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The Cater Street Hangman

  • TV Movie
  • 1998
  • TV-PG
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
398
YOUR RATING
Keeley Hawes in The Cater Street Hangman (1998)
Period DramaWhodunnitCrimeMystery

With the help of a feisty aristocratic woman, a working-class Scotland Yard inspector hunts for a serial killer of young women in Victorian London.With the help of a feisty aristocratic woman, a working-class Scotland Yard inspector hunts for a serial killer of young women in Victorian London.With the help of a feisty aristocratic woman, a working-class Scotland Yard inspector hunts for a serial killer of young women in Victorian London.

  • Director
    • Sarah Hellings
  • Writers
    • Anne Perry
    • T.R. Bowen
  • Stars
    • Eoin McCarthy
    • Keeley Hawes
    • Peter Egan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    398
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sarah Hellings
    • Writers
      • Anne Perry
      • T.R. Bowen
    • Stars
      • Eoin McCarthy
      • Keeley Hawes
      • Peter Egan
    • 11User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos2

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    Top cast33

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    Eoin McCarthy
    Eoin McCarthy
    • Thomas Pitt
    Keeley Hawes
    Keeley Hawes
    • Charlotte Ellison
    Peter Egan
    Peter Egan
    • Edward Ellison
    John Castle
    John Castle
    • Reverend Prebble
    Richard Lintern
    Richard Lintern
    • Dominic Corde
    David Roper
    • Maddock
    Robert Reynolds
    • Dr Hope
    Judy Campbell
    Judy Campbell
    • Grandma
    Sheila Ruskin
    • Caroline Ellison
    Sarah Woodward
    Sarah Woodward
    • Sarah Ellison
    Katie Ryder Richardson
    • Emily Ellison
    Jack Tarlton
    • Detective Sergeant Webster
    Janet Maw
    • Martha Prebble
    Patsy Rowlands
    Patsy Rowlands
    • Mrs. Dunphy
    Amanda Elwes
    Amanda Elwes
    • Mrs. Abernathy
    Anna Winslet
    • Dora
    Hannah Spearritt
    Hannah Spearritt
    • Lily
    Robert Swann
    • Superintendent Drummond
    • Director
      • Sarah Hellings
    • Writers
      • Anne Perry
      • T.R. Bowen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.9398
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    Featured reviews

    bridget-13

    Disappointing

    This is a well acted TV mystery movie. I have not read the book on which it is based, but it is a story about young women being strangled in London in the 19th century, and the circumstances surrounding the investigation of two of the murders. Several characters emerge from these investigations to jolly the story along.

    However, I found the characters to be stereotypical and shallow. The movie's view of the 19th century is lightweight, and all the characters - dastardly males, entrenched class snobs, decent humble servants, rebellious daughters, caring professional policemen, etc. - are cardboard cut-outs. I found the story to be crushingly predictable and boring.

    If you like easy dramas, you will enjoy this.
    5Daphnae-1

    Disappointed

    The characters were far from stereotypical...with the exception of Charlotte's father and mother. Of course, this was the intention...Mr & Mrs Ellison represented the mores of the day while Charlotte and Pitt were representative of a new day.

    While the movie stayed fairly close to the book, I have to admit to being disappointed that the motive was sanitized. The fact that the motives in Perry's books are sometimes rather seamy make them stand out from other mysteries dealing with the Victorian era. Possibly that has something to do with Anne Perry's own history. If the book had ended the way the movie did, I probably wouldn't have bothered reading any of her others.
    8meileen1942

    Rather miscast

    I enjoy Anne Perry's novels, both Thomas Pitt and also William Monk (which would have also made good material for a movie). But I had in mind someone more like Alan Rickman in his younger days. Is there no one able to speak as he does, coming up in the ranks of actors? The character of Charlotte would have been better with someone a little stronger in ability to make Charlotte the determined character she was. I am sure everyone pictures their own ideals when reading a book, but changing the story a bit doesn't bother me as much as making the characters not fit the story. Thomas Pitt was described as having a beautiful voice and brown, not blonde, hair. Anyway. I do so wish they would try a movie using William Monk and his friend, a nurse from the Crimea. (By the way, AP's books have also become audio books, the best ones read by David McCallum, another gentleman with a talented and wonderful voice). I do believe they may have tried making this one because it is the first of the Inspector Pitt series. The stories get better as time progresses. Making one like Pentecost Alley, or Ashworth Hall would be much more entertaining. To have pitted the future of other dramatizations on this one book, was not a good idea as can be seen.
    10TeaJay

    Wonderful adaptation

    While liberties were taken with the original story by Anne Perry, the Cater Street Hangman was very true to the overall feeling of the novel. Eoin McCarthy did an outstanding job as Inspector Pitt - very believable. Keeley Hawes also did wonderful work as the much-oppressed, liberal-minded woman of Victorian times. I wasn't interested in Anne Perry's work until after I had watched this movie, and I hope to see more adaptations of this series in the near future.
    9I_Ailurophile

    An entertaining, well made murder mystery, even if it starts slow

    Ah, British period piece murder mysteries. ITV or BBC, the station hardly matters, for such fare bears a common look and feel from one to the next. The production design, art direction, costume design, and hair and makeup work are all splendid in summoning forth the Victorian setting. The direction, cinematography, lighting, and effects likewise all carry similar airs about them, and similar high quality. In that same spirit, we're also given information on characters' backgrounds, relationships, and social and business dealings that feel superfluous to the central plot, as though the film were intended to be a part of a series that would feature the same characters over time. (In fairness, this was adapted from the first of a series of novels, so there we are.) To this add a considerable demonstration of antiquated values and norms that are deeply unseemly as they further cement the period and present as major themes: sexism coursing through every level of culture; haughty upper class boorishness, including refusal to aid investigations of murder; rampant patriarchy, relegating women to direly low positions all around; tawdry gawking and othering at the notion that some people might not be Christians, and specifically the pretentious "tea and moral smugness" variety thereof. Yes, before we even consider the particular narrative on hand, 'The Cater Street Hangman' is as broadly recognizable as any such genre piece could be.

    Once we get past these facets (and subjective hurdles), there's much to appreciate here. The story is engrossing and compelling as the mystery grows and in one way or another envelops all the characters we're introduced to. The scene writing is increasingly fraught with delicious tension as thick as London fog, not least as Charlotte is the only character who's specifically likable and sympathetic for quite a bit of the runtime. To that point, though I think we're given more information about the characters than is truly necessary (padding out the length, one might say), as written they are all defined by substantial, varied personality and complications, enriching the tale all the more. I also quite admire the dialogue - no doubt present in Anne Perry's novel, screenwriter T. R. Bowen weaves together words of a grandness and grace that lets them all roll off the tongue with pleasant mellifluousness. (Some lines are especially choice, such as a barbed retort in a charged conversation with the vicar.) And to the credit of the cast, they embrace all these complexities with a natural ease portending their skill as actors. Of course Keeley Hawes stands out most, given the prominence and determined, stubborn temperament of Charlotte, with Eoin McCarthy a close second as investigator Thomas Pitt. Yet all others present are just as exemplary in bringing their roles to life, not least those that are so seedy there's no possibility of liking them.

    I'm a bit divided on the ending, for the identity and reveal of the killer is written well, I think; on the other hand, the suddenness with which Pitt pieces together that identity and has his realization is rather oversimplified and inelegant. Still, for that climax and ending to be win-lose is better than many other mysteries have achieved, so I can't entirely hold it against this instance. When all is said and done I must say I rather like 'The Cater Street Hangman.' It falls short of perfect, in my opinion, yet while it starts kind of slow and catches our attention in curious ways, there's much sharper intelligence here than I was first inclined to assume. All that which first makes an impression turns out to be the right elements, attracting our eye in the wrong way - and maybe deliberately so, a sort of movie-making red herring to further distract us as the mystery swirls about. In any event, it's a strong production, a good cast, and the writing is really excellent, all told. I'm pleased to have stumbled onto this, and for it to have so successfully won me over. Viewers who aren't inclined to enjoy British murder mysteries won't find anything here to change their minds, but if you're open to the style, at length 'The Cater Street Hangman' is an absorbing, satisfying film that's well deserving of one's time if you have the chance to watch.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The character Dora is played by Anna Winslet, whose sister, Kate Winslet played Cater Street Hangman author Anne Perry (birth name: Juliet Hulme) in Créatures célestes (1994).
    • Crazy credits
      The opening title sequence included a title "The Inspector Pitt Mysteries", suggesting that there were plans to adapt more of Anne Perry's novels which never came to fruition.
    • Soundtracks
      Barbara Allen
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      (street singer)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 23, 1998 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Палач Кейтер-стрит
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes

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    Keeley Hawes in The Cater Street Hangman (1998)
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