10 Movies Like ‘The Thursday Murder Club’

The Thursday Murder Club (2025j
The Thursday Murder Club (2025)

Here are Cinephile Corner’s 10 recommendations for movies like The Thursday Murder Club:

A Haunting in Venice

A Haunting in Venice (2023)

A Haunting in Venice fails to break free from the constraints of mediocrity that have dogged the Christie franchise. Kenneth Branagh‘s film, like his prior entries in the series, struggles to deliver the tension and intrigue that should be inherent in the genre.

Read our full review of A Haunting in Venice

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (2022)

Although it’s still setting the pace in terms of quality that other murder mysteries strive for, Netflix’s latest Knives Out installment, Glass Onion, feels like a rehashing of every character arch and narrative beat that the original did so much better.

Read our full review of Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery

Amsterdam

Amsterdam (2022)

There were quite a few misfires from major studios in 2022, but Amsterdam stands with some of the worst ones. To have a film as overstuffed and annoyingly uninteresting as Amsterdam with a cast like Amsterdam is impressive.

Read our full review of Amsterdam

Another Simple Favor

Another Simple Favor (2025)

Another Simple Favor isn’t just a misfire—it’s a symptom of the growing problem with streaming-era content. What once felt like an opportunity to tell smaller, riskier stories has increasingly become a dumping ground for shallow IP extensions that lack any creative spark. This is not a thriller. It’s not even really a movie. It’s plain, dull, and disposable “content.”

Read our full review of Another Simple Favor

Wolfs

Wolfs (2024)

The appeal of Jon Watts’ Wolfs is obvious. The film serves as the long-awaited reunion between George Clooney and Brad Pitt. The two mega movie stars have shared the screen for a handful of projects over the years, most notably the Ocean’s franchise and Burn After Reading.

Read our full review of Wolfs

Bodies Bodies Bodies

Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022)

Stylistically and visually, Bodies Bodies Bodies is a real treat. The scenes are lush and vibrant, and the color design for this film is excellent. As all A24 horror projects go, this film finds its pocket early on and sticks to it. Even with a narrative that can feel generic at this point, Bodies Bodies Bodies excels at amplifying and hyper-intensifying the world around its main plotline.

Read our full review of Bodies Bodies Bodies

The Menu

The Menu (2022)

A mixed bag of ideas and food for thought, Mark Mylod‘s The Menu still excels with winking characters and great visual design. The movie struggles to establish much beyond its own genre beats, but that doesn’t take much away from the crowd-pleasing journey the film goes on.

Read our full review of The Menu

It’s What’s Inside

It's What's Inside (2024)

To its credit, It’s What’s Inside makes a few choices to make itself memorable. The premise is inarguably fascinating, and the consequences of the central plot engine are enticing at times. But It’s What’s Inside becomes frustratingly convoluted, compounded by a set of characters that I simply could not care less about.

Read our review of It’s What’s Inside

The Phoenician Scheme

The Phoenician Scheme (2025)

The Phoenician Scheme finds Wes Anderson at perhaps his most emotionally direct since The Grand Budapest Hotel, yet without sacrificing the signature aesthetic and structural quirks that define his work. Where recent efforts like Asteroid City and The French Dispatch relied heavily on narrative framing devices, nested storytelling, and dense, text-heavy scripts, The Phoenician Scheme plays more like an emotional adventure story—a film that hits hardest on first viewing, even as it leaves behind layers to explore on rewatches.

Read our full review of The Phoenician Scheme

Weapons

Weapons (2025)

Weapons opens with one of the most chilling hooks you’ll hear in any movie this year: at exactly 2:17 a.m., every child from Mrs. Gandy’s class woke up, walked downstairs, opened the front door, stepped into the dark… and never came back. It’s the kind of premise that immediately grabs you, the kind of logline that sells itself in a trailer and sticks in your head for days. Writer-director Zach Cregger, who burst onto the horror scene with 2022’s Barbarian, proves once again that he knows how to start a story with an irresistible, terrifying question.

Read our full review of Weapons

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