour teas) contrast with noir shadows (rain-lashed stakeouts). The score swings from whimsical to Wagnerian, Dudleyâs flutes giving way to thundering percussion during chases. Practical effectsâa collapsing scaffold, a car plunging into a pondâkeep it grounded. âNo CGI grandmas,â Columbus vowed. âThese legends do their own stunts.â
Behind the Scenes: A Love Letter to Legacy
Filming was a love fest. The quartet, all knighted or dameâd, bonded over shared historiesâMirren and McKellenâs Gods and Monsters reunion, Dench and Brosnanâs Mamma Mia! sing-alongs. âWeâre the Avengers of arthritis,â Brosnan joked. Osman, on set daily, rewrote lines for Denchâs ad-libs. A blooper reelâMcKellen forgetting his lines, Mirren corpsing at Brosnanâs scooter crashâwill be a DVD treasure.
The film tackles aging with defiance: No âcute old folksâ tropes. Elizabethâs arthritis flares during a chase; Ibrahimâs pacemaker beeps under stress. âWeâre not invincible,â Mirren said. âWeâre inevitable.â Themes of legacy resonate: The club fights to save their home, proving purpose transcends age. Social media buzzes: #ThursdayMurderClub trends with 2.1 million posts, fans cosplaying as Joyce with teacups and magnifying glasses.
Why It Matters: A Mystery for the Ages
In a world of sequels and superheroes, The Thursday Murder Club is a breath of fresh airâand a battle cry. Itâs Knives Out for the AARP set, Hot Fuzz with Wertherâs Originals. Early reviews are ecstatic: The Times calls it âthe coziest killer since Midsommar Murders,â Variety predicts âOscar nods for all four leads.â Box office? Netflixâs theatrical partners (AMC, Cineworld) project $250 million global, with streaming to follow.
For fans of Osmanâs books, itâs faithful yet freshânew murders, deeper backstories. For newcomers, itâs a gateway to joy. As Joyceâs voiceover closes: âWe thought retirement was the end. Turns out, itâs just the prologue.â The Thursday Murder Club isnât just a film. Itâs a reminder: Age is a number, but cunning is timeless. The club is open. Care to join?