A Perry Mason Mystery: The Case of the Wicked Wives
- Téléfilm
- 1993
- 1h 36m
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAnthony Caruso, an old friend of Perry Mason, comes to Denver on the request of Dee Morrison. She's married to famed photographer David Morrison, who wants to shoot a photo featuring his for... Tout lireAnthony Caruso, an old friend of Perry Mason, comes to Denver on the request of Dee Morrison. She's married to famed photographer David Morrison, who wants to shoot a photo featuring his former models. The tricky thing is that all of his former models are also his former wives. B... Tout lireAnthony Caruso, an old friend of Perry Mason, comes to Denver on the request of Dee Morrison. She's married to famed photographer David Morrison, who wants to shoot a photo featuring his former models. The tricky thing is that all of his former models are also his former wives. But Dee knows Anthony can convince them to do it which he does. And David shoots them. Late... Tout lire
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Nina Morgan Morrison
- (as Kim Alexis Duguay)
- Lt Brock
- (as James Mc Eachin)
- Dan Cutter
- (as Dan Erickson)
Avis en vedette
Paul Sorvino gives a fine perrmance, as I expected, bringing a lot of personality to the role. He charms, he sings opera, he presents subpoenas along with the dishes he has cooked. With Barbara Hale as Della Street, and William Moses as Mason's investigator, it looks like they rewrote a script intended for Burr and did a very good job of it.
There's an in-joke about Burr's expertise as an orchid-breeder (he named a variety after Barbara).
And the clothes! The glamour! The settings! The mansions!
I've loved it.
Sadly, this episode was the first to be filmed after Burr's death, putting in Paul Sorvino as a similar character. But he has to be given "quirks" like singing opera (he's not bad, but should take voice lessons) and cooking (that veal sounds nice). He is no substitute.
The story is weak, the script is weak. I found it not worth watching, even for the clothes. One commentator opined that Caruso is funny, unlike Mason. I didn't laugh at the opera or any of it. Mason frequently comes out with witty one-lines, as does Della once the client has left. (Of one she says, "I could learn to loathe him".)
I shall just have to watch the old series as I wait for those missing TV films to become "available". RIP Raymond and Barbara.
Perry is `in Washington' for this film, which sounds like something you'd tell a child instead of having to explain that Granny has died. Indeed that is the case as Burr was dead and never made another Mason movie. However rather than have the taste and sense to finish the series, the producers decided to spin it out. In this instance that decision was ill-advised. The plot doesn't work. In order to get Anthony involved in a big case, it as to be with people he knows thus the tortuous opening where he gets all the ex-wives together. This makes the film feel ill at ease with itself Anthony never really rips into or exposes the suspects as they are all friends plus none of the group seem to struggle with this at all, making it seem like they are strangers. Malansky's investigation is long and dull with moments thrown in just to try and liven things up a bit.
The conclusion is silly even by the standards of this series. Would you take something from the murder scene? Would you have it on you when you are in the witness box? No? Well the guilty party does and it is this that traps them it's daft and he/she is totally unbelievable and it feels so very lame that it's hard to really care!
Sorvino is an interesting choice to play in the lead but he doesn't work. It doesn't feel natural having him walk round singing while one of his friends is a murderer and too much is made of him being an Italian. Aside from that I found it very hard to shake the image of Goodfella's Paulie from my brain and half expected him to order Ken to whack somebody! Sorvino struggles with a role that ties him into a case emotionally but doesn't allow him to express anything I suspect he didn't want a second try and he didn't return for another role in the series. Moses is OK as is Hale but they are exposes without Burr and Hale has little to do. The support cast are OK but none are as interesting as the usual array of red-herrings etc. They are only good as eye candy as they are a few models etc Johnson standing out cause she looks a lot better here than she has recently!
Overall this is a pretty poor film and it highlights how good burr was in holding everything together in a familiar way. This has a plot that is a bit of a mess, characters who don't ring true in a silly situation and the whole thing just crawls to it's dumb climax, by which time I'd long since given up caring!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis is the first Perry Mason mystery filmed after Raymond Burr's Death. Tony Caruso, Paul Sorvino's role, was named after the actor Anthony Caruso; the writers combined his part with Burr's rather than recasting the Perry Mason role, as a tribute.
- Citations
Ken Malansky: Of all the courtrooms in all the world, she had to walk into mine.
- ConnexionsFollowed by A Perry Mason Mystery: The Case of the Lethal Lifestyle (1994)
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Perry Mason: El caso de las esposas perversas
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro