Product Description
Combining the period appeal of Sherlock Holmes with the forensic fascination of CSI, this slick, stylish series has won fiercely loyal fans in the U.K. and Canada. In Victorian Toronto, handsome Detective Murdoch (Yannick Bisson, Sue Thomas: F.B.Eye) uses newfangled scientific techniques like finger marks to solve the city's most baffling murders. Helped by a pretty pathologist (Gemini-winner Hlne Joy, Durham County) and an eager protg (Jonny Harris, Hatching, Matching & Dispatching), he tries to win over his skeptical boss (Thomas Craig, Where the Heart Is) to his radical methods. Clever plot twists, sly wit, and references to historical figures add to the fun.
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Inspired by a series of television movies based on the mystery novels of Maureen Jennings, the enjoyable
Murdoch Mysteries: Series One follows the investigations of Toronto police detective William Murdoch at the close of the 19th century. A man of scientific progress as well as devout Catholicism, Murdoch (Yannick Bisson) approaches mysteries with such new, state-of-the-art techniques as fingerprinting, blood-testing, and trace evidence, collaborating closely with his department's pathologist, Dr. Julia Ogden (Hélène Joy). Working under the skeptical Inspector Brackenreid (Thomas Craig), an old-school copper who respects his lead investigator's results but has little patience for his complex methods, Murdoch often encounters new-fangled technology that, in time, will pave the way for such 20th-century staples as radio, television and the electronic grid. At the same time, the faith element in Murdoch's view of the world allows him to be something more than a complete rationalist. His occasional reliance on a medium (Maria del Mar) to help him discover clues, and his church-derived ethics are all part of Murdoch's approach to an increasingly complicated world.
The first episode in Murdoch Mysteries: Season One is an excellent template for all 13 shows in this boxed set. "Power" finds Murdoch trying to discover how and why a woman was killed during a demonstration of the "evils" of alternating-current-derived electricity put on by a direct-current power company. Murdoch's queries put him in touch with Nikola Tesla, the real-life father of the AC motor. "The Glass Ceiling" pits Murdoch's scientific techniques against the more brutal approach of his boss, Brackenreid, who seems to be the target of a killer linked to an old case. "Elementary, My Dear Murdoch" somewhat inevitably pairs Murdoch in a murder investigation with one of his idols, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, whose faith in such spiritualist pursuits as seances complicates things. (Doyle returns in a later episode, "Belly Speaker," again proving more of a meddler than a help in a case involving a mad ventriloquist.) "Bad Medicine" is a scary story about a hooded archer killing off the patients at a clinic for advanced brain study. (The aforementioned medium has unnerving visions of Murdoch becoming one of the murderer's victims.) The last episode, "The Annoying Red Planet," is easily the season's most ambitious, involving crop circles, possible extraterrestrial footprints, and a genuine unidentified flying object that pushes the series into The X-Files territory. --Tom Keogh
Stills from Murdoch Mysteries: Series 1 (Click for larger image)
Review
Clever and smart. --
Deseret News (UT)
Excellent adventure. --
Midwest Book Review
The compelling performances of the cast help make the series absolutely addictive. --
The Boston Event Guide
This is a show that perhaps you haven't heard much of, but it is truly outstanding. Check this out right away! --
Fort Bend Star
Murdoch Mysteries Season One
Was:
$138.88
Now:
$69.44
- SKU:
- qt417714
- UPC:
- 054961818594
- Condition:
- New
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