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Category:    Home > Reviews > Detective > Mystery > British TV > Van Der Valk Mysteries – Series One (1972/Acorn Media DVD)

Van Der Valk Mysteries – Series One (1972/Acorn Media DVD)

 

Picture: C     Sound: C     Extras: C-     Episodes: B-

 

 

Barry Foster may still be best-known to U.S. audiences for his turn as The Neck-Tie Strangler in Alfred Hitchcock’s Frenzy (1972), but he was also good at playing the good guy as police commissioner in Amsterdam as Van Der Valk (Valk as in “Val”) and did so for 21 years, though this only included five seasons.  After seeing DVD release elsewhere, Acorn Media gives the show its U.S. DVD debut with a Series One set.

 

Here are all six hour-long episodes from the first season (32 episodes over 21 years, all with Foster) joined by Michael Latimer as Inspector Johnny Kroon and Susan Travers as wife Arlette van der Valk.  Episodes include:

 

1) One Herring’s Not Enough (Colin McCormack, Clifford Rose, Michael Turner) – Why has a teacher confessed to killing his unfaithful wife and her lover before anyone has been killed?

 

 

2) Destroying Angel (Richard Hurndall. Artro Morris) – Van de Valk suspects a woman when a man turns up dead from poisoning, but something darker is going on that is not so obvious.

 

3) Blue Notes (Geoffrey Bayldon, Matthew Guinness, Hilary Heath, Peter Pratt) – Why is a famous violinist receiving death threats and who ahs destroyed his Stradivarius?

 

4) Elected Silence (Michael Lees, Michael Sheard, Damien Thomas, Martin Wyldeck) – The daughter of a Right Wing official (who Van der Valk is not very fond of) is nabbed and ransom may be the next part of the ordeal.  Who is doing this and why?

 

5) Thicker Than Water (David Leland, Pauline Letts) – When a wealthy Brit visiting is found dead, his mother is not so anxious to find out why, but it turns out he was visiting the town for its underground scene and the case gets increasingly disturbing.

 

6) The Adventurer (Paul Eddington, William Ellis, Norman Scace) – An ugly car crash and stonemason threatened makes for an unusual case.  The target is not worried about the threats, but Van der Valk knows something is going on and intends to find out what is really going on.

 

 

Everyone is pretty good in these here and the mysteries not bad, but it is not as strong as the best such shows from that time or now, yet it has some very appealing aspects including Foster doing the refined version of the kind of hardboiled police character you would find in either version of Life On Mars.  Michael Chapman and Geoffrey Gilbert wrote all the teleplays and they flow nicely, while Graham Evans and Douglas Camfield handle directing chores.  Still better than most such shows we get today, Van Dek Valk is a must-see for serious mystery fans just the same.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The 1.33 X 1 image was shot in 16mm in outdoor shots and analog PAL videotape for indoor shots and this is a weaker copy of the final edit.  Too bad because the weakness of the transfers betray how good looking the show is.  Wonder if the 16mm footage still exists?  The Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo boosts the old TV monophonic sound but still sounds weak and one wonders if the boosting was such a good idea.  The theme song, a hit instrumental theme song “Eye Level” is featured prominently throughout.  The only extra is text on creator Nicolas Freeling.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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