Lord Peter Wimsey - Clouds of Witness
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Average customer review:Product Description
This classic mystery just keeps getting better. A top-seller on VHS, it's now available for the first time on a feature-rich DVD. Ian Carmichael stars as Dorothy L. Sayers' aristocratic sleuth taking on his most personal case ever. When his sister's fianci is murdered during a family gathering, Wimsey's brother, the Duke of Denver, is charged with the crime. Wimsey must race the clock and risk his own life to exonerate him.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #91138 in DVD
- Released on: 2002-02-05
- Rating: NR (Not Rated)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Box set, Color, DVD, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 2
- Running time: 225 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Ah, there's nothing quite like settling in and getting cozy with a complicated British country-estate murder. In the BBC adaptation of Dorothy Sayers's detective novel, which also aired on PBS, the brilliant Lord Peter Wimsey brings his investigative talents to use close to home. His future brother-in-law is slain during a country retreat, and while there seems to be no shortage of possible suspects, the investigation quickly centers on Wimsey's brother Gerald, the Duke of Windsor. The five-tape adaptation takes its delicious time in delving deeper into the psyche of the unhappy circle around the deceased, as Wimsey tries to avert a full trial of a peer of the realm. Ian Carmichael shines as Wimsey, one of English detective fiction's most memorable heroes--more nimble than Miss Marple, more willful than Poirot, more upbeat than Adam Dalgliesh. All mystery fans need for a lovely and satisfying afternoon is this series and a couple of strong pots of tea. --Anne Hurley
From the Back Cover
When his brother, the Duke of Denver, is charged with murder, Wimsey must race the clock and risk his own life to exonerate him.
Customer Reviews
Marvelous!
I am so glad to see this on DVD, and those who have it on VHS will be surprised--it looks fantastic! You'd never know this was done in 1972.
The picture is crisp and clear, even when switching from video to film (a common practice in those days--film outdoors, and videotape indoors). The sound level is a bit low, but it is not a problem--turning up the volume does not distort the sound in any way.
Lord Peter Wimsey (Ian Carmichael) must find the evidence to clear his older brother, Gerald, the Duke of Denver (David Langton) from the charge of murder. The victim is the fiancé of Gerald and Peter's sister, Lady Mary Wimsey (Rachel Herbert).
There is much conflicting testimony amongst the witnesses, and Lord Peter, ably assisted by his faithful manservant Bunter (Glyn Houston) and Inspector Parker (Mark Eden), does his best to save his brother.
The script is well written, and well paced. We get to see a trial in the House of Lords, something most viewers have perhaps heard of, but never have witnessed. We see the Wimsey family (Lord Peter, the Dowager Duchess, Lady Mary, and the Duke of Denver), and their friends (the Arbuthnots and others), in an excellent adaptation of what life was life in the upper-crust families after World War I.
The cast is first rate, as is the story and the quality of the DVD. There are extras (an interview with Ian Carmichael from September of 2000, information on Dorothy L.Sayers, a trivia quiz, and filmographies of the principal players) that make a nice addition to this slipcovered two-DVD set. Acorn Media has done a splendid job--highly recommended!
At last! I have waited over two decades for this series!!
When the Lord Peter Wimsey series first aired on Masterpiece Theater in about 1975 the host, Alister Cook, commented that generally there are two types of mystery novel readers: those who have never read Dorothy Sayers (who authored the Wimsey series) and those who read ONLY Dorothy Sayers! Sayers was a contemporary of Agatha Christie, but for my money Lord Peter could take Miss Marple with one hand tied behind his back and the other clutching his monocle! He has all of the panache of Poirot and twice as many little grey cells. Sort of like Jeeves and Wooster with a mystery plot and an intelligent Bertie Wooster! Ian Carmichael (rest his soul - he died several years ago) is wonderful as Wimsey, although he does not fit the physical description that Sayers had in mind. Actually, Sayers was a very serious writer and wrote the Wimsey series for the money. Unfortunately, it overshadowed her "legitimate" career and she grew to hate Wimsey and eventually married him off and retired him. I have been badgering PBS for years to release this series - this is the first official release to the video market I am aware of, although some people were intelligent enough (unlike myself) to make copies when they originally aired. I would assume that the 4 vidoes are of the books, The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club, The Nine Tailors, Murder Must Advertise, and The Five Red Herrings. The stories, although set in post-World War 1 England, deal with timeless subjects: murder for profit and revenge, drug addiction, post-traumatic stress syndrome, social climbers, sleazy businessmen, organized crime, the ineptitude of the police officials, class distinction, etc. All in all, the series was very well done, the solutions clever but plausible and the acting and scenery was first rate.
At long last!
There are several ways for a writer to startle the reader at the end of a mystery. The most overused is "the least likely suspect" solution, a variant being found in an early Ellery Queen novel when a character already proven to be innocent turned out to be the guilty party. Agatha Christie broke all the rules when she made the first-person narrator the killer and again when she made all the suspects the collaborating killers and most outrageously of all when she made the Master Detective the killer. (Contact me if you want the titles of these books.) With Dorothy Sayers we have far better written novels--though not necessarily better mysteries than those solved by Poirot and Marple--with characters far more human and therefore interesting. So when the BBC decided back in 1972 to film several of her Lord Peter Wimsey mysteries, mostly at the urging of comedian Ian Carmichael, that actor was not even on the short list of candidates for the part since he was too closely associated with Bertie Wooster, whom he had shortly before that played on British telly. But he got the part and the rest is history. Five of the Wimsey mysteries were filmed and shown a year later on "Masterpiece Theatre":




