
The Mirror Crack'd
1980 • Crime, Mystery, Thriller • PG
Jane Marple solves the mystery when a local woman is poisoned and a visiting movie star seems to have been the intended victim.
Runtime: 1h 45m
Why you should read the novel
Before you watch the film, uncover Agatha Christie's original puzzle in The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side. The Miss Marple novel delivers layered psychology, razor-sharp clues, and the unforgettable Lady of Shalott motif that the movie can only hint at.
On the page, St Mary Mead is alive with telling details—changing times, village gossip, and subtle character beats that fuel Miss Marple’s deduction. Christie’s prose turns everyday observations into evidence, rewarding attentive readers with fair-play clues and satisfying reveals.
If you love classic British crime fiction, the source novel offers the definitive experience: richer motives, deeper characterization, and a meticulously constructed mystery. Read Agatha Christie’s The Mirror Crack’d from Side to Side to enjoy the story exactly as the Queen of Crime intended.
Adaptation differences
Tone and focus: The 1980 movie leans into glossy, star-powered Hollywood satire, heightening the rivalry and camp around the film-within-the-film. The novel is quieter and more psychologically detailed, emphasizing village life, social change, and Miss Marple’s keen observation.
Investigation style: On screen, Miss Marple is more active and mobile, driving the inquiry. In the book, she’s more homebound and solves the case through conversations, memories, and other people’s observations—especially those of her friend Mrs Dolly Bantry, whose role is far more prominent in the novel.
Names and relationships: The victim’s surname is altered from Heather Badcock (novel) to Heather Babcock (film). Inspector Dermot Craddock is explicitly tied to Miss Marple as a relative in the movie, simplifying rapport and access; the book keeps a more formal professional relationship.
Structure and setting: The film streamlines subplots and condenses side characters (such as the Rudds’ entourage and staff) to maintain pace and highlight on-set drama. The novel, set in a contemporaneous St Mary Mead, spends more time on the village’s modernization and domestic rhythms, providing clues and context that the adaptation trims or reassigns.
The Mirror Crack'd inspired from
The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side
by Agatha Christie


















