Movie |
Miss Marple | Based On Novel Or Book
Disclaimer: All content and media belong to original content streaming platforms/owners like Netflix, Disney+ Hotstar, Amazon Prime Videos, JioCinema, SonyLIV etc. 91mobiles entertainment does not claim any rights to the content and only aggregate the content along with the service providers links.
7.2/10
IMDbBest Foreign Film | 1964 | James P.
Like Murder Most Foul (1964), this movie was adapted from an Hercule Poirot novel ( "After the Funeral"), not a Miss Jane Marple novel.
Stringer Davis (Mr. Stringer) was Dame Margaret Rutherford's husband. The part of Jim Stringer was created for him, and never appeared in any Christie novel.
Miss Jane Marple (Dame Margaret Rutherford) refers to a "remarkable novel" of Dame Agatha Christie's, "The Ninth Life." This was an in-joke; her creator wrote no such book.
The world première took place at a church garden party in rural Cheshire, England.
When reporting the second murder to the police on the phone, Miss Jane Marple uses the phrase "murder most foul." A quote from William Shakespeare's "Hamlet" (Act I, Scene V (lines 27-28): "Murder most foul, as in the best it is;/But this most foul, strange, and unnatural."), it was reused as the title of the following Miss Marple movie.
"Miss Jane Marple: Agatha Christie should be compulsory reading for the police force."
"Miss Jane Marple: [attempting to console her dance partner, who is dismayed that the orchestra has chosen to play a rock song] One must be tolerant of the young, Mr. Enderby. I remember my dear mama was quite horrified when she caught me dancing the Charleston in public."