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IMDbPro

Miss Marple: La plume empoisonnée

Titre original : Miss Marple: The Moving Finger
  • Mini-série télévisée
  • 1985
  • Not Rated
  • 51min
NOTE IMDb
7,5/10
2,3 k
MA NOTE
Joan Hickson in Miss Marple: La plume empoisonnée (1985)
CriminalitéDrameMystère

Le village normalement amical de Lymston est en proie à de viles lettres anonymes. Lorsqu'une mère se suicide à la suite d'une telle lettre, Mme Marple n'est pas du tout convaincue que les c... Tout lireLe village normalement amical de Lymston est en proie à de viles lettres anonymes. Lorsqu'une mère se suicide à la suite d'une telle lettre, Mme Marple n'est pas du tout convaincue que les choses sont ce qu'elles semblent être.Le village normalement amical de Lymston est en proie à de viles lettres anonymes. Lorsqu'une mère se suicide à la suite d'une telle lettre, Mme Marple n'est pas du tout convaincue que les choses sont ce qu'elles semblent être.

  • Casting principal
    • Joan Hickson
    • Michael Culver
    • Deborah Appleby
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,5/10
    2,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Casting principal
      • Joan Hickson
      • Michael Culver
      • Deborah Appleby
    • 27avis d'utilisateurs
    • 5avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Épisodes2

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    HautLes mieux notés1 saison1985

    Photos2

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    Rôles principaux28

    Modifier
    Joan Hickson
    Joan Hickson
    • Miss Marple
    • 1985
    Michael Culver
    Michael Culver
    • Edward Symmington
    • 1985
    Deborah Appleby
    • Megan Hunter
    • 1985
    Andrew Bicknell
    Andrew Bicknell
    • Gerry Burton
    • 1985
    Sabina Franklyn
    Sabina Franklyn
    • Joanna Burton
    • 1985
    Richard Pearson
    Richard Pearson
    • Mr. Pye
    • 1985
    Hilary Mason
    Hilary Mason
    • Emily Barton
    • 1985
    Dilys Hamlett
    Dilys Hamlett
    • Maud Calthrop
    • 1985
    John Arnatt
    John Arnatt
    • Rev. Guy Calthrop…
    • 1985
    Sandra Payne
    Sandra Payne
    • Eryl Griffith
    • 1985
    Martin Fisk
    • Owen Griffith
    • 1985
    Penelope Lee
    • Partridge
    • 1985
    Juliet Waley
    • Beatrice
    • 1985
    Imogen Bickford-Smith
    Imogen Bickford-Smith
    • Elsie Holland
    • 1985
    Gerald Sim
    Gerald Sim
    • Coroner
    • 1985
    Geoffrey Davion
    • Police Superintendent Nash
    • 1985
    Ninka Scott
    • Miss Ginch
    • 1985
    Patsy Smart
    Patsy Smart
    • Mrs. Cleat
    • 1985
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs27

    7,52.3K
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    Avis à la une

    10Janet1612

    A good adaptation

    This is one of my favourite Christie books, along with The Pale Horse, The ABC Murders, Sleeping Murder, By The Pricking of My Thumb and Nemesis. all these are great books, well told and with a dark story.

    Hickson is Marple. This is the best of two adaptations - ignore the ITV at all costs!!. The ITV writers are all amateurs who rewrite the story - even the endings to suit themselves, as if they can do better. The BBC have tended to stick to the story here.

    This adaptation is truer to the book and portrays the characters just as Christie wrote them. I love the fact that the awkward and shy Megan is transformed into an elegant, lovely lady. Something she wasn't allowed to do under her mother's care. I do think that it should have been three or four episodes to allow the story and characters to unfold. I suppose that was the BBC budget in those days - now they have so much money they can engage John Malkovich as Poirot!

    Hickson as Marple is a joy to watch. She is just as Christie described her (with no pink cardigan/shawl in this book). A gentle, unassuming elderly lady that no one would take any notice of, until her sharp brain gets to work.
    8TheLittleSongbird

    Very good, with a great cast

    I have made no secret of loving the Joan Hickson adaptations of Agatha Christie's wonderful books, and this is no exception. This is a very good adaptation, it is a little slow on occasions I agree, but not bad, not bad at all. The writers also do an above-respectable job adapting, perhaps lacking the humorous touch of the book, but at least the story is coherent. The production values as always are excellent with lovely scenery, costumes, make-up and photography, the music is lovely and the characters are still interesting, especially the Symmington household. The direction is solid as is the writing and acting- Joan Hickson is just superb as Miss Marple and will always be the best Miss Marple to me. Michael Culver is great as Mr Symmington, Elizabeth Counsell is suitably whiny as his wife and Deborah Appleby is very convincing as Megan. Both Gerry and Joanna still maintain their interest and played well by Andrew Bicknell and Sabina Franklyn, and Penelope Lee is good as Partridge. Overall, this is a very good adaptation with a great cast especially. 8/10 Bethany Cox
    7Dawnfrancis

    Another good Miss Marple

    Miss Marple is called into action once again. This time it's poison pen letters circulating in her friend's village. However, this wouldn't be Miss Marple without a murder or two and sure enough we get them. Another enjoyable, leisurely stroll through Christie country
    7gingerninjasz

    Can't put my Finger on why it's only intriguing

    The Moving Finger sees brother and sister Gerry and Joanna Burton (Andrew Bicknell and Sabina Franklyn) move to a quiet English village for Gerry to recooperate after injuries sustained in a car accident. Everything seems hunky dory and all so ordinary, but pretty soon they receive a poison pen letter. It turns out that a number of the villagers have received them, but little do they suspect that before long it will result in a death. And when it does, it is Miss Marple who suspects there may be a far more sinister cause behind it all.

    My first encounter with the story was the actual novel some years ago. I can't remember it that clearly, but I know I enjoyed the book. And this serves up as a decent adaptation, creating an ordinary quiet village community of the post war period where it seems unlikely that anything untoward could ever happen. That it does makes it all the more intriguing. There's the village doctor Owen Griffith and his sister Eryl, vicar Rev Calthrop and his wife Maud, solicitor Edward Symmington and his wife and children, including awkward tomboy Megan Hunter, plus spinster Miss Barton (whose house the siblings rent out while Gerry recovers) and waspish Mr Pye, a man who lives on his own in a grand house. For me when reading the book I immediately thought of Richard Pearson as Mr Pye, so when I finally got to see this adaptation I was delighted to find him playing the part. He is perfect in the role. His character is clearly gay but without overstating it as they do in modern adaptations of period dramas, he is seemingly affable at first but soon flexes his critical claws when he gets talking. He makes Mr Pye both a slightly camp character and at the same time also sinister, which is perfect when trying to create the possibilities of who the poison pen writer may be. Also good is Michael Culver as Symmington, the cultured solicitor who all the village women like working for. His understated acting gives an added edge of quality and realism to the proceedings just by keeping it ordinary, but he still keeps your attention regardless. And then there is Hilary Mason as Miss Barton, who can conjur up sinister just by her appearance in Don't Look Now (1973). Here she is a genteel spinster of the Victorian generation, still coming to terms with the new world, and Mason plays it beautifully. But is her character actually just an act hiding something more macabre?

    Indeed, I have to say the support cast probably make more of an impact than the main leads, though both Bicknell and Franklyn do well enough as the brother and sister. There is little really at fault with the cast performances, though some - like John Arnatt's vicar - are somewhat bland, and I could of done without the 'comic' turn of Victor Maddern's policeman, despite loving him in the Carry ons. But it's Deborah Appleby's role as Megan that is a little conflicting for me. She's decent enough in the role, but she looks way too old to be playing a girl of 20. It's nice the writers stayed faithful to the novel and didn't decide to sex her up for the TV version, which makes her character so interesting from the usual glamorous "girl in peril" parts. But at times Appleby looks a little awkward in the role, and not just because her character is supposed to be. And there is one scene where Gerry whisks her off for a surprise makeover that looks decidedly cheap. Instead of seeing footage of her being done up, it inserts montage snaps of the event that robs us somewhat of her moment. It's surprising the makers chose to do that, considering the lavish treatment they have done in recreating the past in both costume and sets.

    I reiterate that it is a good adaptation, intriguing to the viewer. But that's what puzzles me - it's intriguing, rather than absorbing, and I can't put my (moving) finger on just why. Maybe it's because the suspects are so everyday they struggle to make this mystery truly stand out. Yet there are moments in this that stay in the memory, both involving poor tragic maid Beatrice (played by Juliet Waley, who I remember from Look & Read's Dark Towers). The first is the image of her waiting fretfully for her boyfriend to turn up among a series of scenes about the village as it builds up to the first murder. The second is when Megan eventually discovers poor Beatrice, with the scene notably effective and creepy. Indeed, it is even more effective than the fate of another maid in A Pocketful of Rye which I do recall as a kid (what DID Agatha Christie have against domestics?). And considering sometimes they say crime writers don't play fair with the viewers, there is a remarkable scene where it practically shows the killer placing the book used for the poison pen letters to plant on another villager, but you don't realize this until the culprit is later exposed. Talk about having confidence in your direction, but it works neverhtless. And at least this time Joan Hickson's character is introduced into the story more naturally, paying a visit to old friend Maud Calthrop (Dilys Hamlett) who happens to relay about the poison pen letters to her in conversation.

    So an intriguing mystery overall, and enjoyable to watch. But for some reason it doesn't feel in the same quality as the truly great Miss Marple mysteries. And I really can't put my finger on why.
    angelknpenny

    do we all see the same show?

    I have to agree with Mike. I have no idea what Ted was watching. Miss Marple 'obnoxious" huh? Joan Hickson nails her completely and is charming. She also is able to bring across just how intuitive and intelligent Miss Marple is. I, too, like McEwan as an actress, but her portrayal of Marple is vile. she is better suited to series like "Mulberry". As for Rutherford, she doesn't bother me as Marple because I don't take her seriously in them. It's more like a charming parody of the character. Remember both Lansbury and Hayes also had a crack at Jane and while both very talented could not come close to Joan Hickson. She manages to be both steely and soft, no small feat! Ted's comments show a lack of knowledge about the mystery genre. There is no such thing as just mystery; there are numerous subcategories as well. So, comparing Gardner to Christie is akin to comparing Chandler to Conan Doyle.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Just before the meeting of the maid and her boyfriend on the bridge, there is a view of Willie Lott's cottage in Suffolk, famous because it appears in John Constable's 1821 painting The Hay Wain.
    • Gaffes
      Somebody finds a book used for cutting out letters to make threatening notes. However, the print in this book is much smaller than the letters used in the notes.
    • Citations

      Miss Jane Marple: When gentlemen of a certain age fall in love, they get the disease very badly.

    • Connexions
      Followed by Un meurtre sera commis (1985)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 21 février 1985 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • États-Unis
      • Australie
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Latin
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Miss Marple: The Moving Finger
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Hoxne, Suffolk, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Lympston village)
    • Sociétés de production
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • A+E Networks
      • Seven Network
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 51min
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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