An inspector is suspicious about the death of the wife of a Marquis, who, in fact, did kill her with his lover Charlotte as his accomplice. The Marquis becomes increasingly haunted by a stai... Read allAn inspector is suspicious about the death of the wife of a Marquis, who, in fact, did kill her with his lover Charlotte as his accomplice. The Marquis becomes increasingly haunted by a stain on the wall which seems to be the image of his dead wife's face. He is ultimately tried ... Read allAn inspector is suspicious about the death of the wife of a Marquis, who, in fact, did kill her with his lover Charlotte as his accomplice. The Marquis becomes increasingly haunted by a stain on the wall which seems to be the image of his dead wife's face. He is ultimately tried and executed, but for the murder of Charlotte who has been literally scared to death by th... Read all
- Ernest
- (as John Wengraff)
- Rose
- (as Deidre Owens)
- Father Leon
- (as Gregory Gay)
- Inspector
- (as Guy De Vestal)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Murdered first wife will not let her husband or the second wife who killed her have any peace
Charlotte has a a portrait of the first wife removed from a prominent spot but a stain appears on the wall where it hung and seems to be growing into something much more eerie and vengeful. Could it be a physical manifestation of the marquis's guilt? Charlotte watches her husband become more and more unstable and erratic. When the marquis claims that the stain on the wall is actually becoming his dead wife's haunting image appearing to accuse and torment him, she believes him to have become insane and she decides to take action that keep him from making a public confession of the crime and will save her from imprisonment and perhaps even the guillotine.She doesn't reckon with meeting a justice from beyond the grave.
As with many of the One Step Beyond episode's, The Image of Death is a morality play condemning greed, betrayal, and murder. Whether or not this story actually happened in the way it was portrayed is not as important as the ideas that it expresses. In the end it is a very taught thirty minute ghost story that makes it's point with a few delightful chills.
Good but too talkative
Strongest acting, weakest plot
By contrast, the plot is even weaker than usual, resting on a dubious device about the blank space where the dead wife's portrait used to hang, and a mysterious stain that keeps appearing and reappearing, to haunt the conscience of the Marquis, but apparently not his new bride.
This brisk operator carries total conviction as the determined social climber, no longer just Charlotte, but Madame la Marquise if you don't mind, making changes to the house in line with her new status. "Some of this furniture is rather old" - "Not old, my dear. Antique." We immediately detect an uncomfortable culture-clash, as well as a personality-clash between the odd couple.
As for Max Adrian, he brings a lifetime of classical training to the role, as well as something of his native Kilkenny, in Ireland's deep south, where the ghosts and the goblins have not quite disappeared. His emotive speech, confessing all to the priest, is thoroughly Irish, despite the French-accented English in which the lines are meant to be spoken.
At the mid-point of the episode, there is a formal party, where the Marquise is playing the grand hostess for the first time, but this is only referenced, not shown, which upsets the flow. Two other weaknesses in the production seem to be perennials, recognisable from several other episodes. Both characters are seen at the piano, clearly faking it, when this is a standard piece of theatrical business: conceal the hands and move the arms in rhythm. And your host John Newland talks about strange things happening on the anniversary of the murder, which spoils the effect of his usually quite plausible commentary.
The Haunting face of guilty!!!!
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First watch: 2019 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7
The Face
Details
- Runtime
- 30m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1






