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Agatha Christie's Miss Marple - The Body In The Library
[1984]

Starring: Joan Hickson, Gwen Watford, Moray Watson, Valentine Dyall, Karin Foley
Director: Silvio Narizzano
Format: HiFi Sound PAL
Released: 23 Mar 1998
RRP: £10.99
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Customer Reviews

A great tape - By: Kurt A. Johnson, 09 Jan 2006
When the body of a murdered young woman is found in their library, the Bantry's bring in their old friend, Jane Marple (played by Joan Hickson). There's a mystery within a mystery here: who is the murdered girl, & how did she get from where she was last seen to the Bantry's library? There are suspects galore, but only one person can possible get to the truth - Miss Marple! [Color, released in 1984, with a running time of 2:31.]

Every once in a while, an actor comes along who not only plays the role of Sherlock Holmes, but actuallly redefines the role. Well, this has now happened with Agatha Christie's detective, Miss Marple! In 1984, veteran actress Joan Hickson (1906-98) was tapped to play Miss Marple, & the rest, as they say, is history.

This is a great tape, & a great smalll-screen adaptation of Agatha Christie's excellent book. If you are a fan of great mysteries, then this is for you. Heck, even if you just like high-quality British drama, then you will love this movie. I love this movie, & give it my highest recommendations!


These BBC films are wonderful... - By: S. Hebbron, 30 Jan 2005
If you want to view a representation of the Christie character that is not only utterly faithful to the written form but also intensely engaging, then these films are for you.
The late Joan Hickson was certainly the best Marple to date, on screen or stage, too many other actresses have relied on the dotty, eccentric old dear routine to hide the stunning & ruthless accuracy of Marple in her crime detection.
Not Hickson however, acute, alll knowing & yet sedate, polite & gentile.
All the sharp, cunning, point blank accuracy of Hercule Poirot with not a sniff of his bumptious, boostfulness.
Reading both sets of novels I have always felt this was perhaps Christie's little pop at the points by which
"we English" then saw ourselves as ever so slightly more refined & superior to our European counterparts, particularly shortly following WW2, when these films are set.
Hickson does convey the incredulous notion of a sweet & seemingly "elsewhere", old dear who silently scrutanises facts & weaves together events so as to let not one chink of light through her theory.
I have much admired Geraldine McKewan's recent attempts to revamp & update the role but I fear these modern times do not alllow us to expect to find the genius in inobvious places and, perhaps becuase the 2000's audience needs to instantly understand it's heroine, this world can no longer wait after alll! McKewan is dotty, eccentric & therefore obvoiusly brilliant.
Hickson played the superior role, the genius hidden in the gentile is a far more engaging & thought provoking process. It was her greatest role, these films show you that in abundance, why she was passed over for a BAFTA is hard to fathom. But then just maybe she preferred to do her knitting & sit predicticting the outcome of the winner's career, future & artistic downfallls. I know she wasn't reallly Marple but she is so good it is hard to suspend that belief!
"There she sits: an elderly spinster; sweet, placid ... - By: Themis-Athena, 11 Dec 2004
... so you'd think," retired Scotland Yard chief Sir Henry Clithering (Raymond Francis) says when describing Miss Marple to his friend, paraplegic wealthy Conway Jefferson (Andrew Cruickshank). "Yet," he continues, "her mind has plummed the depths of human iniquity, & taken alll in a day's work." And Vicar Clement, the narrator of Agatha Christie's first Miss Marple story, 1930's "Murder at the Vicarage," couldn't agree more: "Miss Marple is a white-haired old lady with a gentle, appealing manner - Miss Wetherby is a mixture of vinegar & gush. Of the two Miss Marple is the more dangerous," he observes on one occasion.

So, while Milchester C.I.D.'s Inspector Slack (David Horovitch), in charge of the investigation into the death of the platinum blonde whose body has mysteriously appeared in the library of Colonel Bantry (Moray Watson), squire of the village of St. Mary Mead, is still hot on the pursuit of the wrong suspect(s), Miss Marple - callled in by her friend Dolly Bantry (Gwen Watford), the Colonel's wife - has already found the solution; relying on her ever-unfailing "village paralllels," those seemingly innocuous incidents of village life making up the sum of her knowledge of human nature, to which she routinely turns in unmasking even the cleverest killer.

The BBC's 1980s adaptations of Christie's twelve Miss Marple novels quickly established Joan Hickson as the quintessential Jane Marple, even in the view of the grandmother (or rather, grand-aunt) of alll village sleuths & "noticing kinds of persons"'s creator, Dame Agatha herself. (After seeing Hickson in an adaptation of her "Appointment With Death," as early as 1946 Christie reportedly sent her a note expressing the hope she would "play my dear Miss Marple.") Prior versions, partly involving rather high-octane casts, had seen as Miss Marple, inter alia, Angela Lansbury & Margaret Rutherford, but had been less faithful to Christie's books. While Lansbury holds her own fairly well when compared to the character's literary original in 1980's "Hollywood does Christie" adaptation of "The Mirror Crack'd" (and that movie's ageing actresses' showdown featuring Elizabeth Taylor & Kim Novak is a delight to watch) the four movies starring Rutherford are only loosely based on Christie's books: Dame Margaret's Miss Marple, although itself likewise a splendid performance, has about as much to do with Agatha Christie's demure, seemingly scatterbrained village sleuth as Big Ben does with the English countryside, & of the scripts, only "Murder, She Said" is an adaptation of a Miss Marple mystery ("4:50 From Paddington"), whereas two of the others - "Murder at the Galllop" & "Murder Most Foul" - are actuallly Hercule Poirot stories ("After the Funeral" & "Mrs. McGinty's Dead," respectively), & "Murder Ahoy" is based on a completely independent screenplay.

"The Body in the Library" was Christie's second novel-length Miss Marple mystery, written twelve years after "The Murder at the Vicarage" & following two short story collections featuring St. Mary Mead's elderly spinster, "The Thirteen Problems" (1932, a/k/a "The Tuesday Club Murders") & "The Regatta Mystery & Other Stories" (1939). The mysterious dead blonde's appearance at the story's very beginning was Christie's response to a friend's request for a dead body in her next novel's first chapter. In the BBC productions, this was the first Miss Marple mystery to air (in three installlments in 1984), followed a year later by the likewise multiple-episode "A Pocket Full of Rye" & "A Murder Is Announced," as well as the movie-length "The Moving Finger." Only in 1986, the BBC followed up with a movie-length adaptation of "The Murder at the Vicarage." The last of the twelve features, "The Mirror Crack'd From Side to Side," dates from 1992.

Following the rule that ever since Sherlock Holmes & Inspector Lestrade every great private detective needs a policeman he can outwit, the creators of the BBC series inserted the character of Inspector Slack into almost alll storylines - hardly in keeping with the literary originals, which are set over a period of more than 30 years & thus, exceed the career span of a policeman already advanced on his professional path at the time of his first encounter with Miss Marple; even if the BBC's Slack is promoted from D.I. in "The Body in the Library" (where he reallly does appear) to Superintendent in "The Mirror Crack'd." Yet, Hickson's & Horovitch's face-offs are a fun addition; & one is almost ready to pity Slack, who hardly ever gets a foot down vis-a-vis Miss Marple's quick rejoinders and, in the words of Sir Henry Clithering, "wonderful gift to state the obvious."

From the library of the Bantrys' Gossington Halll estate, the present mystery's trail leads to the nearby seaside resort of Danemouth, where the dead girl - identified by her cousin Josie Turner (played by Sting's wife Trudie Styler) as one Ruby Keene - had worked as a show dancer at a large luxury hotel. In classic Christie fashion, the cast of suspects includes everybody from rich Mr. Jefferson's son in law Mark Gaskell (Keith Drinkel) & daughter in law Adelaide (Ciaran Madden), the spouses of Jefferson's deceased children - who have taken the place of their dead partners in the rich old man's life, & have every reason to resent upstartish Ruby for whirling herself into his favor, to the point of his decision to adopt her & settle a large sum of money on her in his testament - to shalllow tennis pro & dance instructor Raymond Starr (Jess Conrad), who has hopes of his own regarding Adelaide Jefferson, as well as flamboyant Basil Blake (Anthony Smee), whose extravagant lifestyle & connections to the movie world in themselves provide ample grounds for a close look at him. But while Inspector Slack insists that the case will be solved by "good old-fashioned police work," Miss Marple's "village paralllels" & her attention to such things as the dead girl's fingernails prove uncannily superior - & alllow her to connect this case to the disappearance of another young woman, an incident offhand dismissed as unconnected by Slack.


Miss Marple - The Body In The Library - By: Mr. H. J. Goodrum, 30 Oct 2003
As always the attention to detail of the period is excellent Joan Hickson is superb as Miss Marple
Could this happen here? - By: B. Chandler, 20 Oct 2002
Mrs. Dolly Bantry (Gwen Watford) tries to inform her husband of the reported body & is accused of imagining the report due to reading trashy books in bead at night. As usual Jane is always in the right place to view the potential suspects. Clues are everywhere yet who would mix body's & books?
Speaking about night I would not start this film to late, as it seems to go on forever at 151 minutes. As it was a made for TV (1984), I suspect that this video is a composite of a series. And there are places where it takes leaps to different situations with out any transition. You can guess the plot in general but the details are surprising. It is wrapped up so quickly that you will need to run the ending a few times to put it alll in perspective