DVD Review: Time For Murder
Published May 14, 2008
Charles Dance fares a bit better in "This Lightning Always Strikes Twice," a TV tale with vague hints of Hitchcock's Rebecca. Only in this instance the hapless innocent isn't a young girl, but the unwitting suitor her family wishes for her. The actors acquit themselves well in this episode, apart from the bug-eyed overacting of the mysterious ingenue. "Dust to Dust" promises a chilling occult flavor, complete with mysterious magic tokens, but in the end delivers only confusion. Still, it's done stylishly; its few actors are suitably elegant. The poisonous, potent (yet bedridden) matriarch in her tilted wig and beaded bedclothes is straight out of an old Bette Davis film. It's hard to fault camp done with this much gusto. The final tale of six, "Thirteenth Day of Christmas" is more straightforward as a contemporary slasher drama. An insane young man is kept at home by his loving parents. Everyone is in denial, which of course means tragic consequences.
Despite this collection's flaws, I couldn't help but love it - it's a good, fun, campy, cheesy set of engaging mysteries. I felt about this DVD set the way I felt about a brooch I found abandoned on a second-hand store shelf. A bit odd, a bit slipshod. One wonders how it arrived and why it came to be at all, but can't walk by its glimmer. Rational or not, I enjoy what I enjoy. Flawed or not, this boxed set of a mid-1980s British TV series is one such thing. Best viewed on a stormy evening, a bowl of popcorn and mug of cocoa within reach. Time For Murder is available now. Bolton Hall spa robe not included.
- DVD Review: Time For Murder
- Published: May 14, 2008
- Type: Review
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Television, Video: Suspense and Mystery, Video: Drama
- Writer: Brandy
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