WINNER / Outstanding Achievement in Production Design Television Movie/Mini-Series / Directors Guild of Canada Craft AwardNOMINEE / Outstanding Team Achievement in a Television Movie/Mini-Series / Directors Guild of Canada... more » AwardsNOMINEE / Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Supporting Role in a Dramatic Program or Mini-Series / Gemini AwardsNOMINEE / Outstanding Achievement in Direction Television Movie/Mini-Series / Directors Guild of Canada Craft AwardMurder is a deadly businessSet in the 1890s, the sophisticated and sly Detective William Murdoch (Peter Outerbridge ReGenesis, Lucky Number Slevin) investigates murders against the seedy backdrop of a debauched world where no one trusts the police and everyone seems sinister.Murdoch is a principled young man whose intelligence and compassion are often at odds with his superiors and co-workers. While seemingly irrefutable evidence leads his peers down the wrong investigative paths, Murdoch s keen instinct will not allow him to dismiss causes of death so easily. Without modern-day technology to aid him and often with minimal help from witnesses, Murdoch must get to the bottom of each crime armed only with his wits and cunning and he will not rest until the murderer is brought to justice.Considered a CSI in the 1890s, Murdoch Mysteries are gripping thrillers based on Maureen Jennings s bestselling mystery novels about a cop years ahead of his time.« less
"These three adaptations of Except the Dying, Poor Tom Is Cold, and Under the Dragons Tail were so popular on Canadian Television, they spawned a new series entitled The Murdoch Mysteries, which was recently nominated for 14 Gemini Awards for its first season of 13 episodes.
I highly recommend these three movies of the week with a stellar cast of Colm Meaney, Peter Outerbridge, Keely Hawes (MI5, Ashes to Ashes) and Flora Montgomery."
Best kept secret
J. Markham | Toronto | 10/31/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I watched all 3 of these made for TV movies when they first appeared on Canadian TV. Since then, things have moved on to Season 1 of the Murdoch Mysteries TV series and now Season 11.
I absolutely love these original 3 made for TV movies though and highly recommend them especially now they are available as a package - each one is a full length movie in its own right and each is individually based on one of Maureen Jennings' earlier books in the Murdoch series.
Set in turn of the century Canada, they also feature a fine English and Canadian cast and some stunning period costumes."
Toronto in the 1880's, with murder, gaslights and Detective
C. O. DeRiemer | San Antonio, Texas, USA | 12/07/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Maureen Jennings is a fine writer of mysteries. She develops complex plots, creates interesting characters and shows us a world -- Toronto in the 1880's -- that can be pleasant for the well-to-do with their over-stuffed morality and desperately dangerous for the poverty stricken. Those dangers not only come from hunger, cold, sickness and filth, but often from the doings of those who go to church often, dine well and move in upper-class society or middle-class respectability. In the middle of this humanity is Detective William Murdoch. He's on the Toronto police force. Murdoch is a good Irish Catholic, which means he doesn't fit in comfortably most places. He's a hard-worker, ambitious but not pushy, convinced that scientific methods are better at catching criminals than simply pounding confessions out of suspects. He tends to be sympathetic to those with whom the better off want nothing to do. He's rather shy, especially with women, and has had the tragic experience of the death of a woman he was engaged to and loved dearly. Jennings' mysteries, in other words, are first-rate.
That brings us to The Murdoch Mysteries Movie Collection, three 90-minute television programs based on Jennings' first three books. Except the Dying is the story of a young woman's corpse found tossed on a cobblestone street in the middle of Toronto's red light district. Murdoch discovers she was not a prostitute, but a chambermaid from a respectable household. Poor Tom Is Cold begins with the apparent suicide of a young Toronto policeman Murdoch knew. Murdoch doesn't accept this and finds himself confronted with venality, madness and the stark cruelty of a hospital for the mentally ill. Under the Dragon's Tail starts with the death of a grubby abortionist and soon leads to blackmail, respectable wives and the murder of a young boy.
At best, if you've read Jennings' books, these three programs are variable. At their worst, they seriously mess about with Murdoch. The programs feature fine production values. There is a good sense of the 1880's, all cobblestone streets, gaslights, filthy runnels, dignified homes, and characters that range from smudged tykes and raucous prostitutes to mutton-whiskered inspectors and choleric judges. Peter Outerbridge, who plays Murdoch, to my taste looks too well-bred, but he's a good actor and conveys Murdoch's shyness and persistence very well. The three programs stick closely to the plots in the books, which means the stories keep us guessing and keep us interested. On the downside, the production team brings in romantic interest for Murdoch, first with Toronto's first female coroner, Dr. Julia Ogden (way off the mark with the character from the books), and then, bizarrely and over-lapping, with a lower-class, tattered prostitute we first encounter working the streets. By the end of the third program, Dr. Ogden has disappeared and Detective Murdoch and his cleaned up, respectable doxie, now with much less of a lower-class accent, seem to have found love and appear to be accepted as a couple by Murdoch's boss and fellow cops. Well, this is fiction. Except the Dying was interesting. Poor Tom Is Cold was very good. Under the Dragon's Tail had a first class story but wound up putting Murdoch in a personal television melodrama so unlike the character as to be silly. These special movies were cancelled after this last, third program. Murdoch was resurrected four years later, minus the doxie and with Ogden back, with a new cast. It's now a regular television series.
My recommendation if you haven't read Jennings' Murdoch mysteries before...rent this set before you buy and read one or two of the books before you watch. As I mentioned, the plots are well done. If you like the Murdoch books, see if you can find the three mysteries Mark Graham wrote featuring Detective Wilton McCleary. They're set in 1870's Philadelphia. Graham (which may be a pseudonym) only wrote these three, which were released in standard paperback editions. As far as I can tell, he never wrote anything else. If anyone knows what happened to him, post a comment. I'd like to know. The three books are The Killing Breed, The Resurrectionist (Old Philadelphia Mystery Series) and The Black Maria (Mystery of Old Philadelphia)."
Excellent Adaptations!
Diane E. Hendricksen | CA USA | 01/14/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I have read the Murdoch series and found these to be excellent adaptations. They give you a feel for the period, the people, and the atmosphere. Peter Outerbridge does an superb job as Murdoch, and portrays his Catholicism and being in the minority religion very well. The entire cast of each episode come together to bring the books to life."
Turn of the century CSI
E. Skolnick | Brooklyn, New York USA | 12/22/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Absolutely loved it. Interesting characters, intriguing mysteries and the beginnings of forensic science. Entertaining and intelligent"