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  • If you take this show too seriously it'll irritate you, if you treat if for what it is, you'll love every second of it. Pure escapism, pure fun, absurd situations and murder.

    Lansbury captured something with this show, a modern day Miss Marple, who uncovered murderers globally, and in her village of Cabot Cove. She is a delight to watch, a woman with multiple nephews, nieces, and more friends than Facebook has to offer.

    From the cheerful theme tune, to the adorable regular cast, Murder she wrote will always be perfect cosy viewing. My student days would revolve around an early Friday finish to be home in time to watch it.

    Reflections of the mind my favourite of all time. The early years were the best, although there are some gems later on.

    Years on, I still love it. 8/10
  • If you haven't watched this please do. Angela Lansbury was amazing in this!
  • I absolutely love this show. Angela Lansbury was great as Jessica Fletcher and made the show her own.The weird thing about this show is that Jessica Fletcher rarely had a love interest. She may not have had a love interest but she did have a lot of male companions who would regularly help her solve the murders, like for instance Seth Hazlet. She would be pondering about the murder and Seth would say something and suddenly everything would fit together and she would have the murderer.

    The show can be enjoyed by all but only if you see it as escapist fun that is not taxing on the brain. It shouldn't be seen as a realistic TV show, if viewers watch it expecting it to be realistic then they will be sorely disappointed. For instance to obtain evidence Jessica would break into offices, people who watch a lot of murder mysteries(like me) would know this evidence would be inadmissible in the court of law and the killer would get off scot free.

    The show ended in 96 but I normally catch it on reruns. Although I am a fan of the series but I still feel it should have ended after the 93 season. After the 93 season the plots became increasingly tired and predictable. In fact I thought the story lines became far more soapy, it became more about the characters and less about the murders.

    Out of all the murder mystery shows I watch I like this the most. It was fun to spot stars like Ceasar Romero (the Joker from the Batman T.V. series. Over the years most stars came on the show more than once but in different roles.
  • Angela Lansbury IS Jessica Fletcher, a colorful-minded imaginative geriatric author of best-selling mystery novels who always saves the day by helping friends and strangers discover who the 'real' killer is.

    This show ran for twelve seasons, albeit the last season was pretty crook. Guest stars and friends of Angela Lansbury in the industry from the silver screen would often appear as victims, friends and even the killer throughout the 264 episodes that aired on CBS.

    Angela Lansbury, a long time pin-up queen for Disney movies and the like, was the right choice to play television's leading lady of the endless 'who-done-it' mysteries. She plays a kind woman, an unlikely character who would find themselves in the countless situations she got herself into, and someone we didn't mind having in our living room at least once a week.

    Funny as it sounds, this show was suitable for the whole family to watch. A show about 'murder' is suitable for the 'family' you ask? It was tasteful in the way it presented the various different deaths of its victims throughout its long run. People died in just about any and every imaginable manner you could think of on MURDER SHE WROTE. The most desirable choice was via a gunshot - but there were certainly plenty of more elaborate set-ups. The poisonings.. the hangings.. the stabbings.. yet, it was about as 'family' as you could get with the different shows that were on at the same time it was aired.

    Early in its run, MURDER SHE WROTE had a smart ensemble cast including Tom Bosley who played Sheriff Amos Tupper. The setting was usually Cabot Cove of Maine, a quiet coastal fishing town - the ideal place to raise a family... or so you would think, every other week when a murder didn't take place there! When Tom Bosley left to portray a leading role in FATHER DOWLING MYSTERIES, Jessica Fletcher would often travel to different locations across America, and yes, the world. It is quite amusing to wonder why it never seemed funny to Jessica Fletcher that wherever she went, a murder would occur. Although in one episode, she does refer to herself as the 'Typhoid Mary of Murders', a joke within itself.

    A great line-up of guest stars from both the film and television industry would play different characters in each episode. Nearly every episode had at least one 'known' celebrity. The most amazing thing was seeing past-Oscar winners playing various characters. From Martin Landau to Van Johnson. From June Allyson to Jose Ferrer. Stewart Granger, Cyd Charisse, Lurene Tuttle, Glynnis Johns, Claire Trevor, Cornel Wilde, Dorothy Lamour, Ann Blythe, Eleanor Parker, Ernest Borgnine... the list goes on. This show probably sported more famous guest stars than 'THE LOVE BOAT'.

    Of course, for every Jean Simmons, June Havoc and James Coburn, there was Charlene Tilton, Barbie Benton and Michael McKean to tickle your fancy.

    Unknown stars at the time such as Billy Zane, Courtney Cox, Paul Rudd, Megan Mullally and Bill Maher used this show as a stepping stone to get to where they are now.

    Several stars and most likely close friends of Angela Lansbury such as David Ogden Stiers, Fritz Weaver, Pat Hingle, Vera Miles and Larry Wilcox appeared more than three or four times throughout the show's entire run, each time playing a different character.

    As 'MURDER SHE WROTE' slowly grinded to a halt during its 12th season in 1996, you couldn't help but notice that the show had lost probably more than half of its original spark. Angela Lansbury herself never looked better, but the story lines were getting a bit tired, and seriously, just how many murders in the last season seemed a little bit 'familiar' to the other episodes earlier in the show's run? The guest actors that were being scraped together was pretty much 'bottom-of-the-barrel' selection - Gerald McRaney, Rosalind Chao and Bo Svenson were about the biggest names during the 12th season that could be scrounged up. On top of that, audiences across the world were getting hooked on newer fare such as 'E.R.', 'FRIENDS' and 'LAW & ORDER'. Who had time for 'MURDER SHE WROTE' anymore?

    So when the axe finally fell, it came as no surprise, and Angela Lansbury, or should I say, Jessica Fletcher, made a graceful exit to re-appear in isolated MURDER SHE WROTE telemovie projects that would be produced on an almost yearly annual basis after the series was canceled. Although I do remember that she put up quite a fight to keep her show on the air for one more season, I think it came as a blessing in disguise when the show left the broadcast airwaves.

    Angela Lansbury was what made this show work. Her character was inspirational. She wasn't some young attractive lady, or a hot-shot lawyer who was solving all the mysteries. She was a retired English teacher, now writing best-selling novels who was the heroine we came to adore. I used to love it when during the last 15 minutes of each episode, someone would mention a keyword like, "Creosote", or a clue-giving caption like "Hmm, my watch seems to have stopped" which would give her the final piece of the puzzle to solve the murder mystery and her eyes would light up as the pieces clicked together in her head.

    It's been years since she left our television sets, but she will forever live on in syndicated re-runs, a blessing in disguise perhaps, but something for the younger generation to surely appreciate.
  • You don't have to be an old lady to like this show; I'm sixteen years old and a male to boot. I am a big fan of whodunits, and always have been. This is one of the best. In the first few seasons, several episodes featured creative and delightful gimmicks. Although creatively the series sagged a bit in the "middle years," the last two seasons showed a resurgence in quality. Throughout the series' twelve years, however, very few episodes failed to deliver in terms of the mystery itself: it's always fun to try to find the clues and deduce their meaning before the detective does, but if you don't, it's also fun to hear the explanation.

    Although there are several lovable recurring characters, the only real regular in the series is Angela Lansbury. Consequently, the format is refreshingly free, and the writers aren't forced to bog the stories down for a boatload of regulars. However, there are always plenty of interesting characters acting as suspects. Frequently there are famous beloved older guest stars, especially in the first few seasons, but the special guest star is not always the killer; the mystery always comes first! This is an old-fashioned mystery series, unmarred by an overdose of violence or melodrama. Plus, Jessica Fletcher is a character that one can't help but love, and Angela Lansbury plays it to charming perfection.

    There is, of course, the obvious creative license: that Jessica Fletcher always accidentally stumbles across a murder. If you are willing to put this aside, this is a show one can really enjoy. (Note: The show pokes fun at itself on occasion, including one where Jessica reveals that she is nicknamed "the Bloody Mary of murder.")
  • This show was a staple of my childhood - it seemed to be on repeatdly on Sunday afternoons on British telly in the late 80s and 90s! It's corny, wholly unrealistic and predicated on the notion that a retired teacher and mystery writer single handedly solves more murders than the FBI, but if you can suspend disbelief (and the gnawing suspicion that it's Jessica herself that's bumping all these people off - seriously if you were in town and Jessica turned up you'd run for the Hills knowing invariably at least 3 people were going to die!) then the show can be really fun, and a nostalgic throwback to a time when TV seemed simpler and the world somewhat less complex.
  • I'm not quite sure why Murder She Wrote isn't still running. I'm willing to bet that Angela Lansbury could command any kind of deal she could have if she wanted to do more episodes of this wonderful series.

    Angela Lansbury is maybe one of the kindest and most unselfish of players ever to grace the big screen, the small screen and the legitimate theater. Let's not forget she's a star in all three mediums. What I like best about her is the fact that she used her star power to give lots of work to her fellow performers from the golden age of Hollywood's studio system who weren't as lucky with their careers as she. Just look at the cast list of any random selection of Murder, She Wrote episodes.

    For twelve years she got every weekend to show up the police in every corner of the globe that they had the wrong solution to a given murder. The amazing thing is that most of them simply went with the flow as far as her interference with their investigation. It was part of her charm for them and for us.

    About half the episodes took place in the little New England coastal town of Cabot Cove where William Windom as the town doctor and first sheriff Tom Bosley and then sheriff Ron Masak got assistance from Jessica Fletcher every time she was in town at her home. I liked the Cabot Cove shows best and I suspect most viewers did. Though that presents a problem in that Cabot Cove given the percentage of the population might just have the highest murder rate in the country. Good thing she WAS around. But even there she never embarrassed Bosley or Masak in solving the cases.

    Her best scenes are with William Windom, the crusty old town doctor, Seth Hazlitt. I suspect that back in their youth Jessic and Seth were an item and the way Lansbury and Windom are with each other, you can see the bonds are strong. The writers in Murder, She Wrote very wisely never made Dr. Hazlett any kind of buffoon the way Nigel Bruce was as Doctor Watson to Basil Rathbone's Sherlock Holmes. Windom played it absolutely straight and his medical knowledge occasionally helped Lansbury solve the case. I think it's a shame that William Windom never got an Emmy for playing Dr. Hazlitt.

    My hope is that somebody gets the bright idea to have a reunion episode and maybe finally marry Jessica Fletcher and Dr. Seth Hazlitt. It would be the highest rated show of a given season.
  • Angela Lansbury (Bedknobs and Broomsticks) plays Jessica Fletcher, an ex English teacher, mystery novel author and amateur sleuth much in the vein of Miss Marple by Agatha Christie. She is without doubt one of the world's *nicest* characters; she makes friends wherever she goes, remembers names, treats everyone the same and helps out anyone she can. It's easy "early evening" or "mid-afternoon" watching so may be considered to be a program for an older audience as most of the characters are older, but Jessica is much loved by young characters too. It's very dated now, but ran for twelve years from 1984; you see the increased popularity of mobile phones, changes in fashion and also her getting to grips with word processors having used a typewriter to write her books in the early series.

    It's predictable and whilst the plots are original it is formulaic; Jessica is somehow connected to the person who is accused of the murder, believes them to be innocent so proves them so or reluctantly identifies them as the killer. She butts into the Police investigation, with varying degrees of acceptance, and she points out the killer. There's always a eureka moment, when she's doing something else, where she says, "I think I know who the killer is!" and often she needs to play a trick to flush out the murderer and then there's the denouement where she tells everyone how she worked it out. It's always some tiny thing she noticed and remembered that is the nail in the coffin, and sometimes the connections and "clues" are a little tenuous.

    Most of the episodes are set in Cabot Cove, Maine, but there's many in NYC and then some around the world - everywhere she goes somewhere is found dead and sometimes she's the suspect! The regular supporting cast; the Sheriffs in her home town (Ron Mazak and Tom Bosley), friends and the local doctor (William Windom) depending on the series are great characters, and the additional cast are varied and there are many very familiar faces, some from when the actors are starting out (George Clooney, Joaquin "Leaf" Phoenix, Courtney Cox etc) and there are a few recurring characters, and a few actors that have appeared a few times as different characters (Jeff Conaway, Kenickie in Grease, for example, played three different characters in four episodes) but it doesn't matter.

    It's not rocket science, it's not got bangs and whistles, maybe a few explosions and car chases and stunts, but it's relaxing intelligent TV where it's fun to guess the outcomes... it's just about a nice lady who solves murders. With so many episodes (264) over the twelve years I've still not seen them all and I really enjoy them despite them often being a bit cheesy and sometimes the acting is a little hammy but hey, this is a guilty pleasure.
  • This series is one of my all time favourites, and I still eagerly catch it on re runs. Angela Lansbury is surely one of the greatest of all the entertainment world's ladies, growing simply more graceful, dignified, and endearing as the years pass. She made a superb Miss Marple in some of the Agatha Christie movies, but her role as Jessica Fletcher, Cabot Cove's retired high school English teacher and current mystery novelist sleuth, is the one she was born to play.

    True, the series isn't very realistic, as Jessica invariably stumbles upon a murder each week and manages to ferret out the killer quite single handedly, while local law enforcement remains stumped. However, this is fairly typical of all fictional sleuths; look at Miss Marple herself. Certainly Cabot Cove has an astonishing murder rate! Some episodes are of course more captivating than others, but even when a situation is predictable, it's always a joy watching this lovely, clever, & kind lady in action as she uses her charm, wits, imagination, and instincts about human nature. Of course it's always fun to try figuring out the killer before she does.

    Jessica's travels take her around the USA and indeed the world, as she makes frequent trips to her New York City publisher, visits friends & relatives around the country (ranches, ski resorts, Las Vegas etc.), and even travels abroad, for example to Hong Kong, Ireland, Rome, Athens, and Monte Carlo. However, my favourite episodes are set in her small Maine hometown of Cabot Cove. I always enjoy the depiction of her lovely old fashioned white house and small town New England life, her traveling about on her bicycle (like myself, Jessica does not drive a car), and especially her relationships with other townsfolk, notably series regulars Dr. Seth Hazlitt and Sheriff Amos Tupper. As Jessica is a widow, it's always interesting to watch her with her good friend, Seth; one is tempted to look for a glimmer of romance. Quite often Jessica's young nephew, Grady, appears with her as she tackles the solution to a case.

    The guest list throughout the long running series does indeed read like a veritable 'Who's who' of Hollywood, including Hayley Mills, Shelley Fabares, Van Johnson, Efrem Zimbalist Jr., Polly Bergen, Wayne Rogers, Lucie Arnaz, and David Ogden Stiers...to name but a few.

    I'm thrilled that the series continues to live on in re runs and tip my hat to Angela Lansbury's twelve season stint as the mystery writer sleuth. Personally, I wish Jessica Fletcher had taught my son English in high school, would love to read one of her mystery novels, and think she would make a fabulous & interesting next door neighbour...except that I'd be a teeny bit afraid I might just turn up murdered!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Yes, of course the premise of "Murder, She Wrote" ("MSW") is highly implausible: a retired English teacher-turned Mystery novelist, who succeeds grandly at her every page, while happening to stumble across bodies right and left at nearly every turn.

    But yet if you take it in small doses, as it were, one episode at a time as opposed to enduring Murder-thons, it becomes easier to accept the premise that a retired English teacher may have written a novel and stumbles across a body or two, while a friend or relative is framed for the murder.

    Friends and relatives of Mrs. Fletcher are very often framed for murders, to say the least. In fact, nearly every suspect under arrest has been falsely accused of the crime. Law enforcement officers, prosecuting attorneys, judges and juries get it wrong at each turn, and only J.B. Fletcher is able to steer them right.

    And yet, she insists that the matter of homicide investigation must be left for the police or sheriff, and the matter for prosecuting must be left to the courts. Nevermind that several a corrupt officer has done it along the way. Nevermind that prosecuting attorneys have been proved the perpetrators. Nevermind that juries are clueless without Jessica in town.

    The fact of the matter is that no police department in the country nor around the world is able to arrest anyone but an innocent bystander until Jessica turns up to steer them on the right track through her logical deductions through piecing clues together. But if the authorities insist against her interference, she investigates anyway. And if they solicit her assistance and expertise, she invariably answers, "I'm sorry, but I'm just a writer." Of course, she is thereby easily coaxed into the act of investigating.

    Episode writing generally follows formula yet varies according to author. Some offer dark, eerie scripts, while others add humor and lightheartedness, which makes for the more pleasant watch. "Murder, She Wrote" finds its strongest outings in stories in which Jessica rises to the occasion of "doing everything that I can to help" her friend or relative in trouble instead of those in which she sets out to nail someone.

    Guest stars add a great deal to the color and richness of this 12-year series, they primarily entering from film and television, and often playing against type in the process here. Some episodes are directed to portray guest suspects as very innocent-looking, while others have them acting with very guilty demeanors.

    This may result in criticisms of weak or unrealistic acting, such as when Jessica points to the murderer during a showdown scene, the other performers do not react very naturally, as if to say, "Oh, so you're the one who killed my husband? I thought it might have been she. I didn't think that I did it, but we had to wait until Jessica figured it out." Instead, the killer most often confesses then and there, to reaffirm Jessica's clever skills at reasoning.

    She often spots the clues along the way, later causing her to say, "I didn't think much about it at the time, but...." This occurs after the perpetrators motive resonates in her mind. After that, nothing gets passed J.B. If her suspect denies a charge, she remembers another clue, and sometimes yet another.

    Nobody is immune from murder in J.B.'s world, as she travels from her adoptive hometown of Cabot Cove, where murder is an everyday activity, to cities and communities around the world, from the halls of academia to the halls of legislators, from Wall Street to Madison Avenue, from studios to galleries, from rural roadhouses to televangelist centers, from convents to Amish fellowships, from continent to continent, and incompetent law enforcement officers get it wrong at every turn.

    It somehow doesn't matter very much if a murder were planned to the last detail, whether it were impulsive, whether it were accidental or in self-defense, or whether it turns out a suicide in disguise. Suspects are treated all the same and await very similar fates.

    During the midpoint of this series, throughout seasons six and seven, Jessica voluntarily takes a backseat to guest detectives in many episodes, in which she introduces a case and later summarizes, without appearing amid the other characters. These have come to be known as "Bookend episodes," and largely disappear throughout seasons eight through twelve. Some were designed to launch potential spin off series. However, the solitary spin off series from "Murder, She Wrote" came earlier on, with Jerry Orbach's "The Law and Harry McGraw."

    During its remaining seasons, "MSW" seems to have attempted to streamline itself for an updated appearance, with Jessica's conditioning herself from her earlier frumpy appearance, with chic wardrobe and a less ambitious sense of curiosity than before. She is regarded by authorities for her proved expertise more frequently than in the past. Amplified background "music," especially in foreign settings, becomes harder to take than the previous segue music, foreshadowing Jessica's ambitions.

    Taken all-in-all, one episode of the 264 installments of "Murder, She Wrote" may fit the bill for a diversion from routine provided that one doesn't attempt to over-analyze.

    Why a retired English teacher-turned successful novelist would butcher the language as often as Mrs. Fletcher does leaves severe doubt for the authenticity of this series in itself. But yet it what it loses in plausibility, it makes up for towards authenticity in points of law, medicine, physics and technology.

    And even if you become the trusted friend should Jessica arrive in your community, remember to hide away those fireplace pokers, oh those dreadful, lethal flinging fireplace pokers, which claim all too many a victim.
  • "Murder, She Wrote" is one of those television programs which shows you just how influential the "Over 45" demographic is. I had no idea that it was on for 12 years. I knew it was a fixture of the CBS Sunday night line-up in the mid-to-late 80s, but had no idea that it had lasted that long -- my how time flies, when you are being bored to tears with the same plot repeated over and over again.

    Alright, perhaps that's unfair. Just like "South Park," "Murder She Wrote" was designed to appeal to a certain niche market -- in "South Park"'s case it was the edgy youth of today, in "Murder, She Wrote"'s case, it was their grand-parents. Now, there are doubtlessly many people under 40 who have fond memories of this show, but, with its bland non-threatening character and predictable plot twists, it was clearly designed to appeal most to people who didn't like "Matlock" because it was too violent.

    In "Murder, She Wrote," Angela Landsbury took the character of Miss Marple (which she had previously played on screen), simplified it a bit, and gave it an American accent. The plots, too, were watered down Agatha Christie stories, simplified to fit a 50 minute time-slot.

    I don't think I'm revealing anything when I tell you the basic formula that the "Murder She Wrote" writers ground into the dirt: Jessica Fletcher, in the course of her duties as a mystery author, wanders guilelessly into a setting in which there is an unsympathetic character. She notes how character mistreats a variety of other characters around them. Suddenly the unsympathetic character is murdered. A friend or relative of Jessica, who clearly had nothing to do with the crime, is then accused of it by a well-meaning but inept police force. Jessica then puts all of her skills as a mystery writer to work finding out who really did it -- in the process doing a series of good deeds such as uniting shy young people, and saving the homes of elderly widows. In the end, the murderer is always someone who had a really good reason to commit the crime, or someone who appears sympathetic but is actually just as cruel and heartless as the person who was kill -- so no one who has our sympathies ever comes to any real harm.

    I watched this show with my parents when it first came out, and I liked it then, because I've always liked Agatha Christie, and, in the 80s environment of car-chases and cop shows, it was nice to see something slightly more cerebral. I became disenchanted with it as time passed and the formula for the show became more and more rigid, and the plot required less and less thought. There became nothing mysterious about who would be killed, who killed them or why. There was no character development of any kind. The show refused to deviate from the plot in any way. This show just refused to take any kind of a chance on anything new. I'm not saying that Jessica should have tried to match wits with a gang of crackheads that just massacred a kindergarten -- that might be a little too edgy -- but, just as there were variety in all the Agatha Christie mysteries, maybe there could have something to spice up the stories just a little bit. As it is, the show is the television equivalent of Pablum.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The show lasted up to twelve seasons and 265 episodes not to mention four TV movies. And still loved by so many people.

    Angela Lansbury was only the fourth choice in the protagonist role of Jessica Fletcher a novelist and widow. With Jean Stapleton of All in the Family, the front runner.

    Jessica lived in Cabot Cove Maine. And murder would find her rather than the other way around. Later she would move to NY to follow her publisher to greener pastures.

    She would be a amateur sleuth who would solve the clues and crime. Way before the police though it is not realistic but still, very entertaining of the show.

    Like Stapleton but the show would not be as much of a hit without Lansbury's dry wit and smartness!
  • This series is about the most dangerous woman in Maine.

    Jessica Fletcher spent her life in Cabot Cove where she brought bad luck to the entire population by causing a myriad of murders which she then solved. I still wonder how it is possible that there is still someone left alive after all those deaths.

    He then expanded the business by starting to travel all over the world passing from one relative to another, but always ending up investigating some murder usually in which the alleged culprit was the relative who housed it.

    I suspect the series ended because the writers had run out of relatives to get it to go to.

    Despite the exceptional number of deaths, there was very little blood to see and no gory scene. Very reminiscent of Agatha Christie's Mrs. Marple.

    The series had 264 episodes and 4 films but eventually the theatrical style of the series also had to give way to more modern series.
  • Angela is an awesome actress and all that but this show has aged badly. Its cute and the stories are typical tv stuff. There's no real suspense for me and the way she always meets new nephews and nieces oh well...

    It wonders how long this show lasted. Must be Angelas charm and adorable way.
  • Jessica is the best. I love her. She makes me feel good. Every time the music comes on it is always uplifting! I wish she hadn't gone off the air. When I tell people how much I love her they make fun of me since I'm a guy but I tell you it was a hell of a show. I wonder when they'll come out with a DVD on all the seasons. I can't say there are any shows like this one on the air now. The closest thing is to watch A & E. They have some shows. She, however, was the original that all other mystery shows are trying to be. The interesting thing is that she was born in England but i never picked up on that. It's not like she had an accent or anything. The only bad thing about the show was that Jessica and Frank didn't have any kids but she seemed to have an awful lot of cousins, niece's and nephews.
  • I acknowledge that I love Angela Lansbury. If you think of her only as the lovely and charming Jessica Fletcher of "Murder She Wrote", then I implore you to see the original "The Manchurian Candidate".

    This series has the same level of care and attention to detail that went into all-time great shows such as "Breaking Bad" and "The Andy Griffith Show". It rarely disappoints. The guest roster is amazing. I discovered that fact when I was struck by the performance of an attractive older woman whom I later discovered to be the legendary Jean Simmons. But she is only one of a rainbow of actors from every corner of Hollywood.

    I apologize for the lack of specifics in this commentary; but I felt I needed to put in writing my admiration for a show that has given me so much pleasure and comfort, especially in its civility, in recent years.
  • I understand this show's appeal: the mysteries are clean, Angela Lansbury is charming and winsome... it's the kind of show they just don't make any more. Some episodes are downright dumb, but most of them are great examples of classic mystery writing, the kind that budding mystery writers can and should study when honing their craft.

    Heck, one of my favorite comics, Mike W. Barr's independent creation "The Maze Agency," was inspired in part by the writing on this show. (And at least a few of the show's producers were fans of the comic, as well!)

    But the show is marred for me by Jessica Fletcher's infallibility, and by Murder She Wrote's almost excessive focus on boring rich people backstabbing and having affairs with one another. Sure, sometimes Jess helps working-class folks, but most of the time it's uppity people in suits to whom she is devoting her sleuthing skills. It makes the show feel same-y and gives it the distinct flavor of any number of soap operas that focus on gentried individuals, even though the mysteries are generally well-written and will keep you guessing till the end.

    If you're someone in the age range of 50-80, or someone who thinks that Steven Bochco (RIP) ruined TV with his introduction of "immorality" to broadcast television police procedurals, then this show is one you can find respite in. But once you've seen one episode you've seen 'em all, and the show's stubborn refusal to give Jessica any flaws coupled with its stale formula make quote unquote "clean" murder mystery shows like the UK's "Miss Marple" or even the older "Hetty Wainthropp Investigates" far superior to this watered-down American series. May it live on in the land of reruns.
  • I also really like Law and Order and Diagnosis Murder, but this is my favourite of all. The main reason is because after a stressful day at school, I can switch on the TV, and watch the show on Alibi. Each episode is intriguing, and full of guest stars like Michael McKean, George Hearn, Keith Michell and Jerry Orbach. I can go on and on with the list. I do prefer the earier episodes, but there are a lot of standout later ones. Also, Angela Lansbury, a person who I really admire, is really entertaining as Jessica Fletcher, a murder mystery writer who finds murder everywhere she goes. You can never tell she is actually British, and if you see her in Beauty and the Beast and the original Manchurian Candidate, you'll understand why she's a fine actress. William Windom, Michael Horton, Ron Masak and Tom Bosley also make impressive supporting turns. In conclusion, a really entertaining show, worthy of a lot more recognition. 10/10 Bethany Cox
  • The population of Cabot Cove was 3,650 (mentioned in one script). Given that there were 22 episodes per season, it must have had the highest murder rate in the U. S. -- which is really saying something. I assume that this became such a wide spread joke that this is why Jessica began solving murders in New York, then moved on to other locations around the globe. Jessica's powers of observation were also amazing, like solving a murder because of a loose thread on the cuff of one murderer's jacket. Sheriff Amos Tupper was almost as inept as Barney Fife (but Barney's character was on a comedy). Jessica must have also come from a large family and had around 10 siblings. They in turn had families equally as large. That is how Jessica could travel for 12 years to visit a niece or nephew, and solve yet another murder while she was visiting. Jessica became so legendary that she also aided British Intelligence and even Interpol.
  • I usually don't like watching TV, and I'm a filmmaker myself and only care to put all my attention in films. But Murder, She Wrote is one exceptional excellent TV show that has captured one of the top five spots of my all time favourites.

    Every episode was seriously made like a feature film, nice set decorations (- I extremely adore Mrs. Fletcher's cozy and homey house and dream to have one exactly like that one day), and even the numerous extras in restaurant scenes, hotel scenes, party scenes did a professional job. I never actually fancy any lives in films, but Mrs. Fletcher's. Living in a quiet small town, bicycling for groceries, travelling to big cities all expenses paid to solve mysteries, writing in spare time making good money, famous and respectful...

    I found the stories all very interesting. After watching a few seasons, I have really developed an eye for details. Now when I watch any suspense / thriller movies, I barely got out-beat by those scriptwriters and can always guess correctly where a film's going and who's the guilty one.

    Jessica Lansbury is the perfect cast for Mrs. Fletcher. I love her and this character she portrayed. I couldn't find more information on how she's doing now but wish her all healthy and happy somewhere in the world.
  • You can predict how every single episode is going to go and how - conveniently - the murderer always confesses at the end when J B Fletcher confronts him/her with rock solid assuredness she has it right. The formula does get old pretty quickly, but Mrs. Fletcher is a fun character and Angela Lansbury clearly had a good time with this show. In addition, a lot of older actors got work they might not have otherwise gotten, even though many of them were good actors and at least once were very A list. A fun way to spend an hour now and then but it would never have lasted as long as it did if it hadn't had Angela Lansbury.
  • Years ago this series was popular enough to be broad-casted in the Netherlands(with subtitles). I watched it with my family for a while, but after a short time I got bored with it. I think my mother sometimes still watches the reruns.

    Murder, She Wrote is a make-believe world that is safely, ordered, predictable, organized and nice. This is not the world of the A Team, Miami Vice or Hill Street Blues. And, for that matter, a very anglo-saxon world, with very few children. When this world is endangered the champion of this world, Jessica Fletcher, will turn up, intervene and in due time set things strait. A shiny knight hidden in the guise of an elderly woman.

    The series is also an elaboration of the detective, like the Europeans had Sherlock Holmes and Hercule Poirot so America got Jessica Fletcher, next to Columbo(and later-on Father Dowling). In fact Jessica Fletcher is an translation of Miss Marple. As Father Dowling is a translation of the Father Brown. Jessica is remarkable because in everything she is the epitome of plainness. She is a single, sexless, old woman(stress woman: she has nothing of the grandeur of being a lady). She has apparently no obvious weaknesses, no remarkable traits, no violent emotions: she is just plain dull.

    This is partly to enhance the surprise effect, because underneath this plainness hides a skilled dedicated hunter of murderers. Like spiderman the normal person changes to become something else entirely. Surprise! Like a spider envelops her prey with strands of her web, so Jessica watches her environments for clues which will be the downfall of her victim, the murderer. It is interesting that Jessica Fletcher shares this chameleon aspect with Columbo(a shabby confused mind turns out to be a sharp detective) and Father Dowling(an innocent looking simple pastor is in fact a skilled investigator).

    But another part of this surprise effect is to introduce an innovation in the overused detective genre. The presented stories hardly show Jessica's has a sharp mind. In this series most of the time the plot and clues are so obvious that only a halfwit would miss them. Therefore instead of making Jessica inhumanly smart, the series surrounds her with fools. The great point of it all being that average audience of the series can follow what is occurring and revel in the feeling that you don't need to be a Sherlock Holmes, Hercule Poirot and Columbo, you can be an average (elderly) John Doe and be a detective.

    However all of this pervades the series with a aura of dullness. It is like eating plain white-bread: tasteless. To make sure the intended audience can follow what is going on the series progresses at a snails pace. The level of violence is so low that it is surprising it's about murders. There is no blood, no messiness, no sloppiness, no dirt, no shouting, no fighting and no expression of high emotion. The humor witless and is mostly to show what a dumb guy the stool pigeon or side kick of the moment is. It is a tidy neat world in which the flowerbeds are mirrored by the flower-patterns on the dress of Jessica and the curtains of hotel she is staying in. A world of apple-pie and white sheets waving in the wind in the sunny garden, freshly mown.

    This dullness finds it's logical conclusion when the perpetrator is caught, the clues presented, the mask is dropped, the criminal confesses the deed, and then is safely escorted away to jail, to trouble this world no more. We are never ever given a clue if the evidence will stand up in court. Instead we are made to believe that the confession is enough. The coming clean is to allow the audience to go safely to bed. It will also absolve the lawbreaker and the victim(s) of the violence. Order is restored. Be at peace, restless spirits.

    The series ran a long time because by it's dullness, snails-pace, predictable clues and plot, invisibility of the main character,the inevitability to be caught on the flimsies of evidence(I know because the flowers where no lotus-blossoms, but begonia's), the confession gave the audience the feel of a safe stable world. By all means it is a dull world to.
  • This is seriously one of the best plotted murder mystery shows if all time whether American or British! I have seen every episode at least 10 times and most of the time even in the 10th I can't remember whodunnit. So it really annoys me when people refer to this show as predictable and lightweight. Sure we know it's ridiculous that where everywhere Jessica goes there's a murder. But we'll if there wasn't there'd be no 12 season gem of Angela Lansbury's brilliant show.
  • carlamonterey28 October 2020
    Hi!

    How do I watch Seasons 6 and 7? Why do you stop at 5?

    Been binge watching this during COVID19. Definitely relaxing, and enjoyable.

    Thank you,
  • shane-201-46603312 June 2022
    2/10
    Awful
    It amazes me that anybody genuinely thinks this wafer-thin ego trip for Angela Landsbury is a "great show". The plots are hilariously full of holes and the characters utterly unbelievable, but the worst aspect by far is the endless polishing of Ms Fletcher's ego. She teaches tennis pros to play tennis, computer experts how to code, the finest chefs how to cook, ad infinitum. We are even supposed to believe this ancient, narcissist gargoyle of middling intelligence is a total über-babe, with men young and old drawn to her like a magnet.

    The entire house of cards also rests on the 'fact' that all policemen are fundamentally stupid, inept, incompetent, clueless, untrained imbeciles. Now I realise that police everywhere have their failings, but if you believed this drivel you'd think there's not a decent cop in the country.
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