CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.8/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaChief Inspector Armand Gamache and his team arrive in Three Pines to solve the unusual murder of a much-loved woman and find dark secrets shadowing this usually peaceful village.Chief Inspector Armand Gamache and his team arrive in Three Pines to solve the unusual murder of a much-loved woman and find dark secrets shadowing this usually peaceful village.Chief Inspector Armand Gamache and his team arrive in Three Pines to solve the unusual murder of a much-loved woman and find dark secrets shadowing this usually peaceful village.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 8 nominaciones en total
Janine Theriault
- Suzanne Croft
- (as Janine Thériault)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Unlike other reviewers, I haven't read any of the Inspector Gamache series. But I love Nathaniel Parker, so I watched this.
Have to say it was a big bust.
It was directed in a static fashion and moved slowly. Also, the acting was pretty bad.
Even the mystery wasn't impressive, at least the way it was set up.
An elderly woman is killed in the woods by an arrow; she was beloved in the community, so who could have killed her and why?
Inspector Gamache (Parker) investigates. Someone called this "Inspector Lynley Goes to Quebec." I didn't find Parker like Inspector Lynley, who had quite a temper and wasn't anywhere as near as quiet as Gamache.
The characters were not well fleshed out.
All in all, kind of a waste. Reminded me of the Canadian films of Mary Higgins Clark movies - not well done.
Have to say it was a big bust.
It was directed in a static fashion and moved slowly. Also, the acting was pretty bad.
Even the mystery wasn't impressive, at least the way it was set up.
An elderly woman is killed in the woods by an arrow; she was beloved in the community, so who could have killed her and why?
Inspector Gamache (Parker) investigates. Someone called this "Inspector Lynley Goes to Quebec." I didn't find Parker like Inspector Lynley, who had quite a temper and wasn't anywhere as near as quiet as Gamache.
The characters were not well fleshed out.
All in all, kind of a waste. Reminded me of the Canadian films of Mary Higgins Clark movies - not well done.
If I had never read more of Louise Penney's books than Still Life, it might have been okay. As most of the reviewers have already said, casting was terrible. Not one of the characters (most especially Gamache and Clara) was right for the part, except Susanna Fournier as Agent Nichol. She actually got the part right. Too bad her role was so pathetic. The locale was terrible. The village was too big, the roads too well kept. Three Pines isn't even on a map, and no way would such a large village be as inbred as depicted in the books. My husband and I often joke about roles actors are offered by their agents. Patricia McKenzie's agent must have said "you'll be the only Black in the movie and you'll get to say 3 words, but oh honey, it's a great role". Why even put Myrna in the movie? Nathaniel Parker is about 20 years too young to play Gamache. Also too tall. Kate Hewlett was just very wrong as Clara. My husband kept asking why she was happy so quickly after her best friend was murdered. I could go on, but why torture myself remembering?
Storyline was fine, but there are amazing characters in these books, and their witty repertoire is key to capturing the heart of Three Pines. Instead, they looked like a bunch of crazy (and thinner than expected) extras.
There was also lack of character development in Armande's team. Beauvoir and Lacoste were bland background characters.
This, and other Louise Penny mysteries could (AND SHOULD) be made into a series.
There is enough wit and mystery to carry a single novel through a short season, and allow for the long term characters to grow on you.
There was also lack of character development in Armande's team. Beauvoir and Lacoste were bland background characters.
This, and other Louise Penny mysteries could (AND SHOULD) be made into a series.
There is enough wit and mystery to carry a single novel through a short season, and allow for the long term characters to grow on you.
I was so looking forward to seeing the adaptation of the Inspector Gamache series set in the fictitious town of Three Pines somewhere in Quebec. I have read every book in Louise Penny's series and I have enjoyed Nathaniel Parker's acting in several different works. Somehow, though, the TV-movie of "Still Life" just fell flat. I think maybe a one and a half hour TV movie just wasn't enough to fully develop the characters and some of the acting was just so-so. Whatever it was, it was certainly not up to the caliber of Inspector Morse or Inspector Lewis, however beautiful the cinematography. I would say that if another episode is filmed, I would have to watch it.
I wanted to like this movie, having read all of Louise Penney's atmospheric, intelligent, introspective books featuring Armand Gamache. How disappointing to find that all that has been reduced to soap opera standards. There is in the movie none of the sensitivity, insight, philosophizing that makes the books so compelling. The cast is impossibly good looking, with that plastic, every-hair-in-place, perfect make-up at all times look so common to made-for-TV movies. The characters, instead of being complex and unpredictable, are stilted, their utterances short, too fast, emotionless--a sign of poor direction and/or poor acting. The use of that husky, almost-whisper voice (who talks like that?) also betrays the cookie-cutter approach to this movie. Scenes are very short, pushing the plot ahead in only the barest, least thought-provoking manner. It's a shame to see Penney's deeply thoughtful works reduced to such shallowness. It was peculiar, as well, to see what Penney describes as the surreal, provocative artwork of murder-victim Jane,(thus killing off a main and recurring character in the books) represented as poorly-rendered American Primitive. Have the producers/director no loyalty to the books at all? If Penney is one of the executive producers, as referred to in other reviews, I cannot imagine that she feels the movie faithfully represents her literary work. I doubt, too, that she had much to say about it.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaAuthor Louise Penny has said that the character Inspector Gamache was inspired by Atticus Finch (Matar a un Ruiseñor (1962)); Jean Gamache, a tailor in Quebec; and her husband, Michael Whitehead.
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