The Oxford Murders

The Oxford Murders

By Alex De La Iglesia

  • Genre: Thriller
  • Release Date: 2010-08-06
  • Advisory Rating: R
  • Runtime: 1h 48min
  • Director: Alex De La Iglesia
  • Production Company: Telecinco Cinema
  • Production Country: France, Spain, United Kingdom, United States of America
  • iTunes Price: USD 9.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
5.963/10
5.963
From 641 Ratings

Description

A woman is murdered in Oxford. Her body is discovered by two men, Arthur Seldom (John Hurt), a prestigious professor of logic, and Martin (Elijah Wood), a young graduate student who has just arrived at the university hoping to study with Seldom. It quickly becomes clear that this is the first in a series of murders, all of which are announced by the murderer with strange mathematical symbols. Professor and student join forces to try and crack the code, and thus begins an elaborate puzzle, in which nothing is as it seems, and the truth is elusive.

Trailer

Photos

Reviews

  • Excellent!

    5
    By cheshire bee
    After watching this film I cannot comprehend the rotten tomatoes reviews. I was almost put off by those but the trailer proved promising. I thought it had an excellent cast, was well directed and the plot was exceptionally clever. Overall I found it thought provoking, exciting and quite contrary the thoughts expressed by the rotten tomatoes. This film may bring into question the idea of certainty but I would certainly recommend this film to anyone who wanted an english style whodunnit that has some level of thought behind it, a compliment I would sadly struggle to give to most of the films I have seen.
  • Excellent Film

    5
    By Persona1
    A very intelligent demonstration of the distinction between the logical and the psychological, based on a book written by a professional mathematician, who is trained to know the difference. This is also an ideal instance of the undependability of professional critics, who can be depended on for one thing only - never to miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity, to adopt the observation of another well-known logician.

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