"Murder, She Wrote" Something Foul in Flappieville (TV Episode 1996) Poster

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6/10
Could have been a contender...
safenoe16 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Sometimes there needs to be adequate build-up to a murder in Murder, She Wrote.

But Something Foul in Flappieville seemed to spend a bit too long for the murder to spice up the story, and I felt the first half of Something Foul in Flappieville was spent too many technicalities. Kind of like the crawler for Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace which pondered the tax system of the empire and so on.

This episode could have been satirical and even dark, like Anthony Hopkins' movie Magic. Talking about dark roles, here we see Bryan Cranston (12 years before being transformed into high school chemistry teacher turned anti-hero Walter White) as an executive involved in greenlighting puppet shows.
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6/10
Would kids REALLY enjoy this?
planktonrules28 September 2023
"Something Foul in Flappieville" is an episode set at a TV studio where a kids show is being made. However, considering that the days of "Kukla, Fran and Ollie" as well as "Howdy Doody" were LONG past, I had a hard time accepting that any kid would enjoy this sort of 'entertainment'.

The story is about some new, annoying French character that's been added to the pantheon of Flappieville. This results in the pusillanimous creator of the show selling off or giving away well over 100% of the profits from merchandising away...and this, indirectly, leads to a murder. Who is behind it and why?

This is just an okay episode. The killer admits to everything instead of asking for a lawyer (a typical cliche in the series), the show seemed rather dumb and there isn't a lot to make this a standout episode.
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6/10
Engaging Animal Character
bkoganbing4 July 2017
This episode of Murder She Wrote has Jessica Fletcher branching out so to speak. She's gone into the business of writing a children's book with an engaging animal character who is a policeman. Now she's dealing with television who would like to give her character a show.

If Angela Lasnbury thought the publishing business could be cutthroat wait till she has to deal with the various egos involved with television. Stephen Kay who at times is almost childlike himself like Michael Jackson is the host of a current show who'd like to get Lansbury to collaborate with him. Kay is woeful as a business person.

A security guard is killed preventing someone from stealing a prototype puppet and notes on the character. Kay looks good, but we know it won't be him.

Who'd have thought kid's television could be so nasty?
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Weird
lucyrfisher7 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
This is a very strange episode. Jessica is working in the studios of "Flappieville", which are decorated like a playground. Flappieville is a puppet series, and the cast are designers, "fashioneers", puppeteers and possibly imagineers as well. They all hate each other and their egos clash like matter and anti-matter particles. Don Crosley, the head puppeteer, is always "on", speaking in funny voices and would-be funny lines and funny acts. He wants to keep his original character, Pound Dog, alive, though the canine has obviously had his day.

This is not a genius series like the Muppets or Sesame Street. We see a lot of the puppets in action, and everything about them is dire. The puppets are sinister, the scripts are unfunny, the voices are harsh. The up-and-coming puppeteer, who seems to identify a bit too strongly with Jessica's character Inspector Le Chat, gives a masterclass in over-acting. Surely he doesn't have to be quite so nerdy and weird. And his sidekick the clothes designer dresses in primary coloured children's clothes, including a red hat.

Everyone speaks in what they think are witticisms or aphorisms, including one of the puppeteers, a would-be blackmailer, and the chief exec she has her claws into. "Just for the non-record, this meeting never happened!"

Yes, it's Inspector "Le Chat", French for "the cat". He is a Poirot parody (and Don Crosley originally gives him a voice that is a Peter-Sellers-as-Clouseau parody). The puppet even looks vaguely like a cat. Nothing to do with Lestrade or Holmes - though is he wearing a deerstalker cap?
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8/10
Pretty good episode.
wkozak22110 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I like this episode. The story is good, the cast is good. Even in this episode Cranston plays a nasty person. The character of Darren wears some strange outfits. I wished they did a follow-up episode.
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5/10
"How Can She Ever Tell Them... This Is Not a Puppet Love?"
WeatherViolet26 February 2010
"And Introducing Ian Shaw," reads a line from the opening credits of this episode, which features a storyline about pre-teen orphan Stevie (Ian Lansbury, a grandson of Angela Lansbury and Peter Shaw), who appears in the audience of a televised puppet program (or a show within a show), at which many a temper flares behind the scenes.

Flappieville Studio (in an unidentified location, but by reasonable assumption, Los Angeles, California, with its palm tree groves and proximity to television network headquarters) produces the adventures of "Pound Dog," a puppet presentation, which Network Programming Executive Parker Foreman (Bryan Cranston) asserts is running out of steam and in its final season of production.

"Pound Dog" Creater and Voice Artist Darren Crosley (Stephen T. Kay) and Producer Robbie Dorow (Robert Knepper) stand at odds over the triangle created when Robbie's marriage with Mary Dorow (Dey Young) left Darren without Mary, who continuously attempts to smooth the fences between Robbie and Peter. But Robbie still doesn't trust Mary, as he often spots her around town in the company of Terry Fusco (Rick Dano), with whom Robbie believes that Mary has been cheating.

Mary, however, welcomes her dear old friend Jessica Fletcher (Angela Lansbury) to Flappieville, to adapt Jessica's latest children's Short Story into a French-flavored "Pound Dog" sleuth character, Inspector LeShay (sp?).

In the Flappieville Design Department, the multi-talented Illustrator and Voice Artist Jason Cardino (Steven Martini) creates the Inspector LeShay look, while Fashioneer Helena McKenna (Corinne Bohrer) designs his attire, with Kim Swofford's (Kimberley Kates) swaying back and forth, taking credit for the productivity of others, and trying to create a romantic triangle of her own in the process.

Gus Hayward (Alan Fudge) serves on the staff in the capacity of Voice Artist, but when Parker Foreman insists upon Flappieville's hiring Gus' talented but difficult ex-wife, Nattie Holt (Maryedith Burrell), to provide the voice-overs, it becomes up to Darren and Gus to sweeten her deal, for without Nettie, there will be no spin-off series, to keep Flappieville above sinking into the red.

Arvin Bucknell (Richardson Morse) serves on the staff as Security Guard, with more say in matters of policy and decision-making than the average "MSW" security guard would have.

So, by the time that Jessica arrives at the studio, wheeling and dealing has already been set into motion, with temperamental altercations to follow amid a battle of merchandising rights.

Robbie Dorow already has to deal with his problems with Mary and Terry Fusco, and now Darren Crosley has complicated matters by promising shares of Flappieville's merchandising operation to Nettie, Gus, Jessica and himself, which already exceed 135 percent, when Parker Foreman demands fifty percent under the table, in a conversation which Darren secretly records on audio-tape.

And now, everyone who learns about the secret audio-cassette must figure that it carries a large blackmail value because the desk in which it has been secretly stored has been broken into with a pair of scissors, tossed aside near a flat-iron, a Fiji travel brochure, a blood-splattered puppet, and a body on the floor, which Jessica stumbles across, while discovering Darren's kneeling beside it.

Lieutenant Spevak (Brian Cousins) investigates the murder with the able assistance of Jessica, who has been on hand to observe several clues, as she determines to tie the case together and to do what she can to find little Stevie a happy home-life if that is at all possible because there is always "Something Foul in Flappieville."

The cast is rounded out by Wendy Hoffman as Carol the Receptionist, Réné as Puppeteer #1, Douglas Seymore as Puppeteer #2, and Thom Fountain as Puppeteer #3.

This episode represents the only acting credit to date each for Ian Lansbury, Douglas Seymore and Réné, as well as the second of two "MSW" appearances each for Stephen T. Kay, Steven Martini, the third of three each for Corinne Bohrer, Bryan Cranston, Rick Dano and Robert Knepper, the fourth of four for Wendy Hoffman, the fifth of five for Alan Fudge, and the sixth of six "MSW's" for Richardson Morse.

(Not much great acting going on here amid a noisy episode, but Dey Young adds a nice touch among otherwise vindictive females, and Steven Martini adds a nice touch with his impersonations, while Bryan Cranston and Brian Cousins photograph well, as usual. What a clothing iron is doing in an office is anyone's guess.)
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3/10
Pretty foul
TheLittleSongbird2 January 2018
Have always been quite fond of 'Murder She Wrote'. It is a fun and relaxing watch that makes you think as you try to unwind in the evening. If one wants more complex, twisty mysteries with lots of tension and suspense 'Murder She Wrote' may not be for you, but if you want something light-hearted and entertaining but still provide good mysteries 'Murder She Wrote' fits the bill just fine.

"Something Foul in Flappieville" is not only to me one of the worst episodes of Season 12, it is in the bottom 10 worst 'Murder She Wrote' episodes in general. Admittedly was very sceptical as to whether it would work in the first place, with the idea seeming so beneath 'Murder She Wrote's' usual standards and it just seemed on paper so out of place conceptually within the show. My scepticism proved to be correct, the idea just didn't work for me and the execution was near-bottom of the barrel.

There are saving graces. The production values as always are slick and stylish. Some of the scoring has energy and has presence but also not making the mistake of over-scoring, while it is hard to forget or resist the theme tune.

Angela Lansbury is as always terrific, Jessica Fletcher being one of her best-remembered roles for very good reason. Most of the acting is not good at all, and that's being kind, but Dey Young and Corrine Bohrer show some charm and Bryan Cranston does menacing very well.

When it comes to the rest, there is a lot of over-acting going on in "Something Foul in Flappieville" and it is very poor over-acting that wouldn't even pass for unintentional humour. Stephen Kay in particular is embarrassing with the most annoying character of an episode full of characters too over-the-top to be taken seriously. They do have a very contrived and awkward script to work with, one that doesn't have any subtlety of any kind with self-indulgent wannabe witticisms and cringe-worthy funny lines delivered with voices nearly as creepy as the puppets.

Can say nothing better about the story. It takes far too long to get going, the murder investigation is both rushed through and uninspired, with too much strangeness and nowhere near enough twists. For instance it is far too obvious too early who the prime suspect will be, and one doesn't care because not only is the outcome one that can be seen right from the start the prime suspect is also too annoying to be worth investing in. Wasn't that shocked by the reveal either and my interest honestly had wavered by then.

Oh, and the puppets are neither entertaining, cleverly used or interesting. If the writers were trying to go for creepiness they succeeded (pretty certain it was not intended), but to excessively overkill effect that was one step away to scarring the viewer for life.

In summary, pretty foul episode and a 'Murder She Wrote' low point. 3/10 Bethany Cox
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4/10
Killed by a puppet
coltras357 August 2023
JB is watching the Flappieville puppet show with a keen eye, as Inspector Lachère is her creation, something she came up with for her grand nieces and nephews, and now Flappieville Toys want to take Inspector Lachère on the road. She soon gets pulled into a murder investigation when one of the studio backers is murdered and the puppet based on her character is used as the murder weapon.

Even in the children puppet industry things can become cutthroat which leads to murder. It's an interesting setting, but a rather pedestrian episode that ambles on and lacks that urgency. However Jessica is always great to watch.
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Interesting life of puppeteers
ctyankee112 December 2012
This episode is interesting. It shows the kind of things puppeteers go though to perform and puppets updated. The art work, the voice characters, the setting and more.

One thing that brought my attention was one of the puppets was named Lestrad. This may be the wrong spelling but Lestrad was a detective in Agatha Christie stories. Lestrad worked in harmony with Poirot.

In this movie Lestrad had a mustache, a French cap, French accent and was a detective.

This episode is based on changing and updating current puppets and getting rid of old ones. New deals were made to keep the old puppets one of which was a dog.

JB Fletcher supposedly was in this episode because she wrote a story that was being used for the puppets to play in. Jessica was taking notes regarding the story and also the appearance of the puppet Lestrad. She wanted Lestrad to look more professional as a detective. So a raincoat was made for him and a magnifying glass held in his hand. He also had a red bow tie. I am a big fan of Agatha Christie's and her Poirot series. The characters name though is in Arthor Doyles, Sherlock Holmes Inspector Lestrade.

To me this is like plagiarism. Poirot had a mustache, was a private detective, had a French accent and wore a bow-tie pictures Check out Poriot's images on Google. He has dark bowties and light one.

The story has a nice ending so in all I thought it was pretty good but I would have hoped they did not make Jessica take credit for a character written by someone else, Ms Lansbury is a great actress and is the executive producer of many of these shows, her nephew is also a producer so she had some say about the story line
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