queer_scribbling: Pluto. Infrared photo showing a ring of blue against a black background. (pillowfort)
I 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.

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.
queer_scribbling: Pluto. Infrared photo showing a ring of blue against a black background. (Default)
I've added on the Magpie Murders tag because I wasn't expecting the second season to have a different name.

Susan went off to Crete with her boyfriend Andreas at the end of Magpie Murders to help him realize his dream of taking over a family run hotel or something like that. Moonflower Murders doesn't cover the getting there part, so it's a year later, and she's worn down by the work involved in running a hotel. Something is going on with the bank, and the chef quits after not being paid; the water tank on the roof springs a leak, damages the roof, and floods the kitchen; and things just aren't going well. To say nothing of her missing being an editor and sometimes struggling with the language.

When a couple stop by from England with the offer to pay Susan £10,000 to help them find their daughter, she takes the offer. Granted, I don't blame Andreas for being a little surprised that she's leaving in like 24 hours, but he knows that the hotel is quite possibly going to close without that money. The arrival of Atticus Pünd is a sign for Susan, even though she's really not sure if Alan Conway's loosely inspired book actually has the answer to a real murder. (The parents know that their daughter thought she knew who the real murderer was after reading the book, and she's either in hiding or has been kidnapped due to that belief.)

The Pünd story is in 1950s Devonshire. An injured and retired actress has tried to start a hotel called The Moonflower Hotel, which was named after the Moonflower Wing of the real hotel. I think she's played by the 'real' haughty sister instead of the missing one, and we weren't introduced to a partner for her in E1, so the actress' husband is currently just the actor who played Harry in the Charmed reboot. The missing daughter's husband plays the financial advisor, the guy who played Moriarty in Sherlock plays the 'real' dead guy [Parris] and a Pünd suspect [Berlin], and I think the 'real' parents are the two who manage the day-to-day Moonflower Hotel operations, who are kinda giving off skimming money vibes. So far, the housekeeper and her son in the Moonflower Hotel don't have a 'real' counterpart, and the guy convicted of Parris' murder isn't in the Pünd story. (All the extended family and friends who attended the wedding at the hotel on the same day Parris was killed are sorta visual filler for now. Maybe there's cross-story overlap in dual casting side characters, but they not get seen or mentioned again.)

I should probably work on getting all the names figured out, but that's mostly who we were introduced to. The actress was found strangled in her home with several possible suspects, and Susan was on the flight back to London, reading. Odds are, going to the real hotel will rustle something up, or we wouldn't have much of a story, but I do appreciate that Susan isn't overly confident in her sleuthing skills. She's spent most of her life being an editor, dabbled very briefly in Magpie Murders in solving one mystery that came very close to killing her, and she's debating if she wants to stay in the UK and get an editor job instead of going back to the Trifillini (possibly the incorrect name of Andreas' hotel).

Magpie Murders

Wednesday, 26 October 2022 12:45 am
queer_scribbling: Pluto. Infrared photo showing a ring of blue against a black background. (Default)
>.>

Well, that's all I've got in the 'Magpie Murders' tag. Yeah, it's not a lot.

I was under the mistaken impression that I had actually filled out my 'chatting a bit after watching each episode' comments over on Pillowfort, but it turns out that I just grabbed some recap links and noted:
We've definitely hit a point where I've checked out a bit on adding comments. I'm enjoying the show, and everything. Just not remembering to chatter here.
On the one hand, I appreciate the note for future-me, so I'm not sitting here [30 December 2023] while trying to archive the tag and wondering why I mysteriously stopped. On the other hand, I thought I said a little bit more about the show. I've heard there's a season 2 in the works, but honestly, my family's been alright without a sequel. The show was based on a book with an ending, and it was all wrapped up without any cliffhangers or weird "please come back next year for what happens next" stuff.

Magpie Murders

Monday, 24 October 2022 12:30 am
queer_scribbling: Pluto. Infrared photo showing a ring of blue against a black background. (Default)
Episode 2

Aired: 23 Oct 2022 | Watched: 24 Oct 2022

Recap.

Honestly, I can't really think of anything to add that's not already in the recap. I do like the interweaving of the two points in view in some of the interviews - Pünd is at Pye Hall interviewing Lady Pye and James goes downstairs [in 1950s clothes] when a car pulls up, which transitions to James answering the door [in present day clothes] and talking to Susan about Conway.

Also, as someone who is a bit geographically challenged in my own country, I will admit that I'm totally clueless as to where 'Pye Hall' (slash Conway's mansion) is. The recaps keep mentioning Sussex, but I thought it was somewhere in Suffolk (which kind of matches James mentioning being able to see into Norfolk from the tower on a clear day). I'm sure this is a small detail that doesn't really impact the dual stories, but I am just vaguely unaware of where the fuck we are most of the time, I guess.

Magpie Murders

Friday, 21 October 2022 01:00 am
queer_scribbling: Pluto. Infrared photo showing a ring of blue against a black background. (Default)
Episode 1

Aired: 16 Oct 2022 | Watched: 21 Oct 2022

Recap.

While Alan Conway is not presented as an overly likable character, I do appreciate that he's an interesting character for a whodunnit story. He's found on the ground next to a tower, and there's an assumption that he committed suicide, but really, there's a whole long line of people who could have possibly pushed him.

Part of why my family's much more receptive to this show [as originally contrasted to another show] is probably the call back to older murder mysteries and whodunnits like Agatha Christie's work.

Alan Conway is an author of eight best-selling books about Detective Atticus Pünd, and he supposedly sent off his latest manuscript for 'Magpie Murders' to his publishers. Susan is his editor and finds out that the last chapter didn't make it to the publishing company; in 1955, Detective Pünd finds out he has terminal cancer (mirroring Alan's diagnosis of Stage 4 lung cancer outside the book), so this book is intended to cover Pünd's last case. (She says, "A whodunnit isn't worth the paper it won't be printed on if you don't have the end", or something like that.)

Several in-book characters are played by present-day character actors to help confirm that different characters are based on people Alan knows and/or interacts with to some degree. (For example, Detective Pünd's assistant is based on Alan's partner James. Technically, ex-partner with the leaving happening in this episode.) This doesn't guarantee that solving the in-book case will automatically solve Alan's own Susan-presumed murder, but it does create natural interweaving points for the parallel stories to bump into each other (Susan thinks she sees Pünd while she's getting ready to drive off to Conway's mansion to find the missing chapter).

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