89 of 92 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best......., Dec 4 2004
By Dianne Foster "Di" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Inspector Alleyn Mysteries:Set (DVD)
Ngaio Marsh was one of the big three mystery writers who kicked off the genre for women writers in the 20th Century. She was a New Zealander who migrated to England around the time of WWII and who, along with Christie and Sayers, developed a version of the upper crust male protagonist dectective modeled on Sherlock Holmes.
Sadly, few of Marsh's stories were dramatized for PBS Mystery Theater, though I a number of them have been turned into "talking" books. I recall that there was some discussion at the time of the release of the PBS films about the suitability of Patrick Malahide for the part of Inspector Alleyn. I don't know if that was a factor in PBS not showing more episodes or not, but I think Malahide was just fine.
The first episodes of the Alleyn series cover his early days as an Inspector for Scotland Yard where he teams up with DI Fox (William Simons - Inspector Cribb) and meets his future wife, the artist Agatha Troy (Belinda Lang --To Serve Them All My Days). Troy is a suspect in a murder case Alleyn investigates involving a collection of artists one of whom is a victim of foul play.
Marsh was involved with the world of art including the theater and many of her books reflect her extensive knowledge of stage craft. Comparable to Christie with her poisons, Marsh relied on her background knowledge to shape her cunning plots.
Acorn can't get these mysteries released fast enough for me. I have read all Marsh's books, but unfortunately far to few of them were dramatized and fewer still are available on DVD.
65 of 69 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent and lots of fun + but one problem, Jun 9 2005
By TL "TL" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Inspector Alleyn Mysteries:Set (DVD)
I cannot imagine what some of the people who wrote reviews here were watching. Of the four films, Death at the Bar and Final Curtain are brillaintly written and acted. A Man Lay Dead is a bit slow here or there and as is the Nursing Home Murders, but nevertheless I always enjoyed this series and was sorry they did not make more or them. A&E took over airing the series after the show was on PBS (A&E outbid PBS for a number of programs over the years) and A&E was so busy promoting things like Midsommer Murders that Allyen never got the exposure it deserved.
As for the Troy character she is played wonderfully here by Belinda Lang and there is real chemistry between her and Malahide. FYI to one of the reviewers, the characters never married in the series although Allyen proposes and Troy accepts in Dead Water.
2 out of 4 of these are five star films, the balance being 3/4 star but very enjoyable and well cast.
Let's hope the other 5 films come out as well.
ONE BIG PROBLEM:
Not knowing before hand, I bought this package and reviewed it without viewing it. They are edited!!! I have video tapes from the original airings on TV and they run 105 minutes as opposed to the 98 minutes here. Acorn Media should be commended for releasing them but shot for releasing inferior versions.
36 of 37 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Less fun than Christie but very good of kind, Jan 11 2005
By F. Behrens "Frank Behrens" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Inspector Alleyn Mysteries:Set (DVD)
Consider all the detective series now available on DVDs: Lord Peter Wimsey, Hercule Poirot, Nero Wolfe, Foyle's War, Midsomer Murders, Philip Marlowe, and the like. The success of each one depends on the individuality of the sleuth himself rather than the mysteries. The first three on that list are real "characters" in the "eccentric" sense of the word, whereas the other three series seem to rely more on the settings rather than on the main character.
We can now add to this list, thanks to Acorn Media, the first set of the "Inspector Alleyn Mysteries" (AMP-7427), based on mystery novels by Ngaio Marsh, with Patrick Malahide in the title role. Here we have a time setting of post-WWII England and a place setting of old manor houses and remote fishing villages. Alleyn himself is a bit aristocratically stodgy in the first two episodes, a bit looser in the last two. One interesting gimmick is that his sidekick, Detective Inspector Fox (William Simons) is every bit as sharp as his boss, far from the Watson prototype (labeled by humorist Stephen Leacock "the poor nut").
"A Man Lay Dead" concerns priceless relics "liberated" during the war and now in the hands of collectors. "The Nursing Home Murder" reminds me of that classic British film "Green for Danger" in which a similar group of doctors and nurses fall under suspicion after a patient dies inexplicably during an operation.
"Final Curtain" is like the scherzo movement of this set, extremely funny until things turn nasty at the manor home of a once popular ham actor who brings a young bimbo into a home filled with relations who expect to inherit quite a bit. "Death at the Bar" revolves around a complex set of relationships and a dart-throwing expert who misses just once.
Belinda Long appears in the first three episodes as the love interest in Alleyn's life and practically the star of the third episode. And as is true with most of these British mini-series, the supporting casts are very good to superb.
The only bonuses are the usual printed author biography and cast filmographies. Not as much fun as Wimsey or Poirot, but very good of its kind. Look for it towards the end of January 2005.