Category: Mystery TV Show Review

TV Episode Review: Tenspeed and Brownshoe: The Robin Tucker’s Roseland Roof And Ballroom Murder

Tenspeed and Brownshoe is a 1980 TV series created by Steven Cannell of Rockford Files fame and starring Ben Vereen and a young Jeff Goldblum as conman E.L. “Tenspeed” Tucker and accountant Lionel Whitney. Together, the two form an unlikely private detective agency.

“The Robin Tucker’s Roseland Roof And Ballroom Murder” is the first episode available on Tubi as well as on Shout Factor’s website  and also shared on its official YouTube page.

In the story, Lionel gets a client. A rich man who offers him thousands to find a missing woman, but makes sure that Whitney never sees his face but that they have a picture of Whitney. 

I have to admit that coming in, my expectations were pretty high. The series was created by Stephen Cannell, famous for creating The Rockford Files, The A-Team, and Greatest American Hero. And Vereen and Goldblum have had a major careers since then.

It’s a bit disappointing to say that the episode is just okay. Goldblum has a certain charm and I like the idea of a private detective who is into these hard boiled Mark Savage books (from what I gather I’d say Savage is a lot like Michael Shayne) but there’s not a whole lot else to his character other than not knowing what he’s doing. There’s a certain charm to it, but it’s not something that demands your attention.  The same could be said of Vereen’s Tenspeed. He has some good moments, but considering the number of cons that Rockford pulled over the years on the Rockford Files, the efforts here look pedestrian.  

The show has moments where it reminds a little bit of Cannell’s more successful series. Whitney reminded me a little bit of the way Ralph Hinkley would be written in Greatest American Hero but that emphasized how mediocre it was overall

This isn’t bad, but it’s disappointingly middling.  If you set your expectations low,  you can enjoy it. But compared to all of the genuinely good 1970s and 80s detective programs, the only good reasons to watch this one are nostalgia, being a fan of Goldblum or Vereen, or being  Stephen Cannell compleitists. That and the fact can be streamed for free. 

Rating: 2.75 out of 5

Telefilm Review: Murder She Wrote: The Deadly Lady

In “The Deadly Lady,” some time has passed since The Murder of Sherlock Holmes as the episode shows Jessica has a proof copy of a new book and is working on yet another. Wealthy financier Stephen Earl is apparently killed in a storm on a boat with his daughters, who will each receive $25 million at his death. Sheriff Amos Tupper (Tom Bosley) suspects foul play and calls Jessica Fletcher in for her advice and he meets the man’s daughters, most of whom seem to have little love lost for him. At the same time, a drifter named Ralph (Howard Duff) comes to Jessica’s house seeking work and she gives him some work and befriends him.

Thanks to a local newspaperman, she sees a picture of the financier and realizes it’s the drifter, which means he didn’t die in the storm,  clearing one of his daughters who confessed to the “murder.” However when his body washes up on the beach, Jessica has to find out who killed him and why.

What Works:

The scenes between Howard Duff and Angela Lansbury were just superb.  Stephen Earl/Ralph is trying to sell Jessica a false story, several in fact, so that he can stay on the down low in Cabot Cove, though Jessica uses her deductive skills to see through most all of them. She’s still very kind and empathetic towards him and genuinely likes him, which gives her some added to motivation to solve his eventual murder.

We meet our first two Cabot Cove recurring characters. Tom Bosley (Happy Days, Wait Till Your Father Gets Home) would play Sheriff Tupper for the first four seasons on Murder She Wrote before leaving the role to become the lead in The Father Dowling Mysteries. In this episode, Tupper is a solid small-town lawman who does what needs to be done and refuses to alter his ways for high-powered, wealthy out-of-towners who descend on the town in the wake of news of Earl’s death. 

This episode features Claude Akins’ first episode as fishing boat Captain Ethan Clagg, an irascible character who enjoys taking good-natured shots at his friends in Cabot Cove. Akins makes the character work which is a challenge because that type of character can easily become annoying.

Dack Rambo does a nice-turn as the sleazy, money-grubbing husband of one of the daughters. He’s one of those characters you love to hate and Rambo’s quite good at making the character come to life.

What You Just Have to Accept:

Cabot Cove is supposed to be a small town in Maine, but this introductory episode is a bit of a mixed bag in terms of feeling like it’s set there.  The actors attempt New England rural accents with varying degrees of success, and some exteriors shots look passable, although the eagle eye will notice several dead giveaways that this was shot in Mendocino, California. 

It’s the type of production issue that’s fair to acknowledge, but not fair to hold against the show. It was good enough for its time. I just needed to bring my own imagination and suspension of disbelief to buy this location as being in Maine.

What Doesn’t Work:

Sherriff Tupper calls Jessica in when he thinks there might be a murder, but then when he finds an important crime scene, the story implies he told a deputy to not tell her where he was. The deputy then takes a phone call right in front of Jessica,  revealing the location and Jessica goes out there, with Sheriff Tupper none to happy to see her.

The whole sequence is a bit of pointless padding that goes against Tupper’s character as we’d seen it in the episode.

While Murder She Wrote is sometimes criticized for having plots resolved with Jessica finding the solution but the audience isn’t let on until she gives the solution to others, this particular episode has the opposite problem. The clues and overall solution are too simple and easy.  Though that may not be  the worst thing for the first hour-long episode.

Overall Thoughts:

A murderer who crosses Jessica Fletcher’s path is in serious trouble, but it’s pretty much hopeless for the murderer who decides that Cabot Cover is a good place to commit a killing.  The murderer caught in this episode won’t be the last one to try that fool’s errand and suffer the consequences.

While the mystery is a simple affair, Angela Lansbury carries it often with style, helped by a great guest performance by Howard Duff. This story gets the regular run of hour-long Murder She Wrote episodes off to a fine start.

Rating:4.0 out of 5.0

This post contains affiliate links, which means that items purchased from these links may result in a commission being paid to the author of this post at no extra cost to the purchase