P.D. James - Shroud for a Nightingale
KOCH VISION
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$29.98 |
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$26.99 |
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$16.08 |
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$16.49 |
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DVD Details:
- Starring: Roy Marsden, Joss Ackland, Sheila Allen (III), Margaret Whiting (II), Liz Fraser
- Director: John Gorrie
- Format: Color, Content/Copy-Protected CD, Dolby, DVD-Video, NTSC
- Rated: NR (Not Rated)
- Studio: KOCH VISION
- Theatrical Release Date: Dec 01, 1984
- DVD Release Date: Jun 07, 2005
- Run Time: 251 minutes
- ASIN: B0008EN6NQ
- UPC: 741952660996
- Sales Rank: 66856
Amazon Customer Reviews:
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
    Marsden Nails Dalgleish, 2008-06-24
First, let me state upfront that I'm not a huge fan of PD James's mysteries, with or without Adam Dalgliesh, her fabled poetry-writing Scotland Yard detective. The PBS series done on her Dalgliesh mysteries, however, represents one of those infrequent instances in which the screen adaptations were a far more enjoyable experience than the original material. British actor Roy Marsden gets most of the credit for this, with his quietly vivid portrayal of the severely emotionally controlled Chief Superintendent Dalgliesh. Marsden overcomes the problem that Dalgliesh has always presented for me in James's novels: he's so enigmatic that he never quite comes to life. Marsden's strong physical presence, beautiful voice (just close your eyes and listen once in awhile), and subtle but clear characterization finally breathes real life into this unique detective. It was this series that gave Marsden a higher profile here in the States, although his edgy Neil Burnside in "The Sandbaggers" had already created a cult following. The strength of Marsden's work as Dalgliesh can best be appreciated by watching the one failed attempt PBS made to resurrect Dalgliesh with another actor ("The Murder Room") after Marsden exited the series. That is not to insult the later actor, it is just to point out how completely Marsden made Dalgliesh his own.
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br /"Shroud for a Nigthingale" is one of the earlier PD James adaptations for PBS's "Mystery!", along with "Death of an Expert Witness", and despite these two showing video rather than film production values, both are particular favorites. "Shroud for a Nightingale" is set mostly in Nightingale House, a nurse's training school attached to a large private hospital. The story presents not only the cool, brainy Dalgliesh but a variety of other colorful characters, all fully realized by an excellent cast. (Penny Downie, who plays one of the student nurses here, turns up in two later James/Dalgliesh stories, once as Kate Mishkin, Dalgliesh's assistant after John Massingham exits in "A Taste for Death", and once as QC Venetia Aldridge in "A Certain Justice".)
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br /Several narratives intertwine here: one involves a patient at the hospital with a suspicious international past who is under investigation by Dalgliesh; another involves the mysterious past of the self-possessed Matron, who heads up the hospital's nursing staff; others narratives involve relationships among students and senior nurses. The narratives collide early in the story, and, of course, a series of deaths result. Chief Inspector Dalgliesh and his assistant, D.I. John Massingham, set to work to unravel the connections among the narratives. Along the way we meet and get to know the characters of the student nurses, Matron (a strong performance by stage actress Sheila Allen), the senior nurses, and an egotistical surgeon (Joss Ackland), all nicely fleshed out. There is a subtle suggestion of lesbianism in two of the relationships, and the observant (especially if they listen carefully to voices) will also catch a younger John Thaw in a supporting role, long before he made his name in the U.S. as Inspector Morse.
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br /"Shroud for a Nightingale" is one of the best of this series: tightly woven, clearly directed, with many interesting characters to watch - first among equals being Roy Marsden's piercing-eyed, deliciously aloof Chief Inspector Adam Dalgliesh.
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