Genre | Titel [IMDb] | Jahr | Originaltitel [TMDb] | Regie | Land | min |
Adventure, Crime, Mystery | Lord Peter Wimsey 1 - Clouds of Witness | 1972 | Diskrete Zeugen | Hugh David | United Kingdom | 171 |
8,0 IMDb Nr.367 | Handlung Lord Peter's brother, the Duke of Denver is accused of murdering their sister Mary's fiancé. It's up to Lord Peter and his faithful man Bunter to untangle all the clues and the contradicting testimony of a cloud of witnesses to save Denver. Kommentar aus IMDb.com [Klicken zum Anzeigen] (by behrens-2 on 31 December 1999) There are several ways for a writer to startle the reader at the end of a mystery. The most overused is "the least likely suspect" solution, a variant being found in an early Ellery Queen novel when a character already proven to be innocent turned out to be the guilty party. Agatha Christie broke all the rules when she made the first-person narrator the killer and again when she made all the suspects the collaborating killers and most outrageously of all when she made the Master Detective the killer. (Contact me if you want the titles of these books.) With Dorothy Sayers we have far better written novels--though not necessarily better mysteries than those solved by Poirot and Marple--with characters far more human and therefore interesting. So when the BBC decided back in 1972 to film several of her Lord Peter Wimsey mysteries, mostly at the urging of comedian Ian Carmichael, that actor was not even on the short list of candidates for the part since he was too closely associated with Bertie Wooster, whom he had shortly before that played on British telly. But he got the part and the rest is history. Five of the Wimsey mysteries were filmed and shown a year later on "Masterpiece Theatre": Clouds of Witness, The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club, Five Red Herrings, Murder Must Advertise and The Nine Tailors. They were a smash with audiences on both sides of the Atlantic and showed up later with a new series title, "Murder Most British," which included only three of them. The Lord Peter Wimsey website was filled with inquiries from fans panting to get copies of any or all of the fabulous five, but the BBC retained a stony silence. The good news is, as you might have guessed by now, that Acorn Media is releasing four of them and | Darsteller Ian Carmichael ... Lord Peter Wimsey (5 episodes, 1972) Glyn Houston ... Bunter (5 episodes, 1972) Mark Eden ... Det. Inspector Parker (5 episodes, 1972) Rachel Herbert ... Lady Mary Wimsey (5 episodes, 1972) David Langton ... Duke of Denver (4 episodes, 1972) Georgina Cookson ... Helen, Duchess of Denver (3 episodes, 1972) Isabel Jeans ... Dowager Duchess (3 episodes, 1972) George Coulouris ... Mr. Grimthorpe (3 episodes, 1972) Judith Arthy ... Mrs. Grimthorpe (3 episodes, 1972) Francis De Wolff ... Sir Impey Biggs (3 episodes, 1972) | ||||
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