Product Description
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The marvelous Julia McKenzie (Cranford, Notes on a Scandal)
assumes the Marple mantle in four gripping new adaptations of
Christie novels premiering on PBS this summer. Picturesque
English scenery, grand estates, witty scripts, and lavish
post-WWII period detail provide the perfect frame for
frighteningly fun mysteries (Entertainment Weekly). The fantastic
supporting casts include Matthew Macfadyen (Pride & Prejudice),
Jemma Redgrave (Bramwell), Anna Chancellor (Four Weddings and a
Funeral), Rupert Graves (The Forsyte Saga), Helen Baxendale
(Friends), and Joan Collins (Dynasty).
.com
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For many Agatha Christie murder-mystery fans, Marple: Series 4
may feel odd starring yet another new Jane Marple, Julia
MacKenzie (Cranford). Moreover, this series does apparently take
liberties with screen adaptation; two of its four full-length
episodes, "Murder Is Easy" and "Why Didn't They Ask Evans?" are
not even among the twelve Christie novels Marple appears in. Yet
while Joan Hickson, Margaret Rutherford, Geraldine McEwan, and
ultimately many more have played this classic sleuth in previous
tellings of this character's plight, and while myriad shows, such
as Murder She Wrote have modeled themselves after the illustrious
lady detective Jane, the success of this specific program lies in
the retelling of Christie's wonderfully complex tales of
suspense. Series 4 contains stories woven around death by poison.
Julia MacKenzie's Jane Marple is refreshingly self-assured in
her nosiness, and as always, rtunistically capitalizes on how
"people love talking to old ladies." While the viewer does catch
Marple, on occasion, knitting or enjoying tea, for the most part
she's hard at work afield, in her proper tweed suits. Because of
this, each episode moves quickly. The plots are so thick that one
can hardly keep track of what Marple is learning as she makes
discoveries. In episode one, "A Pocket full of Rye," Rex
Fortescue, a president of an investment firm, dies with a strange
"cereal" in his pocket. Inspector Neele (Matthew MacFadyen) sets
out to Yewtree Lodge, the family estate, where he suspects the
poisonous Yew came from. Marple gets in on the action,
unearthing family secrets about Fortescue's troubled children,
Percyval (Ben Miles), Elaine (Hattie Morahan), and Lancelot
(Rupert Graves), who has been living in Africa. Which kid did it,
one often asks in this series? In most episodes, clues given by
housekeepers and chambermaids--in this case, Gladys (Rose
Heiney)--help solve the case.
Similarly complicated episodes follow, each involving their own
family or village. In "Murder Is Easy," Marple meets by train a
kind-hearted Samaritan, Lavinia Pinkerton (Sylvia Syms), on her
way to Scotland Yard to reveal crimes that have been occurring in
her town. When Marple takes the next train to Lavinia's village
to pay respects at her funeral, she teams up with detective Luke
Fitzwilliam (Benedict Cumberhatch), to discover that practically
everyone in town has a motive for the multiple killings taking
place. "They Do It with Mirrors," set at Stoneygates estate,
concerns the philanthropic Carrie Louise (Penelope Wilton), who
is being slowly poisoned in her own home. We have no idea whether
it is her husband, Lewis Serrocold (Brian Cox), daughters Gina
(Emma Griffiths Malin) and Mildred (Sarah Smart), or sister Ruth
(Joan Collins), who is attempting her murder until the very end.
"Why Didn't They Ask Evans?" starring Bobby Attfield (Sean
Biggerstaff) and his girlfriend, Frankie Derwent (Georgia
Moffett), who take interest in a dying man they find on a cliff,
is so incredibly plot-thick that one hangs onto each clue, swayed
multiple times before making a real discovery. Indeed, not until
the last five minutes of each episode does one grasp what has
just happened. While this could be frustrating for those trying
to beat Marple's sleuthing, it does establish an almost mystical
respect for her ability to figure out what's going on. --Trinie
Dalton