Trail Of The Pink Panther - Movie Review

  • 26 January 2006

Rating: 2 out of 5

In 1980, Peter Sellers died. In 1982, Trail of the Pink Panther, with Sellers as the headliner, was released by a studio hungry to capitalize further on the popular series.

Trail certainly isn't historically unique in its use of archival footage to create a role for a passed-on movie star, but it's inarguably one of the ballsiest attempts at it. Sellers isn't some bit player (like Lawrence Olivier in Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow), he's the star. He's Inspector freakin' Clouseau, and he's in more than half of the running time of the film.

How'd they pull this off? Well, an increasingly desperate Blake Edwards figured he'd use footage of Sellers he shot for The Pink Panther Strikes Again in 1976 but didn't use. These are intercut with new footage of the likes of David Niven and Herbert Lom, regulars from the Panther series. A basic plot is created from the old footage, as Clouseau is recruited to find (for the third time) the stolen Pink Panther diamond, but his plane vanishes. A TV reporter (Joanna Lumley) interviews his old compatriots, who reminisce and speculate about what might have happened. (Cue speculative flashback/forward.) Think of it as the cinematic version of a sitcom clip show.

Owing to its nature, many of the scenes in Trail are uncannily familiar, and while there's a certain nostalgia to the movie, rehashing a much better film in this way simply isn't effective. Edwards goes to outrageous links to mask what must have been obvious to everyone in the audience -- that Sellers was two years in the ground -- and, with few exceptions, it simply doesn't work. (In fact, Sellers' widow sued the studio for tarnishing his image, and she won.)

Image caption Trail of the Pink Panther

Facts and Figures

Year: 1982

Genre: Comedies

Run time: 96 mins

In Theaters: Friday 17th December 1982

Box Office Worldwide: $7.2M

Production compaines: Titan Productions, Blake Edwards, United Artists, Lakeline Productions Ltd., Amjo Productions

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 2 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 25%
Fresh: 3 Rotten: 9

IMDB: 4.9 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Blake Edwards

Producer: Tony Adams, Blake Edwards

Screenwriter: Frank Waldman, Tom Waldman, Blake Edwards, Geoffrey Edwards

Starring: Peter Sellers as Chef Inspektor Jacques Clouseau, David Niven as Sir Charles Litton, Herbert Lom as Chef Inspektor Charles Dreyfus, Richard Mulligan as Clouseau's Father, William Hootkins as Taxi Driver

Also starring: Joanna Lumley, Robert Loggia, Harvey Korman, Burt Kwouk, Tony Adams, Blake Edwards, Frank Waldman, Tom Waldman