Jennings
has written seven Murdoch books. The first is Except the Dying (1997), which was shortlisted for the Arthur Ellis
and Anthony first novel awards. This book plus the next two, Under the Dragon’s Tail and Poor Tom is Cold were made into TV
movies in 2004. This is where the mystery comes in. These three movies starred Peter
Outerbridge as Murdoch, Colm Meaney as Brackenreid, and Matthew MacFadzean as
Crabtree. The pathologist is male in the first book and underwent a scriptwriter
sex-change and became Dr Julia Ogden for the movie, in the guise of Keeley
Hawes.
The
plot of Except the Dying is followed
by the TV movie, judging by the synopsis. I have not been able to see the three
TV movies; they don’t seem to be on DVD, though they were released in Canada as
Murdoch Mysteries: Movie Collection. The
book’s story goes: Detective Murdoch investigates the murder of a young girl
found drugged and strangled in an alley. The autopsy reveals the girl was
pregnant. Murdoch finds himself investigating prominent members of Toronto
society when the girl is identified as Therese Laporte, a chambermaid working
for a wealthy family. When a possible witness to the murder is also killed,
Murdoch learns that Therese was seen voluntarily getting into a carriage, as if
she knew the occupant. Before long, another witness seems to be in danger…
Jennings
captures the period well and uses her research subtly, scattering the
underworld vernacular judiciously; ‘… you had connections with Therese Laporte?’
Connections is a euphemism for sex.. Brackenreid in the book is Irish, so Colm Meaney was a good
fit, I imagine: ‘… He had rigorously tried to expunge his native brogue but it
slipped out now and again…’
Murdoch
is a devout Roman Catholic. ‘Brackenreid was perfectly aware of his detective’s
faith but always tried to get in a jibe or two at Murdoch’s expense...’
Murdoch
rents shared accommodation with Arthur and Beatrice Kitchen, who seem to be his
sounding board.
Now,
the mystery is why the original cast didn’t continue for the series. The Canadian TV
series Murdoch Mysteries first
aired in 2008 and stars Yannick Bisson as Murdoch, Thomas Craig as Brackenreid,
Hélène Joy as Dr Ogden and Jonny Harris as Crabtree.
Interestingly, Australian actress Hélène Joy featured in Under the Dragon’s Tail as the wife of a judge. There’s no sign of
the Kitchens. Murdoch’s sounding board is Julia – a creation of the screenwriters.
Hélène Joy as Dr Ogden
Yannick Bisson Thomas Craig
He
nodded over at the wall, which the detective was using as a blackboard. ‘What’ve
you got there?’
‘It’s a
map of the area pertinent to the scene of the crime, sir.’
‘I hope
that chalk will rub off.’
‘If it
doesn’t I’ll personally whitewash the wall.’
Brackenreid
went closer. ‘Explain it to me, Murdoch.’
Murdoch’s hesitation and careful, precise manner are from
the book, merely enlarged upon by the actor; in the book, he has a moustache,
but these days it seems quite rare for a hero to wear one (Tom Selleck
excepted, of course!) so Bisson is clean-shaven.
One of the attractions for the books was the period
atmosphere. The attraction of the TV series is the main leads, their on-off
romance, and the introduction of virtually anachronistic crime detecting
inventions. Real history and people from history often figure in the plots –
Buffalo Bill Cody, Annie Oakley, H.G. Wells, Nikola Tesla, Jack London, Arthur
Conan Doyle, for example. There is plenty of humour as well as gore. The TV series has a big fan base. In 2011, Rogers Media dropped the show after the fifth series, but CBC picked it up.
Reviews of the books have been good, though a few reviewers
have complained that the books aren’t like the TV series – which isn’t
surprising since the books came first! Then again, the publisher doesn’t really
help by putting the series cast on the cover; before the series, the TV movie
cast was on the cover, which was fine (even if Dr Ogden wasn’t in the book!)
The fact is, the TV series helps to sell the books. It’s a business, after all.
If you like Victorian murder mysteries, you’ll find
plenty to appreciate with Murdoch, in either book or TV series.
The other books in the series are:
Let Loose the Dogs
Night’s Child
Vices of My Blood
A Journeyman to Grief.
I've watched this from the beginning and I love it. I love George and Brackenreid. Have a look at Murdoch Mysteries: The Curse of the Lost Pharoahs. It's different and very funny, basically a spoof imagined by George... You can find the trailer on You tube.
ReplyDeleteHi, Joanne, I agree, they've really developed the George Crabtree character. His flights of fancy, 'inventing' things are gems. Thanks, I'll check out the spoof!
ReplyDelete