Margaret Rutherford bows out with style as Agatha Christie's famous
spinster sleuth in this, the last of four Miss Marple films made by MGM
in the early 1960s. Unlike the previous three films, Murder Ahoy! was not based on an
Agatha Christie novel but was an original story, and that could explain
why it is the weakest entry in the series. Overly convoluted and
uncertain whether it is a kiddy's farce or a mystery whodunit, the film lacks
the charm and intelligence of the previous three films and in some
places is just plain silly. Miss Marple's surprising
transformation into Errol Flynn at the end of the film is a case in
point.
Rutherford still manages to delight with her larger-than-life
performance but her co-stars are clearly only there for the money and
look as if they would rather be doing something else. Lionel
Jeffries turns in one of the most irritating performances you will find
in any British film, his penchant for camp excess infecting other
members of the cast, including Charles Tingwell. Still, anything
with the young (and brisk) Nicholas Parsons in it is worth seeing,
probably.
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Film Synopsis
Miss Marple has just been elected onto the board of a trust that has
been set up to finance a project to reform young criminals. At
her first meeting of the board, Miss Marple witnesses the death of a
fellow trustee, Cecil Ffolly-Hardwicke. The official verdict is
that he suffered a fatal heart attack but Miss Marple knows that he was
poisoned, by a lethal dose of strychnine in his snuff. Just
before he died, Ffolly-Hardwicke was to report on his findings after a
surprise visit to the old battleship on which the young offenders are
rehabilitated. Certain that foul play is afoot, Miss Marple
decides to pay a visit to the battleship, and finds far more than she
bargained for...
Script: Agatha Christie, David Pursall, Jack Seddon
Cinematographer: Desmond Dickinson
Music: Ron Goodwin
Cast:Margaret Rutherford (Miss Marple),
Lionel Jeffries (Captain Sydney De Courcy Rhumstone),
Charles 'Bud' Tingwell (Chief Insp. Craddock),
William Mervyn (Comm. Breeze-Connington),
Joan Benham (Matron Alice Fanbraid),
Stringer Davis (Mr. Jim Stringer),
Nicholas Parsons (Dr. Crump),
Miles Malleson (Bishop),
Henry Oscar (Lord Rudkin),
Derek Nimmo (Sub-Lt. Eric Humbert),
Gerald Cross (Brewer),
Norma Foster (Asst. Matron Shirley Boston),
Terence Edmond (Sgt. Bacon),
Francis Matthews (Lt. Compton),
Lucy Griffiths (Millie),
Bernard Adams (Dusty Miller),
Tony Quinn (Kelly - Tramp),
Edna Petrie (Miss Pringle),
Roy Holder (Petty Officer),
Ivor Salter (Policeman)
Country: UK
Language: English
Support: Black and White
Runtime: 93 min
Continental Films, quality cinema under the Nazi Occupation
At the time of the Nazi Occupation of France during WWII, the German-run company Continental produced some of the finest films made in France in the 1940s.
A wave of fresh talent in the late 1950s, early 1960s brought about a dramatic renaissance in French cinema, placing the auteur at the core of France's 7th art.
American film comedy had its heyday in the 1920s and '30s, but it remains an important genre and has given American cinema some of its enduring classics.