
A determined young man, who happens to be blind, strives for success in wrestling while navigating the challenges of graduation. He faces prejudice and overcomes obstacles, proving his strength and skill on the mat and defying preconceived notions about what he can achieve. His journey is one of perseverance, self-discovery, and the pursuit of dreams against the odds.
Does A Shot in the Dark have end credit scenes?
No!
A Shot in the Dark does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of A Shot in the Dark, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.
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70
Metascore
7.6
User Score
72
%
User Score
Challenge your knowledge of A Shot in the Dark with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
Who plays the bumbling Inspector Clouseau in the film?
Peter Sellers
Herbert Lom
Elke Sommer
Louis de Funès
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Discover all the awards and nominations received by A Shot in the Dark, from Oscars to film festival honors. Learn how A Shot in the Dark and its cast and crew have been recognized by critics and the industry alike.
19th British Academy Film Awards 1966
Best Costume Design
Read the complete plot summary of A Shot in the Dark, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
Late at night, the country home of millionaire Benjamin Ballon becomes a tense labyrinth of whispered moves and shadowed glances. The old house, filled with polished furniture and a web of private loyalties, hosts a close-knit staff and family whose secrets could fill several lifetimes. The household comprises Ballon’s wife, Dominique; the head butler, Henri LaFarge, and his wife, Madame LaFarge, the cook; Miguel Ostos, the head chauffeur; Pierre, the second chauffeur, and his wife Dudu, the head maid; Georges, the gardener, and his wife Simone, the second maid; Maria Gambrelli, the third maid; and Maurice, the second butler. Each person moves with a practiced caution as if the night itself might betray them, and every room holds a potential witness to a crime that has already begun to unsettle the manor’s delicate equilibrium.
When gunshots ring out, the quiet unraveling reaches a fever pitch. Miguel Ostos is found dead in the room of Maria Gambrelli Elke Sommer, the tension mounting as the remaining occupants scramble to explain the chaos. The shock multiplies as Inspector Clouseau Peter Sellers, the famously blundering detective of the Sûreté, arrives on the scene with his faithful assistant Hercule Lajoy. The initial suspicion falls on Maria, who is found clinging to the gun that killed Miguel, yet the situation is far too slippery to settle in a single obvious explanation. Soon, the investigation is commandeered by Commissioner Dreyfus Herbert Lom, who fears Clouseau’s bungling of a high-profile case almost as much as the murders themselves.
In a dramatic turn of events, Clouseau is temporarily removed from the case, only to be reinstated the next day thanks to Ballon’s political clout and a rigid, almost ritual, training session with his manservant, Cato. As Clouseau dives into the muddied waters of alibis and motives, he insists Maria Gambrelli remains innocent—though he believes she may be protecting the real killer. To keep her under surveillance, he arranges for her release from prison, a decision that will echo during the night’s subsequent revelations. The uneasy balance of the household is shattered when two more murders occur: Georges in the Ballons’ greenhouse and Dudu at a nudist camp. The evidence—carefully planted to seem connected to Maria—keeps pointing toward Maria Gambrelli, leaving Clouseau in the uncomfortable position of maintaining her innocence while others tighten the net around her.
Dreyfus’s concern grows as Clouseau’s unwavering theory threatens to topple the entire case. The inspector’s bold, if eccentric, logic forces Dreyfus to confront the possibility that Ballon himself could be shielding someone connected to Maria. The investigation spirals into a public spectacle of arrogance and misdirection, and Clouseau’s stubborn faith in Maria’s innocence becomes a source of consternation for the normally unflappable Dreyfus. The tension reaches a new apex when Henri, the Ballons’ servant, is found dead in Maria’s closet, prompting another order to remove Clouseau from the case. Yet the stubborn detective remains, convinced that the truth about the murders remains buried beneath layers of deception.
As the case deepens, Dreyfus’s anxiety and Clouseau’s single-minded pursuit push each man toward a dangerous brink. Clouseau’s pursuit goes on a personal journey as well, with security measures tightening around Maria Gambrelli and the household under the glare of public attention. The night escalates into a crescendo of peril: a stalker targets Clouseau at several locations, including his own apartment, and innocent bystanders are killed in the crossfire of a manhunt that has spiraled beyond control. The mounting notoriety of the case threatens to expose every fragility in Clouseau’s reasoning, and Dreyfus’s grip on reality begins to slip as the investigation grows more chaotic.
In a bold, almost theatrical confrontation, Clouseau forces the Ballon household to assemble for a final, truth-seeking reveal. The moment of truth arrives with a series of shocking, almost ritual confessions: Dominique reveals she killed Miguel Ostos by mistake, thinking he was her husband and that he was having an affair with Maria; Madame LaFarge confesses to murdering Georges because he was leaving her for Dominique; Simone admits to killing Dudu in order to maintain her affair with Pierre; and Ballon himself admits to killing Henri, driven by the same web of jealousy and desire that tangled the other relationships. Pierre then discloses that Maurice was blackmailing Ballon, adding another layer to the tangled web of motives. In a twist, Dreyfus is revealed to have been the stalker all along, driven to menace Clouseau as part of his own unraveling. He plants a bomb in Clouseau’s car, raising the stakes to a deadly finale.
The climax erupts when Hercule cuts the house lights, throwing everyone into a sudden darkness and chaos. The would-be escapees—Ballon, Dominique, Madame LaFarge, Pierre, Simone, and Maurice—flee toward Clouseau’s car, unaware of the booby-trapped danger they now ride toward. The car explodes as they speed away, a desperate attempt to vanish into the night. In the aftermath, Dreyfus’s sanity collapses under the pressure of his own obsession, dragged away by Hercule as the chaos subsides. Clouseau, momentarily victorious, embraces Maria Gambelli [Elke Sommer] and declares her innocent, only for the moment’s tenderness to be interrupted by a final, sly interruption from Cato.
The case closes on a note of irony and romance: the supposed villainy collapses under the weight of the truth, and the detective’s stubborn faith in Maria’s innocence is vindicated. The film leaves the audience with a paradox—justice served in a way that exposes human frailty, passion, and the unpredictable twists of motive that can turn a seemingly straightforward murder into a sprawling, intimate drama.
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