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Nine Bodies in a Mexican Morgue

  • TV Series
  • 2025
  • 45m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,242
56
Eric McCormack, Ólafur Darri Ólafsson, Siobhán McSweeney, David Ajala, Adam Long, Peter Gadiot, Lydia Wilson, and Jan Le in Nine Bodies in a Mexican Morgue (2025)
Nine Bodies In A Mexican Morgue
Play trailer2:00
2 Videos
39 Photos
Suspense MysteryWhodunnitCrimeMysteryThriller

A plane carrying ten people crashes into the Mexican jungle, leaving them stranded. As they are murdered one by one, the remaining survivors must solve the mystery of who is killing them.A plane carrying ten people crashes into the Mexican jungle, leaving them stranded. As they are murdered one by one, the remaining survivors must solve the mystery of who is killing them.A plane carrying ten people crashes into the Mexican jungle, leaving them stranded. As they are murdered one by one, the remaining survivors must solve the mystery of who is killing them.

  • Creator
    • Anthony Horowitz
  • Stars
    • Eric McCormack
    • David Ajala
    • Lydia Wilson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,242
    56
    • Creator
      • Anthony Horowitz
    • Stars
      • Eric McCormack
      • David Ajala
      • Lydia Wilson
    • 42User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes6

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season2025

    Videos2

    Nine Bodies In A Mexican Morgue
    Trailer 2:00
    Nine Bodies In A Mexican Morgue
    Nine Bodies In A Mexican Morgue: Season 1
    Trailer 0:30
    Nine Bodies In A Mexican Morgue: Season 1
    Nine Bodies In A Mexican Morgue: Season 1
    Trailer 0:30
    Nine Bodies In A Mexican Morgue: Season 1

    Photos39

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Eric McCormack
    Eric McCormack
    • Kevin Anderson
    • 2025
    David Ajala
    David Ajala
    • Zack Ellis
    • 2025
    Lydia Wilson
    Lydia Wilson
    • Sonja
    • 2025
    Jan Le
    Jan Le
    • Amy Maclean
    • 2025
    Adam Long
    Adam Long
    • Dan Maclean
    • 2025
    Bradley J. Ibrahim
    • The Figure
    • 2025
    Siobhán McSweeney
    Siobhán McSweeney
    • Lisa Davies
    • 2025
    Carolina Guerra
    Carolina Guerra
    • Cora De Léon…
    • 2025
    Sebastián Capitán Viveros
    Sebastián Capitán Viveros
    • Subteniente Ignacio López
    • 2025
    Ángel López-Silva
    Ángel López-Silva
    • Captain Primero Gabriel Vega…
    • 2025
    Peter Gadiot
    Peter Gadiot
    • Carlos Garcia Mendez
    • 2025
    Sebastian Orozco
    • Daniel Sánchez
    • 2025
    Ólafur Darri Ólafsson
    Ólafur Darri Ólafsson
    • Travis Davies
    • 2025
    Deborah Ayorinde
    Deborah Ayorinde
    • Claire Sundiata
    • 2025
    Hari Dhillon
    Hari Dhillon
    • David Malik
    • 2025
    Harlys Becerra
    Harlys Becerra
    • Hector Guzman…
    • 2025
    Álvaro Alemán
    • Billy Spencer…
    • 2025
    Isaiah St Jean
    Isaiah St Jean
    • Emilio
    • 2025
    • Creator
      • Anthony Horowitz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews42

    6.42.7K
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    Featured reviews

    7mdjedovic

    And Then They Were Lost: A Good Old-Fashioned Puzzle

    The thriller genre is the streaming world's favourite comfort food, but there really aren't many classical whodunits around anymore. Everything nowadays is based more around suspense, shocking twists, police procedure, or rich people being terrible to each other. However, as a longtime fan of good old-fashioned murder mysteries, I was very much looking forward to "Nine Bodies in a Mexican Morgue", an unexpectedly old-fashioned take on Agatha Christie's classic "And Then There Were None".

    Another reason why I was watering at the mouth about this show is that it's written by Anthony Horowitz. It may be deeply unserious of me, but Horowitz is my favourite living novelist. His genre-redifying, metatextual whodunits always find audaciously novel ways of reusing old formulas with clever yet unobtrusive post-modernist twists. Horowitz is also a brilliant screenwriter, as anyone who's ever seen "Foyle's War" can attest. Here, the Christie connection deepens as Horowitz adapted several of her works for the long-running "Poirot" series. Most importantly for me, he wrote the episode "Yellow Iris", in which he reinvented Christie's very short story as a superbly puzzling, non-linear meta-mystery with a dazzling climax. It remains the only time any screenwriter has ever actually improved on one of Christie's plots.

    Now, having seen "Nine Bodies", I do have to concede that it's not one of Horowitz's finest works. It is a fairly straightforward whodunit slasher without any of the writer's trademark boldness or inventiveness. Instead, what I found so delightful about the series was precisely its old-fashioned approach. It doesn't try to reinvent the wheel, it's not loaded with knowing film references or sarcastic winks to the audience. Most enjoyably, it also lacks the irony which is the plague of most modern genre pieces. Here, at last, is a slasher tale told by someone who doesn't worship at the feet of "Scream".

    The premise is very much as advertised: nine people survive a plane crash, find themselves stranded in the Mexican jungle, and are picked off one by one by a mysterious killer. The cast of characters is made up entirely of stereotypes: the tough guy, the selfish guy, the mousy girl, the stuffy doctor, the MAGA-loving Americans, etc., etc. After all, it's the way the genre works. I enjoyed that Horowitz didn't feel the need to give us lengthy flashbacks or expositional monologues about the characters' backstories. Let's just focus on the mystery at hand.

    The quality of the performances varies, but the protagonists who emerge very quickly are all quite good. Eric McCormack is especially fun to watch as the weasely doctor. Meanwhile, Lydia Wilson and David Ajala are quite likeable and charismatic as this show's versions of Kate and Jack from "Lost". My one constant issue with the performances is the presence of some truly awful American accents from otherwise good British actors. Siobhan McSweeney is probably the biggest offender with her over-the-top Southern draaaaaawl, but Adam Long is no better with his stiff, vaguely trans-Atlantic lilt.

    What the show really lacks is strong, stylish direction. This is usually what separates great thrillers from mindless potboilers. Unfortunately, "Nine Bodies" falls squarely in the latter category. The show is directed by two people, Brian O'Malley and Viviane Andereggen, each handling three episodes. While Andereggen clearly does the better job, neither director really infuses the show with any atmosphere or visual flair. The cinematography is disappointingly bland throughout, and the framing frequently makes the show look like a workaday police procedural instead of the moody slasher it should have been.

    Back to the script. Horowitz has concocted a deliciously enjoyable variation on "And Then There Were None". I enjoyed trying to outguess the characters, even though I wish there were more clues to the solution. In the end, all the plot threads really do come together in a satisfying manner. Of course, it's all utter hokum, but that's part of the genre's fun. Even with the best Christie or Dickson Carr novels, you have to play by their logic. The plotting's one gaping flaw is the survival of one character (I won't say which) who really has no business being alive at the end. That, I'll admit, made me groan. Also, I knew that Horowitz simply won't be able to resist reusing one of Christie's finest twists, so I did figure out who the killer was before the finale, but that's also par for the course.

    Otherwise, I had a lot of fun with "Nine Bodies in a Mexican Morgue". It's the kind of old-fashioned good fun I miss in this jaded, self-important age of event television. Forgive me, but sometimes I don't really want my thriller to be a dark journey into the drug-addled underworld of contemporary America or a scathing indictment of the capitalist system. There's room for your "Long Bright Rivers" and "Sirens", for sure, but I'm hungry for some convoluted, preposterous, but wildly engaging and cleverly constructed puzzles.
    4logandmerrick

    Really?

    I was really enjoying this show up until the final episode. The pacing, acting, and twists had me hooked, and I kept thinking the writers had something clever up their sleeves. But then the last episode happened, and I couldn't believe how lazy the reveal was. I genuinely thought they wouldn't go with the most obvious choice for the killer-but they did. And not only was it obvious, it was downright unbelievable. I get that the entire show leans into the ridiculous, but this ending pushed it into the realm of absurdity. The motives didn't add up, the logic fell apart, and it felt like the writers just gave up. I can suspend disbelief for a good payoff, but this was just a sloppy mess. A complete waste of time and potential.
    8insidelinemedia

    Went into this blind, off to a good start.

    I had never heard of this series, nor seen any trailers for it. I didn't even read the synopsis, the name was intriguing enough to get me to watch the first episode and I'm glad I gave it a chance.

    Can't really make critical judgements after just 1 episode, but it does a good enough job of making me want to watch the next one.

    The camera work is good, beautiful vistas, and the actors all seem to give off the intended vibe for their respective characters, although the writers get a little too cliche with the "fat American couple". I mean c'mon, would that "type" really be visiting Guatemala? Unlikely. The tension between the survivors seems to be just enough to be believable without anyone going off the rails or doing something incredibly stupid (yet). You don't need unnecessary over-the-top drama to make something intriguing. A slow build up can be more satisfying.

    I'm glad they don't give away too much of the story up front, I'm looking forward to seeing where this goes.
    8imdbfan-7347583539

    Entertaining

    Good old-fashioned TV-show for those who love murder mysteries. Good characters that make you guess who has done it all the time. It feels like an Agatha Christie mystery where the characters sometimes have an intense vibe that makes them more endearing. Great and easy entertainment if you don't try to read too deeply into it and find issues.

    As a murder mysteries fan I enjoyed not only the plot and the characters but the oppressive beauty of the Mexican jungle which makes the situation even more challenging. I am looking forward to the last episode and finally finding out what has really happened to them.
    4smartass-55353

    It was good till it wasn't

    Honestly, as the title says. The writing and acting falls apart on the last two episodes. Not that it was anything special, but it at least had me interested in the beginning. I should have known it would fall apart when the pilot could barely speak spanish. The last two episodes are full of cringe specailly Eric McCormick's acting... Maybe it was the writing but the performance is not believeable. It's like someone pretending to be something they are not.

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    • Trivia
      Nine Bodies in a Mexican Morgue, which takes place in the Mexican jungle, was actually shot in the Canary Islands, particularly in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 2, 2025 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Nine Bodies in A Mexican Morgue
    • Filming locations
      • Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, Spain(Botanical Garden "Viera y Clavijo")
    • Production company
      • Eleventh Hour Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 45m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2:1

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