Moonflower Murders
Sunday, 20 October 2024 12:30 amI haven't gotten any better at remembering to post after each episode with trying to put this type of thing over here on Dreamwidth.
Admittedly, I'm just not much of a speculate-as-it-happens sort of person with murder mysteries. I like watching them, and I like watching them with my family where we might dabble a little in who might have done it, but Moonflower Murders feels like the sort of mystery story that you should ideally watch in one setting and get the reveal at the end.
It's a good thing we don't bet on our guesses. The doctor-slash-revealed lover was the ultimate killer of the movie star, even though her husband did think he had killed her initially. (Manual strangulation takes longer than expected, so she was just unconscious when he left.) Ms Caine, the assistant, thought that the husband was never going to face any punishment even after he confessed, and she was the one who stabbed him. She actually was a very devoted fan who hired someone to pretend to be an American agent in order to convince Pünd to take the case in the first place.
In Susan's mystery, my family guessed who Leo was, initially, but we got thrown off by the Melbourne joke. (There's a Melbourne in South Derbyshire, England.) Aiden killed Parris because he had wanted to leave the male escort life behind with this marriage to Cecily (and Parris basically wanted to blackmail him into having sex on the night before his wedding), and Stefan was framed because he was a seemingly perfect fall guy (immigrant, criminal record, recently fired for someone else's theft). Cecily was actually still maintaining her forbidden relationship with Stefan while engaged, so she had a compelling reason to try to prove his innocence after getting married; Aiden killed her with the hope that his original murder wouldn't be revealed.
Susan and Andreas's relationship got through all this intact, and Susan got a freelance editing job, which will help pay for keeping the Crete hotel long-term. Stefan is released, and Susan finally stops worrying over missing any last clues in the book. HEA (for now), and now it's just a waiting game for the third (and from what I've heard, final) book in the Susan Ryeland series.
Admittedly, I'm just not much of a speculate-as-it-happens sort of person with murder mysteries. I like watching them, and I like watching them with my family where we might dabble a little in who might have done it, but Moonflower Murders feels like the sort of mystery story that you should ideally watch in one setting and get the reveal at the end.
Anyways, tonight was the final episode.
It's a good thing we don't bet on our guesses. The doctor-slash-revealed lover was the ultimate killer of the movie star, even though her husband did think he had killed her initially. (Manual strangulation takes longer than expected, so she was just unconscious when he left.) Ms Caine, the assistant, thought that the husband was never going to face any punishment even after he confessed, and she was the one who stabbed him. She actually was a very devoted fan who hired someone to pretend to be an American agent in order to convince Pünd to take the case in the first place.
In Susan's mystery, my family guessed who Leo was, initially, but we got thrown off by the Melbourne joke. (There's a Melbourne in South Derbyshire, England.) Aiden killed Parris because he had wanted to leave the male escort life behind with this marriage to Cecily (and Parris basically wanted to blackmail him into having sex on the night before his wedding), and Stefan was framed because he was a seemingly perfect fall guy (immigrant, criminal record, recently fired for someone else's theft). Cecily was actually still maintaining her forbidden relationship with Stefan while engaged, so she had a compelling reason to try to prove his innocence after getting married; Aiden killed her with the hope that his original murder wouldn't be revealed.
Susan and Andreas's relationship got through all this intact, and Susan got a freelance editing job, which will help pay for keeping the Crete hotel long-term. Stefan is released, and Susan finally stops worrying over missing any last clues in the book. HEA (for now), and now it's just a waiting game for the third (and from what I've heard, final) book in the Susan Ryeland series.