Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueHarry Barnett is a failed businessman who used to run a garage until he went bankrupt. He is now living on the island of Rhodes, looking after the villa of a friend, Alan Dysart, a former go... Tout lireHarry Barnett is a failed businessman who used to run a garage until he went bankrupt. He is now living on the island of Rhodes, looking after the villa of a friend, Alan Dysart, a former government minister. After Heather Mallender, a young woman who is staying at Dysart's villa... Tout lireHarry Barnett is a failed businessman who used to run a garage until he went bankrupt. He is now living on the island of Rhodes, looking after the villa of a friend, Alan Dysart, a former government minister. After Heather Mallender, a young woman who is staying at Dysart's villa, goes missing, Harry is accused of her murder. He is determined to prove that she is stil... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
- Detective
- (as a different name)
Avis à la une
The made for television movie starts with a flashback. A schoolboy finds a box from the railway line, it contained a baby.
In later years two women have been attacked and found dead.
In the the present day. Harry Barnett (Thaw) is house minding a property in Rhodes for politician Alan Dysart.
Harry is a failed businessman but Dysart has helped him out. Only Dysart was a government minister who had to resign over a scandal.
Now Harry is involved in a scandal of his own. A young woman called Heather Mallender bedded him and has now disappeared. Harry knows she was snooping about Dysart's house looking for something.
Harry returns to Britain to clear his name. He finds that Dysart had been involved with Heather's sister who was found drowned.
Maybe there is a dark side to Dysart, he seems to be involved with dodgy business dealings.
By the end the various plot elements all makes sense. It is just not that good.
I came into John Thaw's work very indirectly, Inspector Morse would air on ETV as one of the Mystery segments. Of course, he was good.
It would take me a while or two to realize that Into The Blue was not the same character, but still the story was fun.
Being handed the abandoned baby, the death in the canoe and then the body found on the shore like that all at the beginning, and seeing how they all connected was a good attention-getting story.
He got a pretty good ally in Zhora there for a while too.
I know nothing about the book, of course, so it was all the first time I had seen the story.
I had no problems with it.
Robert Goddard is a solid and reliable British writer of clever and complex mysteries. However this adaptation of his novel Into The Blue as a vehicle for John Thaw is disastrous from word go. Embarrassingly miscast, Thaw struggles with accent and intent as he blunders from one scene to another, and he is horribly betrayed by a great clunking script and ghastly supporting actors - Ba is particularly awful as Harry's reluctant sidekick.
Find Goddard's original novel and avoid this turkey at all costs.
As an author of mystery novels and an observer of the two industries (print & film), the media are so different that I often discount the "it did not follow the book" criticisms. Most viewers of the film never have nor ever will read the novel. We writers need to bank the movie checks and move on to the next book.
I wanted to see this after reading the book, and having only recently filmed it, I'd have to question how much of the book was adapted, it almost feels like an entirely different story.
If you're a fan of mysteries, and a fan of the late great John Thaw, I think you'll enjoy this, if you're looking for a faithful adaptation, you'll be sorely disappointed.
It had a great start, decent core, and a very confusing, but exciting ending. The conclusion was the only poor element for me, not all events were explained, it felt very vague and ambiguous.
Great location work, fine acting and some excitement. The acting was great I thought, and for me John Thaw was very well cast.
I enjoyed it, 7/10.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOriginal author Robert Goddard was not impressed with the adaptation of his novel. In an interview, he said "The TV version of Into the Blue was a travesty of the story I wrote and I am determined that any future adaptations should be more faithful to the original".
- GaffesThere was nothing in Kingdom's house to make it explode as shown in the film.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Rejtély Rodoszon
- Lieux de tournage
- Bearwood College, Wokingham, Berkshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Where Jack Cornelius teaches)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro