While on vacation at a resort hotel in the West Indies, Miss Marple correctly suspects that the apparently natural death of a retired British major is actually the work of a murderer plannin... Read allWhile on vacation at a resort hotel in the West Indies, Miss Marple correctly suspects that the apparently natural death of a retired British major is actually the work of a murderer planning yet another killing.While on vacation at a resort hotel in the West Indies, Miss Marple correctly suspects that the apparently natural death of a retired British major is actually the work of a murderer planning yet another killing.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Greg Dyson
- (as Robert Swan)
- Raymond West
- (as Trevor Bowen)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
A good Miss Marple mystery though not one of the best. The setting makes for a refreshing change and the plot is reasonably intriguing. However, what usually makes a Marple episode great for me is how engaging the secondary characters are and here they're mediocre, and in some cases, quite irritating. Jason Rafiel (played by Donald Pleasance) is particularly loathsome as is Mr Dyson. Interestingly, this is the same Jason Rafiel who died in Nemesis, meaning the two episodes are out of order, timeline-wise.
The local police detective, Inspector Weston, is interesting but doesn't get enough screentime.
Add in a very slow start to the episode - it takes forever for something significant to happen - and it's far from great.
Not like you haven't got a whole resort hotel filled with likely suspects. On doctor's advice Joan Hickson has left St. Mary Mead for the sunny climate of Barbadoes and she's booked into a hotel run by the husband and wife team of Adrian Lukis and Sophie Ward. A Colonel Blimp like guest played by Frank Middlemass who makes a crashing boor of himself to Hickson and the rest of the guests is found dead in his room the next day after he tells Hickson he's on to a murderer from back in his days in the colonial service. Some blood pressure medicine is found at the scene that doesn't belong to him. That sets Hickson's little gray cells inside her gray head working.
Two more murders follow before Hickson figures it out. And figuring prominently is the glass eye that Middlemass had.
Hickson as Marple is the oldest Marple out there unless someone tells me different. She was in her 80s doing this role. But her powers if anything seem to increase with age.
Jane Marple is always good viewing for anyone wanting to get their little gray cells in action.
By far and a way the best version of Christie's whodunit. It was filmed in Hollywood in 1983 as a lacklustre TV movie starring Helen Hayes as Miss Marple and was saddled with an indifferent script. This BBC production is lengthly, but there is more attention to detail and a first rate cast including Donald Pleasance, Frank Middlemass and not forgetting Hickson's Miss Marple. All do fine work in their roles.
Did you know
- TriviaThe subtle beeping sounds in the background for all the evening outdoor scenes are made by frogs, which are very common in the Caribbean.
- GoofsMiss Marple finds a library copy of the Pelican edition of "To Define True Madness: Commonsense Psychiatry for Lay People" in Molly Kendall's room, with Date Due stamps ranging from 1941 to 1951; this book was first published by Penguin in hardback in 1953, and the Pelican edition was released in 1955.
- Quotes
Jason Rafiel: I had to think about this quite a bit before mentioning it to you.
Inspector Weston: And why is that, Mr. Rafael?
Jason Rafiel: It wasn't my idea, and the person who had it - the idea, I mean - is a little old lady who knits and wears lace. She also has a mind like a bacon slicer.
Inspector Weston: Why didn't she come to me herself?
Jason Rafiel: She didn't think you'd take her seriously.
Inspector Weston: I might have done.
Jason Rafiel: I doubt it. It's a very good disguise. She even had me fooled for a minute.
[He laughs]
Inspector Weston: Better have her name for the record.
Jason Rafiel: Miss Marple.
Inspector Weston: [Startled] What?
Jason Rafiel: Miss Marple.
Inspector Weston: You wouldn't know if this lady comes from a village in England called St. Mary Mead?
Jason Rafiel: Yeah, yeah! That rings a bell... I think that's what she said - something like that anyway. How do you know that?
Inspector Weston: [Laughs] Magnificent! I've heard her called the best personality analyst in the world, a ruthless forensic brain - a mind like a bacon slicer would do very well.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Remembers...: George Gallaccio Remembers... Miss Marple (2025)