Inspector Alleyn Mysteries, Set 2 (2006)
Inspector Alleyn Mysteries, Set 2 Image Cover
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Director:John Woods, Jim Goddard, Martyn Friend
Studio:ACORN MEDIA
Rating:5.0 (8 votes)
Rated:NR
Date Added:2008-10-21
Last Seen:2017-09-26
ASIN:B000CCD1SO
UPC:9781569388143
Price:$59.99
Genre:Mystery & Suspense
Release:2006-02-07
Location:0646
Duration:392
Aspect Ratio:1.33:1
Sound:Dolby
Languages:English
Features:Box set
Custom 1:CopiedE
John Woods, Jim Goddard, Martyn Friend  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
William Simons  ...  
Summary: Anyone familiar with the thin, cruel features of Patrick Malahide from "The Singing Detective" (or any other movie in which he so vividly plays someone venomous or unpleasant) will have some trouble adjusting to his role as the hero of "Inspector Alleyn Mysteries", based on the popular mysteries by Ngaio Marsh. But Malahide, a keenly intelligent actor, will win you over. As the gentleman turned police inspector Roderick Alleyn, Malahide is genteel and almost dandyish, but his ferocious intensity underlies his gracious manner and gives it teeth. Though Marsh's mysteries are whodunits, they play out more like police procedurals, with Alleyn and his right-hand man Inspector Fox (William Simons, "Heartbeat") doggedly piecing together the clues.

The second set of "Inspector Alleyn Mysteries" includes the final episode of the first series, "Death in a White Tie"--in which Alleyn asks a good friend to assist an investigation, leading to that friend's death and Alleyn's fierce pursuit of his killer among the upper crust--as well as the three episodes of the second series. "Hand in Glove" features Sir John Gielgud ("Prospero's Books") as a stuffy aristocrat caught up in a plot featuring forged paintings and a letter of condolence sent before the murder is even discovered. "Dead Water" sends Alleyn and his beloved Agatha Troy (Belinda Lang, "To Serve Them All My Days") to a Scottish island where a waterfall is believed to have healing powers--at least, until a dead body turns up in it. But the strongest of them all is "Scales of Justice", which coolly observes British social schisms as Alleyn tries to unravel a mystery featuring stray cats, stray arrows, Nazi skullduggery, and a very large trout. Tom Wilkinson ("In the Bedroom") gives a wonderfully nuanced performance as a petty, lecherous creep who values his family's name more than a woman's heart. A satisfying collection for any mystery fan. "--Bret Fetzer"