Bei ihrem Urlaub in der Karibik entdeckt Miss Marple (Helen Hayes) einen ihr vertrauten Gast im Hotel, der wenig später von einem skrupellosen Mörder vergiftet wird....Bei ihrem Urlaub in der Karibik entdeckt Miss Marple (Helen Hayes) einen ihr vertrauten Gast im Hotel, der wenig später von einem skrupellosen Mörder vergiftet wird....Bei ihrem Urlaub in der Karibik entdeckt Miss Marple (Helen Hayes) einen ihr vertrauten Gast im Hotel, der wenig später von einem skrupellosen Mörder vergiftet wird....
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Molly Kendall
- (as Season Húbley)
- Arthur Jackson
- (as Mike Preston)
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Helen Hayes, her American accent intact, still makes a passable Miss Marple even when she utters the name of a quaint village in England as her home, St. Mary Mead. Barnard Hughes is the mean-spirited man whose rudeness becomes a bit overdone after the first few scenes, making you wish he's going to be one of the victims. Not so. He and Miss Marple join forces to solve the crime.
The conclusion is rushed through with brief explanations and not much dramatic conflict, so it's a bit of a letdown--although the murderer's identity is never hard to guess. The acting ranges from competent to barely competent, but the script is rather mediocre.
Recommended for rabid Christie fans only. Nicely photographed with Santa Barbara, California filling in for the Caribbean, but this is very tepid stuff, to say the least, nowhere as good as other Christie outings.
The story- Detective Miss Marple (Helen Hayes) is on vacation, luxuriating in an opulent Caribbean resort. She meets quirky mystery writer Maj. Geoffrey Palgrave (Maurice Evans), who giddily informs her that he believes one of the other guests is a wife-murdering serial killer. But before he can reveal the alleged killer's identity, Maj. Palgrave dies under suspicious circumstances. Soon there are other victims. Now, Miss Marple must take on the case before more are murdered.
A Caribbean mystery moves at a leisurely pace, and is quite entertaining- close attention is paid to the motley crew of suspects and when the murderer is unravelled you're left satisfied.
The first sign Helen Hayes is playing rather than being Jane Marple is during the opening credits when she's beaming out of a plane window. My mother loved the sainted Helen but I can take her or leave her.
It's a largely 1980s cast, including Jameson Parker and Beth Howland. And Stephen Macht (I never understood how he maintained a career; he had the goods on somebody?)
The story is followed closely enough with proper tweaking for oversensitive American audiences (and we've only gotten worse; we're like children). Which is strange because the script is partially by Sue Grafton who had already started her popular "alphabet" series of crime novels (it's nice to find a gimmick).
Frankly, I've always preferred 1920s and '30s Christie. She produced some great stuff in later life, but not that much. I do like the idea Marple has that people are the same everywhere and so she can always draw her village parallels. It's a very American notion (or used to be).
It's nice to see Brock Peters. Nice to see Maurice Evans, too. In fact, I wish Evans had played in the wheelchair and grumpy Bernard Hughes had been murdered, but one can't have everything.
I agree with those who say Joan Hickson's version is better, but I'm reviewing this and not that. And while I have reservations about some of the cast, this version is good enough and not too heavy if, like me, you're an insomniac who needs to pass the night without getting (inside joke) one's blood pressure up.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis was Maurice Evans' final acting role before his death on March 12, 1989 at the age of 87.
- PatzerWhen Marple opens a book on psychiatry, we see that the book was taken in the library five times from 1941 to 1951. However, To Define True Madness first came out in 1953 (by Sidgwick and Jackson), and the cover shown before belongs to the revised (Penguin Books) edition in 1955. In the Agatha Christie's work (Chapter 21) neither the title of the book nor the library insert is mentioned.
- Zitate
[last lines]
Miss Jane Marple: Well you seem to be in fine fettle this morning, Mr. Rafiel.
Mr. Rafiel: [with flowers for Miss. Marple] Here. I got you these. And they weren't cheap. Ah-ah-ah. No sentiments. I won't tolerate any poppycock.
Miss Jane Marple: Well I should hope not.
[starts to walk away before she turns around and smiles as she winks at Mr. Rafiel]
- VerbindungenFollowed by Mord mit doppeltem Boden (1985)
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