A small-town district attorney's saddled with several major investigations, including a gambler's murder and a possible insurance scam.A small-town district attorney's saddled with several major investigations, including a gambler's murder and a possible insurance scam.A small-town district attorney's saddled with several major investigations, including a gambler's murder and a possible insurance scam.
William Elliott
- Deputy Bob Terry
- (as Bill Elliott)
Valentin de Vargas
- Alex Cordoba
- (as Val de Vargas)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
5.6336
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
Rather well done
It was like an episode of Columbo without already knowing the murderer and Columbo.
Good TV Pilot
Jim Hutton, the district attorney of a small county some place in southern California (with some exteriors shot in San Anselmo in Marin County) is confronted with a puzzling murder: a man shot in a pool by two guns -- so it's unclear which one killed the man -- with lots of suspects, no motive, an annoying defense attorney among them, played by Lloyd Bochner, and a growing pile of corpses.
Erle Stanley Gardner started out as a lawyer, but was bored by the practice of law. He started writing in 1921. When he became a full-time writer in 1933, he felt that any year in which he wrote fewer than 1,200,000 words was a bad year, and he used eight or so pen names to avoid flooding the market. That may seem like a lot of books, short stories, radio scripts, travel books, and articles on forensics. In the 1940s, he founded the Court of Last Resort, a forerunner of such organizations as the Innocence Project. He died in 1979, at the age of 80.
He's best remembered for creating Perry Mason, who appeared in more than 80 novels, a dozen movies, and hundreds of episodes of the TV series and succeeding TV movies. This TV movie is from a lesser known series. In an inversion of the Perry Mason formula. District Attorney Doug Selby, confronted with a puzzling mystery, faces off in court against defense attorney A. B. Carr. This is the only screen version of the characters; doubtless it was intended for a series, but after Raymond Burr, who could believe such a thing?
Nonetheless, it has a fine and confusing plot, Ed Asner as a brutish police chief, Leslie Nielson with an Irish accent, and Vic Tayback as an insurance investigator. Very watchable.
Erle Stanley Gardner started out as a lawyer, but was bored by the practice of law. He started writing in 1921. When he became a full-time writer in 1933, he felt that any year in which he wrote fewer than 1,200,000 words was a bad year, and he used eight or so pen names to avoid flooding the market. That may seem like a lot of books, short stories, radio scripts, travel books, and articles on forensics. In the 1940s, he founded the Court of Last Resort, a forerunner of such organizations as the Innocence Project. He died in 1979, at the age of 80.
He's best remembered for creating Perry Mason, who appeared in more than 80 novels, a dozen movies, and hundreds of episodes of the TV series and succeeding TV movies. This TV movie is from a lesser known series. In an inversion of the Perry Mason formula. District Attorney Doug Selby, confronted with a puzzling mystery, faces off in court against defense attorney A. B. Carr. This is the only screen version of the characters; doubtless it was intended for a series, but after Raymond Burr, who could believe such a thing?
Nonetheless, it has a fine and confusing plot, Ed Asner as a brutish police chief, Leslie Nielson with an Irish accent, and Vic Tayback as an insurance investigator. Very watchable.
Murder and insurance
In what looks like a pilot for a possible television series Jim Hutton plays the
District Attorney in a small southern California county who partners closely
with County Sheriff Robert J. Wilkie in the investigation. Hutton is even in on the
final shootout.
For Bob Wilkie sad this pilot wasn't picked up. Wilkie played dozens of bad guys in westerns and this would have been a career change for him.
A body is found in the pool where Leslie Nielsen resides with daughter-in-law Jessica Walter. Nielsen is in a wheelchair as a result of an accident where his son was killed several months earlier.
There's an insurance settlement in the offing. But the insurance company PI Vic Tayback smells a rat.
Of course the murder and the accident are linked but you watch the movie to see just how. I guessed the right perpetrator, but not the extent of the con that was being played, A few murders happen before the solution is found.
Also note good performances from JoAnn Pflug as a reporter and Nita Talbot who is an actress worried about keeping up with the younger women coming up in her profession.
There's also Ed Asner who is an obnoxious and bumbling city police chief. His role seemed superfluous to the story.
Might have made a good series.
For Bob Wilkie sad this pilot wasn't picked up. Wilkie played dozens of bad guys in westerns and this would have been a career change for him.
A body is found in the pool where Leslie Nielsen resides with daughter-in-law Jessica Walter. Nielsen is in a wheelchair as a result of an accident where his son was killed several months earlier.
There's an insurance settlement in the offing. But the insurance company PI Vic Tayback smells a rat.
Of course the murder and the accident are linked but you watch the movie to see just how. I guessed the right perpetrator, but not the extent of the con that was being played, A few murders happen before the solution is found.
Also note good performances from JoAnn Pflug as a reporter and Nita Talbot who is an actress worried about keeping up with the younger women coming up in her profession.
There's also Ed Asner who is an obnoxious and bumbling city police chief. His role seemed superfluous to the story.
Might have made a good series.
I Call it Awesome!
Quite many of these obscure cable-television thrillers from the early 70s are really, really good. "They Call it Murder" is even better than good. As far as yours truly is concerned, this is a downright great thriller with a captivating & puzzling plot, a fantastic ensemble cast, and a mystery climax that would even cause Agatha Christie herself to nod her head with approval. I don't want to reveal too much about the plot, but it starts with a dead body in the pool of a wealthy but eccentric family, and it ends with the utmost twisted and convoluted insurance scams you'll ever witness. The cast this modest little TV-thriller managed to gather is truly impressive, and they are all giving away stellar performances in roles that seem very fitting. Jim Hutton as the persistent DA, Lloyd Bochner as the insufferable upper-class attorney, Ed Asner as the somewhat doofus Chief of Police, Leslie Nielsen as the arrogant patriarch (who talks with a bizarre Irish accent that makes him sound like a Leprechaun), Michael Pataki as the small-time crook, and the stunningly beautiful Jessica Walter as the quiet widow with a dark secret. The latter will always remain one of my favorite actresses thanks to her glorious roles as the psycho in "Play Misty For Me", and Lucille Bluth in "Arrested Development".
exercises the grey-matter
Do we have a misleading system here? I'm talking about this "weighted vote" process. Guess I'll have to read up on that. Other ratings don't often sway me. But I am, at least, curious about opposing viewpoints. So, after I thoroughly enjoyed They Call It Murder, I investigated its low "weighted" evaluation because it's so different from my own. Imagine my astonishment when I saw NO overall bad comments, and more than five times as many positive votes as negative ones. Now that I've further trivialized opinions, here's mine: I highly regard this film; consider that many familiar faces herein perform quite capably; and am thankful for the four-minute concluding summation because the script was too intelligent for me, as is often the case when I try to follow a thoughtful mystery. Henceforth, "weighted" numbers will have even less significance to me; and, perhaps, they shouldn't be too terribly meaningful to you, either.
Did you know
- TriviaThis is the only vehicle - movie, TV or otherwise - to feature Doug Selby, and it is based on Erle Stanley Gardner's Doug Selby novel "The DA Draws a Circle."
- Quotes
Doug Selby, D.A.: The quality of my life is at least as important as it's length.
- ConnectionsReferenced in South Park: Hummels & Heroin (2017)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Они называют это убийством
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 35m(95 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content




