"Ruth Rendell Mysteries" The Secret House of Death: Part 1 (TV Episode 1996) Poster

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7/10
Patchy Reworking Of Rendell's Novel Brightened By Amanda Redman's Performance!!
kidboots16 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
All this week one of our TV stations has been running a Ruth Rendell Mystery Movie. I caught "A Case of Coincidence" on Wednesday, which I found pretty boring and the sort of thing that happens when you pad out a short story into 120 minutes. Imagine how I felt when I tuned in the next day and found "The Secret House of Death", one of my favourite non Wexford novels, based on an early (1968) Rendell work. Definitely not as meticulously plotted as the novel, it really helped having a star of Amanda Redman's quality (she of "New Tricks" and "At Home With the Braithwaites" fame). She plays Susan Townsend, newly divorced, living in a cul de sac and the only person not curious about the comings and goings of "flaky" neighbour Louise. When she pops around to Susan's place agitated and needing a "real" drink, it is not hard for Susan, like the other neighbours, to believe the gossip that she was having an affair with Bernard, a kitchen refitter, when they are both found dead (by Susan) in an apparent murder suicide. It seems and open and shut case and when Bernard's wife, Magdalena, gives evidence at the inquest she paints a damning picture of Louise as a husband stealer.

Susan is also having trouble with her ex husband so she finds it easy to give support and comfort to distraught Bob who comes across as a model husband bravely putting up with Louise's affair. Meanwhile Det. Sgt. Mary Janes refuses to believe it is so transparent and is convinced that Bernard's eerie brother has something to do with it.

It then falls apart (from the book). Susan invites Bob around to dinner where she finds him less than enthusiastic (after sharing some passionate moments) and she starts to question whether she has been too eager to start a new romance. When she realises that the photo she has admired is not Bordeaux (as Bob always claimed) but Devon scenery, she instantly turns into an investigative journalist and turns up first at the eerie brother's butcher shop where he confirms that they all came from Devon, then going to Devon where she questions an old friend of Magdalena's who tells her the story of the wheel chair bound father.

And like a lot of these sensationist crime movies, explanations don't get in the way of an explosive ending - read the book and you will get both!! The last ten minutes of the movie has Susan, after stealthily leaving Bob's house (he has given her a key), realising she has left the side gate ajar at the same moment that Bob feels "the little grey rabbit" has got too inquisitive and will have to meet the same fate as Louise. Unfortunately you don't get the involved and ingenious explanation found in Ruth Rendell's book, about how Bob met Mag in Devon and how, far from having an affair, Louise actually only knew Bernard as just a handy man when Bob encouraged Louise to refit their kitchen - and after complaining to the neighbours that her extravagance was sending him broke!! They were two innocent dupes - but only in the book!!
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4/10
The Secret House of Death: Part 1
Prismark106 October 2021
Susan Townsend (Amanda Redman) is being asked by her neighbour to pop down. She has something important to discuss with Susan.

When Susan goes to visit, she finds her dead with another man beside her. It is ruled as some kind of murder/suicide.

The dead woman's husband Bob North (Owen Teale) knew nothing about her affair. He is shocked and grief stricken. Susan seems to be too keen to comfort him.

Being a Ruth Rendell mystery there has to be something more. Especially as it features Magdalena, the vampish wife of the dead man.

It all takes too long to get going. A policewoman thinks that the murder/suicide is just too neat.

The ending of the first episode shines another light on two of the characters. This could had been done half way through the first episode.
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4/10
Stupid Main Character and Predictable Plot
jethrojohn24 September 2022
Amanda Redman stars as a lonely divorcee who gets too involved in this predictable and rather dull thriller.

I must preface by saying I've never read a Ruth Rendell novel, although I've seen several of these adaptations. And none of them have ever clicked with me.

The Wexford stories are always overlong. A few of the others had no engaging leads. And this falls into both categories.

Redman is a great actress, but here she's just miserable, sad, and useless all the time. She's too quick to get involved with the widower, acting like a woman so in need of a man in her life that she'd choose anyone that was close enough to grab.

She's a very weak lead, and as the child of a single mum, I also found her to be an insulting one. Her desperation puts her and her son in the thick of danger throughout, suggesting that a woman's only purpose is to seek out a man.

Every other character is rather nasty, especially the male detective - a stereotypically sexist, fat, greasy sod who insults every woman he works with and every woman he has ever met.

The female detective shows some promise, yet she's not in enough of the story to do much. She should have been the main character, since she seems to be the only one in the whole story with any brains whatsoever.

And the kid who plays Amanda's son is rather good. He accurately purveys some of the same emotions that I went through as a child - especially when his father cancels on their time together at the last minute.

As for the plot. Well. If you can't guess who the baddie is as soon as they appear, then you haven't watched enough of these types of things. The only reason to keep watching after that is... I don't actually know, cause I found no reason to pay attention.

Only watch if you need something to make noise in the background while you do something else.
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