"Partners in Crime" The Secret Adversary: Part 3 (TV Episode 2015) Poster

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8/10
A satisfying conclusion
Sleepin_Dragon16 August 2015
After watching the conclusion to the Secret Adversary I felt like they'd tried to capture elements of Endeavour and Foyle's War, and with this third part they'd achieved somewhat.

Part 3 felt more grown up, it had a more serious side, still a little bit of humour but definitely a harder edge.

I get that quite a few liberties were taken with the script, and that a few re-workings had gone one, but as I've said in an earlier review, I never thought the Partners in Crime books were Christie's best, they appeared in only 4 main novels.

I have read each of Tommy and Tuppence's novels, the best being by the pricking of my thumbs, and when you read the books you feel that Tuppence is the stronger almost overbearing character and Tommy is fairly subtle almost shy, I think the balance in this series between Walliams and Raine.

Am I loving or hating 'Beresford's bees?' I can't decide, after all everyone has to have a hobby.

Overall, the most satisfying episode yet, with a great ending, yep I enjoyed it. 8/10
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S1: The Secret Adversary: Gentle broad fun, but lacking tightness and genuine mystery, while feeling a touch too pleased with itself
bob the moo29 August 2015
I may pretend I am above Sunday evening light entertainment television, and I do tend to avoid a lot of it, but Agatha Christie's name is usually enough to get my interest. I guess the logic is that the material is coming down to a level of light entertainment, rather than being written up to that bar, so perhaps it will be better, but regardless I did look forward to Partners in Crime.

The first season is two mysteries, three episodes each. The first is The Secret Adversary. In terms of narrative it does have quite a lot of coincidence and convenience in the way the plot plays out, but I was fine to go along with this. Mostly the drama plays out in a broadly quite fun way, with perhaps just enough menace and risk built is so that we care, but never so much that it risks being too challenging on a Sunday night. The same could be said of the mystery; there is just about enough to it to keep the interest, but not so much that you will be picking away at the details trying to work out the solution. Indeed in terms of mystery this serial seems happy not to worry too much about the details and instead keeps it broadly moving on the surface.

This approach works reasonably well, but it does give the story a rather self-satisfied feeling – not quite smugness, but certainly something approaching that. The pacing also feels rather too at ease with having Sunday nights to fill, so it never seems in a rush to do much and again this takes away some element of urgency from the mystery; in terms of narrative there is really no reason this story could not have worked better as a two-hour special as opposed to three one-hour long episodes. The performances are fine, at least they fit the tone of the show, even if there is a certain discomfort in some of them as to how to play things. Walliams in particular never seems to work out if his character is a buffoon, a hero, a sharp mind, or a put-upon husband; and as a result his performance and character changes by the scene. Raines is not great, but seems more at ease with her character and gets a better balance of who she is. In terms of design the show commits to the 1950's setting and it all has the polished look and feel that one expects to come from a Sunday night period piece of light entertainment.

Watched as a piece of fluff, the first story in the season is perfectly fine; it never challenges, it doesn't go deep enough to cause you to ask too many questions, and it moves along with a general broad smile that eases the weekend to a close. Viewed as a Christie mystery though, it really doesn't deliver much in the way of actual intrigue, tension, or thrills – and the whole thing lacks a sharpness that could have benefited it, even if it feels perfectly happy with that situation.
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3/10
Uncovering the truth
TheLittleSongbird1 May 2018
Although Agatha Christie is one of my favourite authors, adaptations of her work have always personally been judged on how good they are on their own merits, regardless of how good or bad an adaptation it is.

The Tommy and Tuppence books/stories are entertaining reads, though none of them are among my favourites from Christie, and the 80s 'Partners in Crime' series is not only true in details and spirit to the stories but charming, suspenseful, light-hearted entertainment in its own right. But when advertised, surprisingly didn't find myself desperate in seeing this, which is highly unusual for an Agatha Christie adaptation. Despite looking good visually, the casting just seemed off and even when advertised the writing seemed clunky.

Finally giving it the benefit of the doubt, and without comparison to the source material and the previous 'Partners in Crime' series, as someone who loves Agatha Christie and who has enjoyed a large amount of adaptations of her work. Didn't care at all for the first two parts, this part fares better but the disappointment still remains.

It has a few plus points, with the best thing about it being the production values.

The 1950s setting is evoked beautifully, the scenery is positively sumptuous and at times effectively mysterious and a lot of work clearly went into evoking the period, because the attention to detail is great. It is also very stylishly filmed and atmospherically lit.

While the acting is a vast majority really not very good one performance is decent.

This going to an effectively menacing Jonny Phillips, who shows that you don't have to do an awful lot to make one feel uneasy.

Ending is clever and fun, if not quite ingenious.

However, that is pretty much it for the good things. One of the main things that ruins "The Secret Adversary: Part 3" (and this would continue to be one of the series' biggest problems) is the woeful miscasting of David Walliams as Tommy, have nothing personal against Walliams but there was the fear that he would be out of place and stick out like a sore thumb and that fear was proved correct. Walliams even when playing straight often looks vacant and doesn't seem to have a clue as to whether to camp it up as Tommy or underplay, his performance here is a mess of both and he never looks comfortable doing either, he acts jarringly buffoonish when camping it up, the dramatic scenes being very overwroughtly played, and when underplaying he is incredibly wooden.

While Jessica Raine is not as badly affected, this viewer is in the camp of not finding her that much better, she doesn't look very engaged as Tuppence (as if she didn't want to be there), a very charming and authoritative role, and comes over as rather too forceful in the more dramatic scenes. Although this is more to do with how the character is written here Raine seems and acts too modern for the 50s, at least here and throughout 'Partners in Crime'.

The two have no obvious chemistry together, while it may not have been the case at all it was like they didn't get along, or maybe it was how the roles were written because Tuppence looked more annoyed with rather in love with Tommy. Both manage to do something seemingly impossible and make Tommy and Tuppence annoying. The rest of the acting is not good either, the lack of chemistry also applies to the supporting cast which severely undermines the tension and pacing of the story and few seem sure of how to play their roles.

As good as the production values are, the effort put into them doesn't translate in the music, script and storytelling. The music is too loud, too much, too constant and too intrusive, not to mention very one-note mood-wise, even in scenes that would have benefited from more understated scoring or none at all.

Script-writing is clunky and instead of being suspenseful and light-hearted it's like trudging and struggling through very thick mud, and it never feels like it belongs in the 1950s, constantly the viewer feels like they are yanked back to 21st century. The dialogue, complete with comic elements in serious need of a toning down, dramatic elements that are talky and overwrought and mystery elements that feel under-explained and as long a way from tense as one can get, is rather stilted and lacks pulse and urgency, especially in the talkier scenes.

Sadly, the storytelling in "The Secret Adversary: Part 3" is not good, apart from the ending. On the page, 'The Secret Adversary' seems slow going but it was really quite diverting. Here the storytelling rambles on ponderously as a result of far too much padding (not quite as sluggish as in the first part but not everything felt like it served a point) with a lot of the 'tense' or 'suspenseful' scenes instead bordering on the laboured. And there are additions that are either silly, pointless or confuse the story, sometimes even all three, plus some of it is ridiculous.

Regarding the direction, while it fares well visually and does a good job bringing a sense of period it does poorly in the direction of the actors, most of whom look lost at sea with what to do, and with the storytelling.

Overall, disappointing. 3/10 Bethany Cox
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5/10
Too much silliness, too many loose ends
DoctorStrabismus19 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
To quote Janice Nicholls, "Oi'll give it foive!" She was of a later era, about a decade later, and that was the top score. Here it means 'middling' and 'indifferent'.

It was the second time I had watched it, partly because my childhood was in 1950s England, and the fairly authentic images took me back 70 years, with only minor anachronisms, and a Minor anachronism - they had somehow got hold of a 1953 Morris Minor in 1952.

But the plot was not tight, padded out with silliness, and Walliams was lumbering inanely about, very far from his best. James Fleet was still playing Hugo from 'Vicar of Dibley' he acted as such a numbskull, when he was meant to be a spymaster. And a serious Russian spy network would surely not have employed a mob of dumb murderous psychopaths as their 'enforcers', who in the end just sailed off into the sunset, as far as we could tell.

Could have been a lot better.
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