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Cover Her Face

  • Mini-série télévisée
  • 1985
  • 4h 51min
NOTE IMDb
7,4/10
394
MA NOTE
Roy Marsden in Cover Her Face (1985)
CrimeDramaMystery

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueFollows Adam Dalgliesh as he investigates the death of Alice Liddell. A woman who ran a home for unwed mothers.Follows Adam Dalgliesh as he investigates the death of Alice Liddell. A woman who ran a home for unwed mothers.Follows Adam Dalgliesh as he investigates the death of Alice Liddell. A woman who ran a home for unwed mothers.

  • Casting principal
    • Roy Marsden
    • Phyllis Calvert
    • Mel Martin
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,4/10
    394
    MA NOTE
    • Casting principal
      • Roy Marsden
      • Phyllis Calvert
      • Mel Martin
    • 9avis d'utilisateurs
    • 1avis de critique
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Épisodes6

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés1 saison1985

    Photos239

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    + 233
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    Rôles principaux41

    Modifier
    Roy Marsden
    Roy Marsden
    • Chief Superintendent Adam Dalgliesh
    • 1985
    Phyllis Calvert
    Phyllis Calvert
    • Eleanor Maxie
    • 1985
    Mel Martin
    Mel Martin
    • Deborah Riscoe
    • 1985
    Rupert Frazer
    Rupert Frazer
    • Stephen Maxie
    • 1985
    John Vine
    • Inspector John Massingham
    • 1985
    Jean Heywood
    Jean Heywood
    • Martha
    • 1985
    Norman Wooland
    Norman Wooland
    • Simon Maxie
    • 1985
    Bill Fraser
    • Sir Reynold Price
    • 1985
    Julian Glover
    Julian Glover
    • Felix Hurst
    • 1985
    Clare Higgins
    Clare Higgins
    • Catherine Bowers
    • 1985
    John Bott
    John Bott
    • Rev Bernard Hinks
    • 1985
    Robert Glenister
    Robert Glenister
    • Derek Pullen
    • 1985
    Kim Thomson
    Kim Thomson
    • Sally Jupp
    • 1985
    Charles Morgan
    Charles Morgan
    • Dr. Charles Epps
    • 1985
    Barbara Hicks
    Barbara Hicks
    • Miss Molpas
    • 1985
    Katja Kersten
    • Ingrid Graham
    • 1985
    Ronnie Stevens
    Ronnie Stevens
    • Victor Proctor
    • 1985
    Arturo Venegas
    • Marcos Iturralde
    • 1985
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs9

    7,4394
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    Avis à la une

    7Sleepin_Dragon

    Well thought out, a good murder mystery.

    Cover her face is a satisfying mystery, it possesses a great deal of intrigue, boasts a very good cast, and provides an interesting snapshot of life at the time, thoughts and attitudes.

    The first three parts are a little slow, it does take its time to get going, from Part four onwards it takes on a whole new life, and picks up the pace. When one of the main characters is removed, I would argue the show isn't made better by their demise, that individual adds a lot to the story. Parts 4 and 6 I would suggest are the best.

    The attitudes and behaviours towards pregnant and single women are so at odds with those most of us hold nowadays, the thought on there being institutions for single mothers, bizarre.

    The acting is very good, Phyllis Calvert is the standout, a remarkably talented actress, Julian Glover is also good.

    Dalgleish is strong throughout and charismatic, he makes his presence known, and remains dogged in pursuit of the killer.

    It's an engaging whodunnit.

    Intriguing, 7/10.
    7gingerninjasz

    Sally Jupp the heart of the mystery

    This P. D. James mystery feels somewhat different to the other two adaptations in that it doesn't focus around an institution. Whereas Death of an Expert Witness centred around a forensic laboratory and Shroud for a Nightingale a hospital, Cover Her Face is different as it is set in a village and centres around a country house lived in by the Maxie family. Not that it starts out that way. Straight from the off we follow Sally Jupp (Kim Thomson), a single mum with her baby son, get out of a taxi to go and visit her old work colleagues at the Book Club in the city. Outside she bumps into old friend Stavros Veludis, a Greek cypriot who greets her warmly enough but seems to be running away from someone. Later she goes down to change her baby and discovers the dead body of Stavros on the stairs and hears someone running away. Naturally she is a person of interest to Dalgliesh, both as a witness and a friend of Stavros, and it is soon revealed that he was chief suspect in a drug case Dalgliesh is working on. He also becomes convinced that Sally isn't telling him everything she knows, but when he goes to question her at St Mary's Refuge for Single Mothers the manageress Alice Liddell (Freda Dowie) informs him that she is no longer living there. In what seems an astonishing stroke of luck she meets Dr Stephen Maxie (Rupert Frazer) on a train, who hears what happened to her and hires her to work at his family's country home. Or is it?

    Straight away the curiosity is aroused, but it is not the only suspicious activity going on in the village. Dalgliesh is surprised by Alice Liddell's nervous demeanour when he meets her, but why? Could the answer be something to do with the Refuge accounts? Sir Reynold Price (Bill Fraser), a rich financier on the committee seems to think so, but he himself is a little shady and both may have connections to the case Dalgliesh is investigating. The Maxie household at the country house seem ordinary enough however, with Eleanor Maxie (Phyllis Calvert) looking after her ailing husband upstairs, while children Stephen and Deborah (Mel Martin) argue over whether to sell the house or not. Both also have suitors mooning other them who later come over to stay as they prepare for the village fete - Catherine Bowers (Claire Higgins) and Felix Hurst (Julian Glover). But the arrival of Sally Jupp to help housekeeper Martha in the kitchen (a formiddable Jean Heywood) shakes up the whole place in ways they never imagined. Before they know it, she's made an enemy of Martha (not hard, I grant) and creates turmoil throughout the group when she announces her engagement to Stephen. Their reaction is such that it couldn't of been worse if she'd served them up roadkill for their evening meal!

    Sally Jupp is at the heart of everything in this. She is evasive every time Dalgliesh questions her, and seems to be involved with everybody from Stavros Veludis to the Maxie family, St Mary's Refuge and even Sir Reynold Price. She is a mystery to everyone because she is such an outsider to them, and the fact she won't even reveal who the father of her baby is lead many to speculate just who could of impregnated her. And her actions are constantly shifty, including her secret meetings with village lad Derek Pullen (Robert Glenister), who gives her letters postmarked Venezuela. Her character is fascinating because she is so hard to pin down and Kim Thomson deserves huge credit for her performance. It's not that she's outstanding acting wise, but she is so compelling in the role with a mixture of cheerful disposition and calculating manipulation she portrays that can switch at a moment's notice. You know you can't really trust her and her character is not particularly nice, but with Thomson in the role you can't help liking her in some strange way. And that is partly because the Maxie household are not always easy to like. They all look down on her due to her background, and many are openly hostile to her. Even the seemingly reasonable Eleanor Maxie displays some prejudice towards her lowly status when she uses the phone in the hall, reminding her that staff use the kitchen phone and to note down the calls made. When Sally is brought in by Stephen during the fateful dinner, it is Eleanor who pointedly informs her that staff members' place are in the kitchen, in a hint to her that she is not part of THEIR circle. It's this, and the feeling throughout she is in grave danger, that keeps you on her side, despite her manipulative character.

    Indeed, it has to be said that after Sally is indeed later found murdered that this mystery begins to lag somewhat. The first three episodes are compelling, featuring a suspicious death an episode with Stavros' murder, Miss Liddell's highly suspicious suicide (or is it?), complete with a strange phone call from the dead woman afterwards to someone, to the events that eventually lead up to Sally's murder. There are so many off shoots that are happening in the village or in Dalgliesh's drug racketeering investigations that these episodes are never dull. But Sally is such a dominating presence that when she is killed her absence is keenly felt and the intensity of the mystery drops because of this. It's a shame because by and large this is a well acted mystery with some notable performances. All of the main actresses handle the emotional challenges their characters go through with aplomb, such as Phyllis Calvert, Mel Martin, Claire Higgins and Freda Dowie. But best of them all is Jean Heywood as the formiddable housekeeper Martha. Hers is not a likeable character at all, cantenkerous and unforgiving at times. But despite this Heywood is able to portray her tender side and secret love towards the ailing Simon Maxie beautifully and her scene with him when he has died is outstanding. Bill Fraser proves he is not just a comedy actor in his role as Sir Reynolds Price, while Ronnie Stevens is superb as the shifty and nervy Victor Proctor. But my favourite has to be Julian Glover's beautifully judged performance as Felix Hurst, a thoroughly decent man in love with a woman who cannot love him back. Rupert Frazer's Stephen Maxie, however, is so objectionable that you can't help but hope that someone punches him on the nose before the end of the mystery.

    It may slow down halfway through, but it uses it's country settings well and there are some beautifully shot scenes, including one on a bridge with Stephen and Sally during the village fete that is breathtaking. It's surprising therefore to see during the car sequences involving Dalgliesh and Massingham some stage backdrops used that are painfully obvious. It also features a couple of topless scenes involving Marsden and Frazer that was likely meant to add a bit of phwoar factor in but is more likely to see women (and men) running screaming from the room at the sight of such skinny pasty bodies. I know I did. There are also some wonderfully chucklesome moments, intentionally or otherwise in this. Nick Berry (pre-EastEnders) makes a delightful appearance as a delivery boy in episode 2 and is cheerfully amusing as the apprentice passing comment on the YTS Scheme. And there was a unintentionally funny moment when in one scene a drug addict teenager is caught raiding the Book Club by police, who when asked what his name is I thought he said "David Mellor" If only!

    Overall this is a well acted mystery that starts well but the death of one of it's main characters impacts somewhat on the remainder of the episodes. Despite this it has enough though to keep you interested, it has some beautiful scenery and it remains an absorbing murder mystery.
    9jeffhanna3

    Outstanding on Every Level

    This is my second favorite of the Adam Dalgleish mysteries - the first being the superb and fascinating "Devices and Desires" (which is the only one inexplicably not on DVD). (Update: "Devices and Desires" is now available on DVD).

    The story here, the acting, the settings, are all first rate. An absolutely riveting murder mystery. That the other person commenting found it laughable in parts and overly melodramatic is mystifying to me.

    Roy Marsden will always be the classic Dalgleish, sorely missed in the extremely inferior stories filmed after he left the series. Phyllis Calvert and the old woman who plays the cook in this one are particularly good. The seductive and cunning young woman who insinuates herself into the family, with the help of a wastrel son, is a master of female manipulativeness.

    HIGHLY recommended for those who enjoy literate British mystery.
    3jamesandteresa

    Disappointing

    While not a devoted fan of P.D. James, my husband and I have enjoyed several of her novels. We looked forward to the entire series of P.D.James adaptations in this set. But they were produced badly, and we can't quite figure out why. All of the actors bounce between being wooden and melodramatic, even though after looking up their other work they seem to be actors of high caliber. The camera angles seem borrowed from soap operas--even the music never seems to fit the action on the screen. The director, producer, screenwriter, or all three simply did not know what they were doing or did a very sloppy job. They are not unwatchable, but we found ourselves laughing at scenes that were supposed to be dramatic because they were so overdone.
    6grainstorms

    A New Look at The Book

    In this video adaptation of P. D. James' first Dalgleish mystery, "Cover Her Face," many liberties were taken. These apparently were done to convert a leisurely "County" mystery to a fast-moving TV miniseries.

    While many fans of P. D. James find the changes disruptive and not true to the original, it must be said that this introductory video adaptation proved successful enough to warrant more Dalgleish mysteries being filmed.

    The story is essentially a character study of a young woman and her effect on a number of assorted personalities, ranging from a housekeeper-cook to a young physician.

    It's set in an England that is already fading from the memory -- big stately homes, church fetes, horse-riding gentry. vicars out of Anthony Trollope...and no cell-phones.

    Roy Marsden plays Adam Dagleish, who, in this story, has been promoted from Chief Inspector to Chief Superintendent, which would seem to be a rather exalted New Scotland Yard rank for a detective concerned with only one mystery, rather than the half-dozen or so at one time that a real policeman-executive on that level would be working. He has but one assistant, whose function is primarily to take suspects into custody. The local police are fawning and ever so grateful for the great man's presence. Questioning of witnesses and suspects is casual and low- key and rarely confrontational.

    The actor Roy Marsden, quiet and cool, would seem, at first glance, to be an odd choice to play a police detective. But he was a good choice for the role.

    His character as Dalgleish is diffident, soft-spoken, observant, intellectual -- a poet, no less. But he is a super-smart sleuth who can be tough if the circumstances so warrant.

    The pacing of this story, though speeded up for TV, can still seem excruciatingly slow at times, but stick with it. Superb acting makes it all worth while.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Alice Liddell is the name of the child that Lewis Carroll (Charles Dodgson) named "Alice in Wonderland" for.
    • Citations

      Chief Superintendent Adam Dalgliesh: We know that Volunus was not only a drug king, but was using money to finance other activities.

    • Connexions
      Followed by The Black Tower (1985)

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    FAQ1

    • what is the theme music for this series - I love it but cannot identify it

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 17 février 1985 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Mord på herrgård
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Rainthorpe Hall, Saxlingham Lane, Tasburgh, Norfolk, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Martingale Hall)
    • Société de production
      • Anglia Television
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      4 heures 51 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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