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IMDbPro

Into the Blue

  • TV Movie
  • 1997
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
265
YOUR RATING
Abigail Cruttenden and John Thaw in Into the Blue (1997)
CrimeDramaMystery

A British expatriate living on the island of Rhodes investigates the mysterious death of a woman with whom he had a brief affair.A British expatriate living on the island of Rhodes investigates the mysterious death of a woman with whom he had a brief affair.A British expatriate living on the island of Rhodes investigates the mysterious death of a woman with whom he had a brief affair.

  • Director
    • Jack Gold
  • Writers
    • Simon Burke
    • Robert Goddard
  • Stars
    • John Thaw
    • Tom Towndrow
    • Vida Garman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    265
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jack Gold
    • Writers
      • Simon Burke
      • Robert Goddard
    • Stars
      • John Thaw
      • Tom Towndrow
      • Vida Garman
    • 12User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos1

    View Poster

    Top cast23

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    John Thaw
    John Thaw
    • Harry Barnett
    Tom Towndrow
    • Young Harry
    Vida Garman
    • Clare Mallender
    Abigail Cruttenden
    Abigail Cruttenden
    • Heather Mallender
    Dimitri Andreas
    Dimitri Andreas
    • Kostas
    Kevork Malikyan
    Kevork Malikyan
    • Inspector Miltiades
    Matthew Marsh
    Matthew Marsh
    • Alan Dysart
    Giannis Grivas
    • Chief of Police
    Andreas Karras
    Andreas Karras
    • Detective
    • (as a different name)
    George Savvides
    George Savvides
    • Operator
    Inday Ba
    Inday Ba
    • Zohra Labrooy
    Miles Anderson
    Miles Anderson
    • Dr. Peter Kingdom
    Tony Spooner
    • Ted
    James Mair
    • Policeman
    Kieron Jecchinis
    Kieron Jecchinis
    • Pineaar
    Arif Hussein
    • Said
    Steven Law
    • Michael
    Tim Brierley
    • Willy Morpurgo
    • Director
      • Jack Gold
    • Writers
      • Simon Burke
      • Robert Goddard
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.0265
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    Featured reviews

    7rjschneid47

    TV mystery fans will not be disappointed.

    While a bit of Inspector Morse comes through, Thaw pulls it off with a working class persona. We get to follow him through his investigation, and this is the most appealing type of mystery for me. Thaw's Harry Barnett is as tenacious as is his Morse (created by novelist Colin Dexter). Harry is driven mostly by two forces, his attempt to disprove his involvement in a disappearance of a woman and his lifelong relationship with a wealthy former politician, Alan Dysart. But the more questions he asks, the more questions arise about his longtime friend. The connection between the very beginning of the film and its ending works, provides an added twist (there is one right before the end as well), and brought the (film) story full circle, including the exchange of an important gift between two main characters (Barnett and Dysart), bound together through life experiences. You will not be disappointed.

    As an author of mystery novels and an observer of the two industries (print & film), the media are so different that I often discount the "it did not follow the book" criticisms. Most viewers of the film never have nor ever will read the novel. We writers need to bank the movie checks and move on to the next book.
    5crumpytv

    Average

    A British expatriate living on the island of Rhodes investigates the mysterious disappearance of a woman with whom he has had a brief affair.

    Outside of Morse, The Sweeney and Kavanagh I have found John Thaw as not very credible. In this he plays Joe Average and he is not convincing, neither is his affair with a girl young enough to be his daughter. It just looks embarrassingly wrong.

    The storyline is convoluted and has a twist at the end that may have been original in 1997, but not in 2025.

    This is one of those films where it might pay to remember the opening scene throughout. I completely forgot about it.
    1robertconnor

    Awful

    When a woman he has just met disappears on the island of Rhodes, Harry's innocence is doubted. But as he begins to examine the woman's past he realizes his closest friend could be involved in murder.

    Robert Goddard is a solid and reliable British writer of clever and complex mysteries. However this adaptation of his novel Into The Blue as a vehicle for John Thaw is disastrous from word go. Embarrassingly miscast, Thaw struggles with accent and intent as he blunders from one scene to another, and he is horribly betrayed by a great clunking script and ghastly supporting actors - Ba is particularly awful as Harry's reluctant sidekick.

    Find Goddard's original novel and avoid this turkey at all costs.
    richard.fuller1

    I Liked It

    Compared to what we get on American tv, it was good. England seems to understand that there can be suspense without having to have calm, cool main characters and it is supposed to be believed that this is intensity.

    I came into John Thaw's work very indirectly, Inspector Morse would air on ETV as one of the Mystery segments. Of course, he was good.

    It would take me a while or two to realize that Into The Blue was not the same character, but still the story was fun.

    Being handed the abandoned baby, the death in the canoe and then the body found on the shore like that all at the beginning, and seeing how they all connected was a good attention-getting story.

    He got a pretty good ally in Zhora there for a while too.

    I know nothing about the book, of course, so it was all the first time I had seen the story.

    I had no problems with it.
    El Cine

    Good TV thriller when taken on its own terms; obviously no friend of the book

    Having been dismayed by many tawdry TV rewrites of perfectly good books, I can understand why the "Into the Blue" author and many readers would be apoplectic after watching this. Instead of gasping at the thrills and chills in this TV movie, those who read the book first will merely gasp in surprise at how well over half of anything to do with it has been radically altered for this film, including the most major characters and plot twists.

    That any major changes should occur is not a surprise, however. Indeed, one wonders just why the producers chose to film this book of all things. There was just no way 400 pages of dense, hard paragraphs and exhaustive backstory (all in tiny font) could've made a film of 110 or so minutes. Despite having some compelling drama and ideas, frankly the book can afford to lose perhaps 100 pages.

    Even so, by the standards of adaptations, this film's condensations and rewriting are savage. I read the book second, then revisited the film. Thus for me, it's rather a hoot how the film broadcasts right from the start how it's spared nothing in its rewriting. In the first five minutes, Harry Barnett shows someone a portrait of Alan Dysart's wife, a small but important (and alive) supporting character in the book. Harry reports that she died of cancer 2 years ago, then moves on without another word. That's that for wifey!

    But the film gives us a decent enough TV movie thriller. Its technique is plain, typical for TV movies, but offers attractive sets, location shootings, and cinematography. The book has its share of melodrama, but the film really ups the thriller factor, which gets clichéd but still fun.

    The altered story also retains much of what worked best in the book's drama: Harry Barnett's central quest, and an interesting friendship with the vivid, yet inscrutable Alan Dysart.

    True, the film is clichéd in how it sets up Harry's private investigation of Heather Mallender's disappearance. The usual "innocent man must launch his own private investigation to clear his name, while the authorities hassle him and do nothing useful." But it keeps the device of Harry obtaining photos Heather has shot, and using them to retrace her own investigative journey from the past. The film gets great cinematic fun out of this -- Harry will give us a close-up view of a photo of a building; then the shot pans up to show the actual building, proving that he's on the right track.

    Alan too remains compelling: a well-fed and well-groomed man of power (love the suspenders) who's generous, supportive, yet ambiguous. (The film errs a little by making him ambiguous from the start.) Forever helping Harry out of trouble, Alan provides one of the most gripping dramatic moments when Harry declines to do him a major favor. Alan stops and glares at him, and complains to Harry for the first time. "It's the only favor I've ever asked of you." Immediately he departs in defeat. We feel the pain and guilt such an accurate criticism must've made to Harry.

    Unfortunately, the film glosses over their surprising drama at story's end.

    Zora Labrooy, friend of Heather and secretary to a shifty psychologist, provides another strong character and relationship for Harry. Despite rewrites, her essential elements are largely the same. The investigation pushes her to become an ally and assistant to Harry. Besides its own ambiguity, this friendship is made interesting by an increased, constant tension and fragility. They're never sure they can trust or find a real use for each other.

    Also of note is John Thaw, who provides the right dramatic gravitas whenever required. It's also fun to see him convincingly play a cockney man of modest background, in contrast to his famous role of cultured Inspector Morse.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Original author Robert Goddard was not impressed with the adaptation of his novel. In an interview, he said "The TV version of Into the Blue was a travesty of the story I wrote and I am determined that any future adaptations should be more faithful to the original".
    • Goofs
      There was nothing in Kingdom's house to make it explode as shown in the film.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 15, 1997 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Rejtély Rodoszon
    • Filming locations
      • Bearwood College, Wokingham, Berkshire, England, UK(Where Jack Cornelius teaches)
    • Production companies
      • Carlton Television
      • Triumph Proscenium Productions Ltd.
      • WGBH
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h(120 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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