The first feature from writer/director Thomas Hardiman, Medusa Deluxe is an innovative and smartly written whodunnit.
When you think of a murder mystery, your mind might immediately wander to the classics of Agatha Christie ā to Poirot or Miss Marple. Or perhaps to the more recent work of Rian Johnson on the
Knives Out films. All of these are bound together by a detective investigating a murder and gradually dragging the truth out of reluctant suspects. You might be lulled into thinking that the murder mystery genre in general is rather generic, and that there are few ways of presenting it in a way thatās new or exciting.
Enter new feature director Thomas Hardimanās murder-at-a-hairdressing-competition movie
Medusa Deluxe.
Throwing us right into the middle of things, we learn in the opening scene from the foul-mouthed, gossip-loving Cleve (
EastEnder's Clare Perkins) that fellow hairdresser Mosca has been murdered. Not just murdered ā scalped.
Of course, being a group of work-obsessed hairdressers at a regional competition, every competitor is a suspect. Not just Cleve, who attracts early suspicion with her lack of regard for the situation, but also Kendra (Harriet Webb), Divine (Kayla Meikle) and the competitionās host Rene (Darrell DāSilva). Also in the mix is Moscaās bereaved partner Angel (played with absolute gusto by Luke Pasqualino, who provides some great physical comedy).
Whatās so utterly refreshing about
Medusa Deluxe is that from this opening scene onward the story is told from the perspective of the suspects, with very little police or detective involvement at all. In fact, thereās never even a police officer on-screen. Thereās no mustache-twirling Poirot here, only the gossiping hairdressers and their heavily made-up models with their sky-high tresses. Thereās some excellent hair and makeup design here courtesy of Scarlett OāConnell and Eugene Souleiman, who really lean into the absurdity of the situation.

In one take, Hardimanās camera follows these flamboyant characters through dimly-lit corridors and into different rooms, where we learn a bit more about their complicated relationships each time. Itās like a game of cinematic Cluedo ā no telling who it was, but it was in the dressing room with the scissors.
Often one-take movies can seem a little bit gimmicky, but here it feels absolutely essential to what Hardimanās trying to achieve. Not only does the camera follow the characters, it stays close and limits what we can see to only what he wants us to know. It adds to the mystery of it all, and it creates a sense of claustrophobic unease that reflects what the characters must be feeling. Theyāre trapped in a building with a killer among them, not allowed to leave until they each speak to the police.
In this sense, not only is
Medusa Deluxe innovatively shot, itās also very tense. But while youāre always waiting for something surprising to happen, it very rarely delivers on this front. In the end, it does feel a bit like itās let most of the air out. The endingās quiet, but it does at least provide a bit of an unexpected twist ā and a cast dance sequence in the credits.
However, like most murder mysteries, the joy of
Medusa Deluxe is really in the search for answers rather than the answers themselves ā and that search is driven by the characters. The cast are blessed with sharp and witty dialogue that they can really sink their teeth into, and watching them bicker with each other never gets old. Clare Perkins and Luke Pasqualino are the two who are really making the most of the filmās dry humour ā Perkins with her sharp tongue and deadpan deliveries and Pasqualino by completely throwing himself into such a flamboyant role.
Itās impressive work from a first-time feature director and writer, and if youāre a murder mystery fan looking for something a little bit different, Hardimanās innovative debut is certainly that.
Medusa Deluxe is in cinemas on 9th June and streaming on Mubi from 4th August.
ā
Thank you for visiting! If youād like to support our attempts to make a non-clickbaity movie website:
Follow Film Stories on Twitter here, and on Facebook here.
Buy our Film Stories and Film Junior print magazines here.
Become a Patron here.
Related Stories
- Queer review | A tequila-soaked tale of obsession
Daniel Craig and Drew Starkey star in Luca Guadagnino's slightly depressing romance that's hard to watch at times. Here's our Queer review.
In a post-war Mexico City, Daniel Craig’s Lee is lonely. A middle-aged American expat drifting from bar to bar with a heroin addiction almost as crippling as his own insecurities, he and a [...]
- Bring Them Down review | Thereās nothing sheepish about this thriller
Christopher Abbott and Barry Keoghan argue over sheep in Christopher Andrews’ thriller. Here’s our Bring Them Down review.
Christopher Abbott has had a busy few months with recent appearances in Kraven The Hunter and Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man. Writer-director Christopher Andrews’ Bring Them Down is a much smaller film than those, but has more power than [...]
- Bird review | A magical drama that never quite takes flight
Fish Tank director Andrea Arnold adds a touch of magical realism to her latest film, starring Barry Keoghan and Nykiya Adams. Here’s our Bird review:
Andrea Arnold is one of the most vibrant voices of British cinema. She first burst onto the scene in the early 2000s with her Oscar-winning short Wasp and second feature Fish [...]