12 reviews
These adaptations of the P D James books of Adam Dalgliesh are of the best - and I mean all of them. The stories are long in comparison to today's highly edited story lines. It makes for a natural flow to the story, building atmosphere and generally contributing to the general feeling of the episode. I like seeing cars arrive and depart and the characters making the tea! It is also very natural for a detective to sit and ponder a very complex murder - and the director did good by showing us these scenes.
Roy was an excellent choice to do this role as he did not resort to emotional gimmicks as lessor actors would have done - he interpreted the role as that of an inspector who was fully aware of his detective abilities and the character had no need to impress the viewer with predictable devices. This show was obviously aimed at a more mature audience - hence the absence (most of the time) of bar fight scenes, car chase scenes, bed scenes, impossible superiors, sub plots and other devices to pad the plot and episode.
Highly recommended.
Roy was an excellent choice to do this role as he did not resort to emotional gimmicks as lessor actors would have done - he interpreted the role as that of an inspector who was fully aware of his detective abilities and the character had no need to impress the viewer with predictable devices. This show was obviously aimed at a more mature audience - hence the absence (most of the time) of bar fight scenes, car chase scenes, bed scenes, impossible superiors, sub plots and other devices to pad the plot and episode.
Highly recommended.
Well, yes, it's long, but the interweaving of characters takes time. P. D. James brings us into the scenes by offering stories in the first half about the major suspects in a murder that takes place half-way into the series. While you want to get to the 'who did it?' part, relax, enjoy the stories. None are irrelevant or thin, and they all add depth to what otherwise would be just another detective procedural.
- priscillahodgkins-21456
- Nov 2, 2021
- Permalink
- HerrDoktorMabuse
- May 1, 2011
- Permalink
This was the first of the adaptations of the P D James books of Adam Dalgliesh, which is unfortunately unavailable to the public in video. If it come again onto your local television station, it is a must see!
Roy Marsden makes a perfect Dalgliesh! Tall, mysterious Dalgliesh is the best man available and is picked by New Scotland Yard to investigate murder and intrigue in a highly sensitive government department.
Jowly Geoffrey Palmer plays a part far different from the relaxed comedy parts of late, and Barry Foster cuts a dash as Dr Maxim Howarth. The plot twists and turns and the viewer will be kept literally guessing 'Who done it' until the last scene! A great night of entertainment for mystery fans. Well worth a look!
Roy Marsden makes a perfect Dalgliesh! Tall, mysterious Dalgliesh is the best man available and is picked by New Scotland Yard to investigate murder and intrigue in a highly sensitive government department.
Jowly Geoffrey Palmer plays a part far different from the relaxed comedy parts of late, and Barry Foster cuts a dash as Dr Maxim Howarth. The plot twists and turns and the viewer will be kept literally guessing 'Who done it' until the last scene! A great night of entertainment for mystery fans. Well worth a look!
- wendylaing
- Aug 24, 2000
- Permalink
British mystery at its absolute finest. Death of an Expert witness is long, but loaded with rich content, compelling characters, and fine performances, a masterclass from lead actor Roy Marsden.
Some will find the direction and pacing too laden, but it's that pace that allows the story to develop, the characters to grow, and the resulting conclusion to come as a big surprise.
It's very much a product of the elegant eighties, with Lesbianism something of a taboo subject, and Stella referred to as a friend, rather then partner, and of course we get some eighties glamour, in the form of Domenica, who genuinely looks dazzling at times, a fine performance from Meg Davies.
Marsden stands out of course, but he's in good company, Fiona Walker and Geoffrey Palmer shine, only Andrew Ray feels somewhat wooden as Bradley.
It's a great story, from a book I'd highly recommend, but this is a fantastic adaptation, and very faithful. This is the best of the PD James adaptations, and I must at this point highlight the sublime music, the score is one of television's greatest.
A truly great watch. 9/10.
Some will find the direction and pacing too laden, but it's that pace that allows the story to develop, the characters to grow, and the resulting conclusion to come as a big surprise.
It's very much a product of the elegant eighties, with Lesbianism something of a taboo subject, and Stella referred to as a friend, rather then partner, and of course we get some eighties glamour, in the form of Domenica, who genuinely looks dazzling at times, a fine performance from Meg Davies.
Marsden stands out of course, but he's in good company, Fiona Walker and Geoffrey Palmer shine, only Andrew Ray feels somewhat wooden as Bradley.
It's a great story, from a book I'd highly recommend, but this is a fantastic adaptation, and very faithful. This is the best of the PD James adaptations, and I must at this point highlight the sublime music, the score is one of television's greatest.
A truly great watch. 9/10.
- Sleepin_Dragon
- May 19, 2019
- Permalink
Nobody knows mystery and drama better than the British, and this 1983 miniseries is first-rate British drama. As a fan of BBC drama/mystery (but unfamiliar with author PD James), I was completely unaware of the plot when I first watched this, which made it all the more riveting. From the start, the viewer is plunged into an interconnecting plot with lots of clues, suspects, red herrings, forensics, and all the usual stuff that mystery lovers love!
Roy Marsden is superbly natural as detective Adam Dalgliesh, portraying a man who is both charming and hardcore (a little like Sherlock Holmes, and his assistant, played by John Vine, as a kind of Watson). The supporting cast features such familiar BBC players as Geoffrey Palmer, Brenda Blethyn (long before her Academy Award nomination), and wonderful Barry Foster (who still impresses me with his incomparable performance of Kaiser Wilhelm in Fall of Eagles). The rest of the characters are well played (ignore the reviews that say otherwise; this is British mystery, remember, and a little theatrics is expected). Since juvenile actors are never mentioned in reviews, another minor but featured supporting player is Annabelle Lanyon, a terrific child actress who appeared in a bunch of BBC shows around this time (a notable performance being the Marchioness in The Old Curiosity Shop; she is still recognized today in the cult classic arena for playing Oona the fairy in Ridley Scott's Legend).
Remember that this was filmed in the early 80s, so it is shot on video rather than film, which gives it a little less visual style. But this was true of most of the BBC shows of the time, and once the story gets moving, you forget all about camera techniques and find yourself fully engrossed in the twisting, turning plot.
A great experience for mystery and drama fans, and especially for fans of classic BBC productions, which, granted, were thin on action and technique, but big on acting, characters, dialogue, and plot!
Roy Marsden is superbly natural as detective Adam Dalgliesh, portraying a man who is both charming and hardcore (a little like Sherlock Holmes, and his assistant, played by John Vine, as a kind of Watson). The supporting cast features such familiar BBC players as Geoffrey Palmer, Brenda Blethyn (long before her Academy Award nomination), and wonderful Barry Foster (who still impresses me with his incomparable performance of Kaiser Wilhelm in Fall of Eagles). The rest of the characters are well played (ignore the reviews that say otherwise; this is British mystery, remember, and a little theatrics is expected). Since juvenile actors are never mentioned in reviews, another minor but featured supporting player is Annabelle Lanyon, a terrific child actress who appeared in a bunch of BBC shows around this time (a notable performance being the Marchioness in The Old Curiosity Shop; she is still recognized today in the cult classic arena for playing Oona the fairy in Ridley Scott's Legend).
Remember that this was filmed in the early 80s, so it is shot on video rather than film, which gives it a little less visual style. But this was true of most of the BBC shows of the time, and once the story gets moving, you forget all about camera techniques and find yourself fully engrossed in the twisting, turning plot.
A great experience for mystery and drama fans, and especially for fans of classic BBC productions, which, granted, were thin on action and technique, but big on acting, characters, dialogue, and plot!
- mkramer-693-816493
- Mar 10, 2015
- Permalink
The P. D. James mysteries are another that I remember well from my childhood. They were dark, atmospheric and in depth in it's subject - perfect for those who love to play amateur detective and try to fit the clues to make a solution. I was a big fan of the series, but it's astonishing that it managed to survive it's 15 year run after a surprisingly slow start with it's first mystery, Death of an Expert Witness in 1983.
It starts off intriguingly enough with the discovery of a body in a car - another victim of a serial killer known as the Backseat Strangler. But as evidence is bagged and sent to Hoggart's Laboratory, it soon becomes clear that it is less interested in the mysterious serial killings than the lives of the work colleagues of Hoggarts. Edwin Lorrimer (Geoffrey Palmer) believes he is a shoo in to take over as Head Scientist there, so he's not a happy bunny when new boy Maxim Howarth (Barry Foster) takes the job instead and proceeds to shake up the place when he arrives, along with his half sister Domenica (Meg Davies). Domenica stirs a sexual awakening in Lorrimer - and considering this is Geoffrey Palmer of As Time Goes By fame, please don't feel queasy reading this - and embarks on an affair with her. When she later callously breaks off the affair, Lorrimer becomes bitter and lashes out at his work colleagues. This includes neurotic and nervous trainee scientist Clifford Bradley (Andrew Ray), who he bullies mercilessly; Paul Middlesmass (Stephen Thorne), who he clashes with and who has never forgiven Lorrimer for the suicide of another trainee under his tutoredge; his cousin Angela Foley (a young Brenda Blethyn), who asks Lorrimer for a loan in order to stay at her home but instead ends up cut out from his will; and even pathologist Henry Kerrison (Ray Brooks) after he throws out Kerrison's ever so slightly disturbing childlike daughter Nell (a memorable Annabelle Lanyon). He even clashes with bullish (and somewhat dodgy) copper D. I. Doyle (Malcolm Terris), making him a very unpopular chappie indeed. So there is no surprise when Lorrimer is eventually murdered - but by eventually, I MEAN eventually!
The reviews seem to be split by those who think this is outstanding and those who find this incredibly dull. The truth is it is neither, but more somewhere in between. Over the course of it's 7 (yes, seven!) episodes it does become an absorbing and compelling mystery, but it has to be said that it takes a heck of a time to get there. When I first saw this in the ITV3 repeats it had been edited into 6 parts and even then I thought it slow to get going. But in it's original 7 episode format it takes until episode 3 before Lorrimer is murdered, given a sedative in his science laboratory with a wooden mallett. In Episode 1 the opening scene alone takes five minutes of Ray Brooks' character getting out of bed and going to work (I kid you not!). It's not as if up until that point it concerns itself with the Backseat Strangler, as that is soon forgotten as a mere side story as it details the Hoggarts staff love lives and turmoils. Indeed, it's a shame that it's put on the back burner, as one of P. D. James' strengths as a novellist is creating an atmosphere of fear and foreboding and that could of been used to enliven the early episodes of this. Another regret considering the amount of episodes this mystery has is the lack of screen time that Adam Dalgliesh's wife (Stacey Tendeter) has as the ill fated Jean. The few scenes they have together are sweet, but when her demise comes - in childbirth, for those who queried how she dies - it's off screen, and with no funeral or anything. The next you see of Dalgliesh after his wife goes off in the ambulance is a month later in church, and left me feeling somewhat cheated. With all those episodes the makers could of built up the relationship with screen time so that we could of had a more emotional impact with her death. Instead it robs us of that moment of loss.
However, once Lorrimer is finally murdered in episode 3 it becomes absorbing as Dalgliesh and his little assistant Inspector Massingham (John Vine) investigate and discover a number of peculiarities in the case. Such as how the murderer got in - or out - when the security doors were locked; why Lorrimer's pages in his notebook were torn out, or why Mrs Bidwell the cleaner received a hoax phone call delaying her arrival to the laboratory? Other curios include Paul Middlemass' blood stained coat disappearing, tyre marks discovered outside the lab grounds and a figure spotted running down the path. As Dalgliesh methodically goes over the clues and questions the numerous suspects, it's this procedure that becomes fascinating as it gives us the clues and statements so that we too can try and figure it out. And because of it's multi episode format you are able to go into more depth with the characters to see who would be likely to be the killer - and why. Roy Marsden is wonderful as Dalgiesh and great at capturing our attention with those mesmerizing blue eyes, whether haunted in grief, compassionate at times or coldly clinical in scrutinizing the statements that the various suspects give. It's a multi layered performance that shows just what can be expressed just by using the eyes. He's an imposing figure, both in character and in stature (6'4" in real life) and as such he adds real authority to the role without having to raise his voice - a rarity in detective dramas.
The other performances range from the good to solid, to the more dubious and suspect. I suspect some of the criticisms in some of the reviews on here are levelled at Chloe Franks as Brenda Pridmore for her more 'yokel' accent and performance. Her acting may not be great here, but there's no harm in her character and certainly doesn't irritate. Her attempts to describe what a secretor is in a case involving a vicar to her parents while at the breakfast table is wonderfully amusing. One that did irritate was (surprisingly) Cyril Cusack's performance as Lorrimer's father, whose dodery and rambling narrative (during which he relays to Dalgliesh a peculiar phone call he received for his son the day he died) almost had me up the walls in frustration. Another who seemed a little lightweight was Andrew Ray as the neurotic Clifford Bradley, complete with a moustache that made him look like a human ferret. Considering his long established career stretching back to 1950, it is the inexperienced Sheridan Ball as his wife Sue who gives the more assured performance. Other stars like Valerie Testa and Stephen Thorne are decent, but are given little screen time compared to some of the other suspects. Even Annabelle Lanyon has fewer screen time than expected as the childlike but somewhat creepy Nell Kerrison, effectively sticking needles into a wax effigy of Lorrimer in one memorable scene.
Of the more notable performances, Geoffrey Palmer is memorable as the victim Edwin Lorrimer, full of thwarted ambitions, frustrations and seething anger as he slowly unravels. It's especially remarkable as he only appears in 3 episodes, but his impact is felt throughout. Indeed, what impresses is how each actor or actress make their own mark in different ways, from the understated Ray Brooks as Kerrison, to the more commanding and authorative Barry Foster as Maxim Howarth. Malcolm Terris deserves notice as the bombastic and suspicious D. I. Doyle. At times his character is repellent, but it's a memorable performance that also feels real for a certain sort of copper that existed back then. Meg Davies is also coldly contemptable as Domenica Howarth, but unfortunately I just couldn't warm to her. This is the second thing I've seen her in after Van Der Valk (with Barry Foster, coincidentally), and both times she's left me cold. I quite liked John Vine as Dalgliesh's chippy but amusing sidekick Inspector Massingham. But deserving most praise is Brenda Blethyn as Angela Foley, Lorrimer's cousin. Hers is a quiet, sweet character, but becomes considerably overwrought as the mystery progresses as she desperately seeks money to stay at the love nest she has established with her girlfriend Stella Mawson (Fiona Walker). Denied a loan by Lorrimer, she thinks things are looking up when he dies, only to discover that she's been cut out of his will. Her performance is superb, especially towards the end as her character's world just seems to be collapsing all around her and deserves all the plaudits thrown at her.
It also benefit from some genuinely eerie moments that so characterize P. D. James' novels. The moment when Lorrimer's body is discovered by Brenda Pridmore in the laboratory is notable enough. But it's the chapel scene in episode 6 when the same said unfortunate Brenda has to walk through the cemetary when her bike tyres are slashed that is the most eerily effective. The whole scene, including the discovery of a hanging woman from a bell rope, plus the lengthy efforts of Dalgliesh and Massingham to revive her (and Brenda) mark as one of it's high points (no pun intended). And it's end episode is dramatically memorable as it is surprisingly touching. This first P. D. James mystery does have it's problems - such as it's slow pace in getting to the main murder, plus a couple of points that it never really satsifactorily explains, such as the slashed tyres on Brenda's bikes (who did it?) or the Backseat Strangler, which is reduced to a sub-plot. But once it does get going it becomes an absorbing watch with a couple of memorable moments. And this mystery does have it's heart in the right place - that of everyday people's lives and emotions, the seemingly insignificant problems that in this case all combine to create one tragic sequence of events after another, just because one one person's decision. It's as much a human drama as a mystery, and for that it deserves some credit.
It starts off intriguingly enough with the discovery of a body in a car - another victim of a serial killer known as the Backseat Strangler. But as evidence is bagged and sent to Hoggart's Laboratory, it soon becomes clear that it is less interested in the mysterious serial killings than the lives of the work colleagues of Hoggarts. Edwin Lorrimer (Geoffrey Palmer) believes he is a shoo in to take over as Head Scientist there, so he's not a happy bunny when new boy Maxim Howarth (Barry Foster) takes the job instead and proceeds to shake up the place when he arrives, along with his half sister Domenica (Meg Davies). Domenica stirs a sexual awakening in Lorrimer - and considering this is Geoffrey Palmer of As Time Goes By fame, please don't feel queasy reading this - and embarks on an affair with her. When she later callously breaks off the affair, Lorrimer becomes bitter and lashes out at his work colleagues. This includes neurotic and nervous trainee scientist Clifford Bradley (Andrew Ray), who he bullies mercilessly; Paul Middlesmass (Stephen Thorne), who he clashes with and who has never forgiven Lorrimer for the suicide of another trainee under his tutoredge; his cousin Angela Foley (a young Brenda Blethyn), who asks Lorrimer for a loan in order to stay at her home but instead ends up cut out from his will; and even pathologist Henry Kerrison (Ray Brooks) after he throws out Kerrison's ever so slightly disturbing childlike daughter Nell (a memorable Annabelle Lanyon). He even clashes with bullish (and somewhat dodgy) copper D. I. Doyle (Malcolm Terris), making him a very unpopular chappie indeed. So there is no surprise when Lorrimer is eventually murdered - but by eventually, I MEAN eventually!
The reviews seem to be split by those who think this is outstanding and those who find this incredibly dull. The truth is it is neither, but more somewhere in between. Over the course of it's 7 (yes, seven!) episodes it does become an absorbing and compelling mystery, but it has to be said that it takes a heck of a time to get there. When I first saw this in the ITV3 repeats it had been edited into 6 parts and even then I thought it slow to get going. But in it's original 7 episode format it takes until episode 3 before Lorrimer is murdered, given a sedative in his science laboratory with a wooden mallett. In Episode 1 the opening scene alone takes five minutes of Ray Brooks' character getting out of bed and going to work (I kid you not!). It's not as if up until that point it concerns itself with the Backseat Strangler, as that is soon forgotten as a mere side story as it details the Hoggarts staff love lives and turmoils. Indeed, it's a shame that it's put on the back burner, as one of P. D. James' strengths as a novellist is creating an atmosphere of fear and foreboding and that could of been used to enliven the early episodes of this. Another regret considering the amount of episodes this mystery has is the lack of screen time that Adam Dalgliesh's wife (Stacey Tendeter) has as the ill fated Jean. The few scenes they have together are sweet, but when her demise comes - in childbirth, for those who queried how she dies - it's off screen, and with no funeral or anything. The next you see of Dalgliesh after his wife goes off in the ambulance is a month later in church, and left me feeling somewhat cheated. With all those episodes the makers could of built up the relationship with screen time so that we could of had a more emotional impact with her death. Instead it robs us of that moment of loss.
However, once Lorrimer is finally murdered in episode 3 it becomes absorbing as Dalgliesh and his little assistant Inspector Massingham (John Vine) investigate and discover a number of peculiarities in the case. Such as how the murderer got in - or out - when the security doors were locked; why Lorrimer's pages in his notebook were torn out, or why Mrs Bidwell the cleaner received a hoax phone call delaying her arrival to the laboratory? Other curios include Paul Middlemass' blood stained coat disappearing, tyre marks discovered outside the lab grounds and a figure spotted running down the path. As Dalgliesh methodically goes over the clues and questions the numerous suspects, it's this procedure that becomes fascinating as it gives us the clues and statements so that we too can try and figure it out. And because of it's multi episode format you are able to go into more depth with the characters to see who would be likely to be the killer - and why. Roy Marsden is wonderful as Dalgiesh and great at capturing our attention with those mesmerizing blue eyes, whether haunted in grief, compassionate at times or coldly clinical in scrutinizing the statements that the various suspects give. It's a multi layered performance that shows just what can be expressed just by using the eyes. He's an imposing figure, both in character and in stature (6'4" in real life) and as such he adds real authority to the role without having to raise his voice - a rarity in detective dramas.
The other performances range from the good to solid, to the more dubious and suspect. I suspect some of the criticisms in some of the reviews on here are levelled at Chloe Franks as Brenda Pridmore for her more 'yokel' accent and performance. Her acting may not be great here, but there's no harm in her character and certainly doesn't irritate. Her attempts to describe what a secretor is in a case involving a vicar to her parents while at the breakfast table is wonderfully amusing. One that did irritate was (surprisingly) Cyril Cusack's performance as Lorrimer's father, whose dodery and rambling narrative (during which he relays to Dalgliesh a peculiar phone call he received for his son the day he died) almost had me up the walls in frustration. Another who seemed a little lightweight was Andrew Ray as the neurotic Clifford Bradley, complete with a moustache that made him look like a human ferret. Considering his long established career stretching back to 1950, it is the inexperienced Sheridan Ball as his wife Sue who gives the more assured performance. Other stars like Valerie Testa and Stephen Thorne are decent, but are given little screen time compared to some of the other suspects. Even Annabelle Lanyon has fewer screen time than expected as the childlike but somewhat creepy Nell Kerrison, effectively sticking needles into a wax effigy of Lorrimer in one memorable scene.
Of the more notable performances, Geoffrey Palmer is memorable as the victim Edwin Lorrimer, full of thwarted ambitions, frustrations and seething anger as he slowly unravels. It's especially remarkable as he only appears in 3 episodes, but his impact is felt throughout. Indeed, what impresses is how each actor or actress make their own mark in different ways, from the understated Ray Brooks as Kerrison, to the more commanding and authorative Barry Foster as Maxim Howarth. Malcolm Terris deserves notice as the bombastic and suspicious D. I. Doyle. At times his character is repellent, but it's a memorable performance that also feels real for a certain sort of copper that existed back then. Meg Davies is also coldly contemptable as Domenica Howarth, but unfortunately I just couldn't warm to her. This is the second thing I've seen her in after Van Der Valk (with Barry Foster, coincidentally), and both times she's left me cold. I quite liked John Vine as Dalgliesh's chippy but amusing sidekick Inspector Massingham. But deserving most praise is Brenda Blethyn as Angela Foley, Lorrimer's cousin. Hers is a quiet, sweet character, but becomes considerably overwrought as the mystery progresses as she desperately seeks money to stay at the love nest she has established with her girlfriend Stella Mawson (Fiona Walker). Denied a loan by Lorrimer, she thinks things are looking up when he dies, only to discover that she's been cut out of his will. Her performance is superb, especially towards the end as her character's world just seems to be collapsing all around her and deserves all the plaudits thrown at her.
It also benefit from some genuinely eerie moments that so characterize P. D. James' novels. The moment when Lorrimer's body is discovered by Brenda Pridmore in the laboratory is notable enough. But it's the chapel scene in episode 6 when the same said unfortunate Brenda has to walk through the cemetary when her bike tyres are slashed that is the most eerily effective. The whole scene, including the discovery of a hanging woman from a bell rope, plus the lengthy efforts of Dalgliesh and Massingham to revive her (and Brenda) mark as one of it's high points (no pun intended). And it's end episode is dramatically memorable as it is surprisingly touching. This first P. D. James mystery does have it's problems - such as it's slow pace in getting to the main murder, plus a couple of points that it never really satsifactorily explains, such as the slashed tyres on Brenda's bikes (who did it?) or the Backseat Strangler, which is reduced to a sub-plot. But once it does get going it becomes an absorbing watch with a couple of memorable moments. And this mystery does have it's heart in the right place - that of everyday people's lives and emotions, the seemingly insignificant problems that in this case all combine to create one tragic sequence of events after another, just because one one person's decision. It's as much a human drama as a mystery, and for that it deserves some credit.
- gingerninjasz
- Jul 19, 2023
- Permalink
The first of the Dalgliesh detective series will surely put intelligent viewers off. First, at four and half hours long it is about 300 percent as long as it should have been. What seems like endless scenes of cars arriving, departing, and moving down roads, and of Dalgleish sitting and thinking to himself are just two of the ways the script is padded almost beyond belief. If this is being down in the first two parts of this three part series to establish an air of realism all this is thrown to the winds in part three when the major characters act in a downright silly way. Clichés abound. With a murderer on the loose, a young girl, who hitherto would faint at a frown, decides to take the shortcut home through the dark woods, announcing her reason for doing it to the audience as if the justify so silly a behavior in the mind of the viewer. The final coup de gras in this respect is when Superintendent Dalgliesh and the confessed murderer go for a walk alone in the countryside while the murderer explains the reasons for his criminal behavior. As someone who has just finished teaching the mystery as a part of a course in Modern Drama I count myself among the great fans of the dramatized mystery story. However, I fell asleep more than once trying to get through this one. 'Nuff said. Unless you are ready for your nap skip this one and go to 'The Black Tower' or one of the other later programs in the Dalgliesh series.
- adreceiverjapan
- Aug 22, 2007
- Permalink
This series has become one of our most enjoyable to watch with Roy Marsden being the "perfect" Adam Dalgleish. Having not watched these video adaptations in order, we noticed in some episodes of other stories mention made of Dalgleish's wife and child and the fact that they were killed in some vehicle accident. Now in this episode we find Dalgleish bidding his very pregnant wife goodbye as they await a taxi to take her (presumably) to hospital. Nothing more is said of her or her demise except for two very brief statements from Dalgleish referring to his wife's death "a month ago". Surely something better of this traumatic episode could have been made for the viewer! We did find it touching to see Dalgleish toying with his wedding band in several scenes as the story progressed...wonder if this was a little touch that Marsden added on his own. We also cannot quite come to grips with a "new" Dalgleish (Martin Shaw) in the most recent episodes.
- donsmith-33
- Feb 10, 2007
- Permalink
Having very much enjoyed "Original Sin" (one of the later P D James adaptations in this series), I was disappointed by "Death of an Expert Witness". The main actors - Roy Marsden, Geoffrey Palmer, Cyril Cusack, Brenda Blethyn, Fiona Walker - are very good, as one would expect, but most of the minor characters are played really badly - sometimes so badly as to be embarrassing or amusing. This may well be in part down to the direction, which is inexplicably poor from the normally excellent Herbert Wise, who must have been going through a bad patch. Also I hated the device of occasionally making Dalgleish's thoughts audible: it simply doesn't work.
A pity the team didn't remake this adaptation in later years.
A pity the team didn't remake this adaptation in later years.
I got in a little snooze while waiting for something to happen in this tedious production and woke to find that in the meantime, little had happened. Direction is pretty bad overall and it's not just in comparison to "today's standards." I don't remember any other show from this era dragging like this. Do I finish Part 2 of this DVD or cut my losses?