"Poirot" The Cornish Mystery (TV Episode 1990) Poster

(TV Series)

(1990)

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8/10
very good episode
blanche-29 February 2014
Hercule Poirot tries to unravel "The Cornish Mystery" in this 1990 episode.

Mrs. Pengelly visits Poirot at his office and confesses that she thinks her husband is trying to kill her. She's very sick to her stomach when he's at home, but when he's out of town, she feels fine. Her doctor insists she has gastritis. There's weed killer missing. Add to this, her husband is a dentist with a new va-va-va voom blond assistant.

Her niece was living with them, but recently moved out. She has no other relatives in town, just a close friend, Jacob Radnor. Poirot and Hastings go to her home in Cornwall the next day, but they're too late. She's already dead.

The husband, Edward, is the obvious suspect, and Hastings' eyes bug out when he sees his assistant! Jacob Radnor, who has just become engaged to Mrs. Pengelly's niece, thinks it would be better if the entire thing were left alone. Poirot says that six months from then, he and Hastings would be back, because there's no way to cover it up, due to "the vox populi." Sure enough, within six months, the husband is arrested. Poirot returns -- because he's sure there's more to the case than Inspector Japp has uncovered.

Really good mystery, with Poirot and Hastings in fine form, as well as Miss Lemon. Poirot is quite funny with Japp, especially at the end.

Very enjoyable and entertaining.
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7/10
The Lady Was Right.
rmax3048235 May 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Pretty good episode with the usual familiar elements -- a mysterious death; Poirot, Hastings, and Japp on the trail; a red herring or two; greed; romance; and a curious ending in which Poirot gives the confessed killer a twenty-four hour head start on the police. Last shot: Japp waving his fist angrily in the direction of the departing Poirot.

The locations were shot in Dunstan, Somerset, in the Southwest of England, a village that has been more or less voluntarily trapped in some previous century. It's picturesque and attractive, even in the rain, and Dunster Castle, which has been a kind of fortress for 600 years, can be glimpsed sitting atop a hill in some of the shots on Main Street.

I don't like to carry on about the location but it looks so terribly PEACEFUL, given current events, that one can easily imagine spending his or her twilight years prowling the many tiny shops and open markets. Let it rain.

The episode struck me as above average and moves along speedily.
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8/10
Poirot visits the country to solve a poisoning crime
SimonJack26 January 2018
Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot (David Suchet) travels to rural England to solve this TV series mystery. Faithful sidekick, Captain Hastings (Hugh Fraser) goes along, and they soon find Scotland Yard present after a murder. Chief Inspector Japp (Philip Jackson) thinks he has an open and shut case. If one were to believe the rumors and gossip that would be true. But, naturally, Poirot doesn't go along.

His keen eye gets to the bottom of the murder by poisoning. And, the clever Poirot has to use a scheme up his sleeve to expose the real murderer. After all, he has no proof.

This is a wonderful addition to a collection of one of the best mystery series ever made for TV. Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot series, with David Suchet and company, is without a doubt the most entertaining of all the mystery series.

The humor that starts this film has Hastings sitting on the floor and doing deep breathing exercises. Poirot is looking out the window at the rain, and shows some irritation on his face. He turns and walks over to Hastings. Poirot, "Are you feeling better, Hastings? Hastings, "Yes...Yes... Takes the pressure off the pancreas, you see." Poirot, "Ah, the pancreas is nothing. Of the digestive organs, the liver is the key. Look after the liver and life will take care of itself."
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9/10
Another great episode of an outstanding series
TheLittleSongbird20 April 2012
Agatha Christie Poirot is one of my favourites ever, and has been for several years now. The Cornish Mystery is not quite one of my favourites of the series or one of the best short story adaptations(Wasp's Nest, The Chocolate Box, Adventure of the Italian Nobleman), but it is still a great episode. I don't think it is ever made clear what happens to the murderer, but the final solution was unexpected with an amusing final touch. The Cornish Mystery is very well made as usual with sumptuous costumes, splendid scenery and photography and an atmosphere and attention to detail that is never less than convincing. The music is both haunting and beautiful, the story is always involving even if the effectiveness of the ending may divide and the script has the ideal balance of tension and humour. David Suchet is impeccable as ever, and Hugh Fraser, Phillip Jackson and Pauline Moran support him wonderfully. John Bowler(before The Bill) is good as Jacob, Jerome Willis likewise though I did find myself doubting his guilt about twenty minutes into the episode and Amanda Walker is very moving here.

All in all, a great episode. 8.5/10 Bethany Cox
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9/10
An excellent episode that sees Poirot set off to Cornwall to catch a killer.
Sleepin_Dragon27 October 2015
Poirot is called upon by a reluctant client, refusing even to go into his office, Alice Pengelley meets Poirot and Hastings outside in the rain. Nervously she explains her situation, she believes her husband Edward is slow poisoning her. The following day Poirot and hastings set off for Polgarwith in Cornwall to investigate further.

Mrs Pengelley is quite a tragic victim, her personal plea for help and sudden death is tragic. Poirot naturally feels a sense of guilt for not preventing it.

Utterly glorious location, filmed in the exquisitely beautiful village of Dunster, its castle looks magnificent in the backdrop.

Nice touches of humour, Hastings attempts at palming himself off as a relative of Mrs Pengelley and meeting the yellow haired hussy is a funny scene, as are the closing scenes. I've always thought this to be one of the saddest stories.

Poirot takes the law into his own hands, it's a very interesting mystery, one in which he uses different methods. 9/10
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7/10
Rather grim
kaberi-893-64231623 September 2015
For me this episode stands out for being considerably less light-hearted than its predecessors. From the first shot of Poirot staring out the window at the rain, through the initial interview with the client conducted outside on the rainy sidewalk, through the scenes of the funeral and subsequent exhumation, the grim states of death and grief hang over the story like a fog. There are a few glimmers of a subplot, involving Hastings' temporary obsession with all things "Oriental" (which in 1930s Britain evidently included everything from Rabindranath Tagore to the I Ching)but they do little to relieve the overall sense of gray foreboding.

The plot can be summarized briefly. Mrs. Pengelley travels from a small town in Cornwall to consult Poirot. She is worried that her husband is poisoning her because he is in love with his young blonde assistant in his dentistry practice. Poirot and Hastings take the train to Cornwall the next day, only to discover that their client is already dead. Outraged and disappointed in himself that he had not taken the woman's concerns seriously (the first time we have seen Poirot truly angry with himself), Poirot goes to interview the woman's niece and discovers that there were multiple reasons for her husband to have considered murdering her. And yet, by the time he is back on the train to London, he is predicting that he will be returning to Cornwall to save the husband from the gallows.

It will not surprise any Poirot fan to discover that the case is not as open-and-shut as Chief Inspector Japp would like to believe. And the way Poirot and Hastings elicit a confession from the real killer requires really an extraordinary suspension of disbelief. Overall, an average, but not remarkable episode.
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8/10
"Hein, the pancreas is nothing. Of the digestive organs, the liver is the key."
bensonmum223 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Mrs Pengelley travels all the way from Cornwall to pay Poirot a visit. She fears her husband may be poisoning her. Two things that support her theory are some missing weed killer and the fact that she only feels well when he's out of town. She's certain her husband has his eyes set on his new "yellow-haired hussy" of an assistant. Poirot and Hastings set out for Conrwall the next day to investigate, but find they get there too late. Mrs. Pengelley is dead before they arrive.

The Cornish Mystery is a very fine episode. I'll be honest, the mystery here isn't really all that difficult to figure out. In fact, the reading of the will all but cinched it for me. No matter, it's still fun to watch Poirot and company get to the solution. The acting of the four regulars is what I've come to expect. Hugh Fraser's Hastings has one of the more memorable scenes. His initial encounter with the "yellow-haired hussy" is hysterical. According to IMDb, The Cornish Mystery was filmed at High Street, Dunster, Somerset, England, UK. What an amazing location! Not only does the village look perfect, but filming it in the rain makes for the ideal setting. Add to that some appropriately moody music, and the stage is set. Like most of the other reviewers, I also got a kick out of the final scene with Japp waving his fist in frustration as Poirot rides off. It's an excellent moment that pretty well sums up Japp and Poirot's relationship in these early episodes.
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6/10
Poirot does Cornwall
safenoe27 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I'm finally getting around to catching up on Poirot, and I finally get to watch The Cornish Mystery which features Poirot (David Suchet) and the Scooby Gang. For me, I prefer the episodes with the Scooby Gang, rather than the later series hiatus that had them missing unfortunately and unjustifiably (I think it was a new production team that made the decision).

Amanda Walker plays Mrs Pengelley, and I loved the part at the end where Poirot is keen for an Indian meal, so he was quite ahead of his time init. This episode could have gone longer, but still in this age of social media, it's length is manageable.
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9/10
a very superior episode
mgl-9203712 April 2022
This episode has two things going for it: a very sympathetic victim, and a repellent culprit who is nevertheless very believable as a type. Added pathos comes from seeing Mrs. Pengelley's fears dismissed and her character derided. The plot here is practically without artifice, with the events developing very naturally. I'm on at least my third viewing of most of the Poirot episodes. This one is underrated, in my opinion. It's one of the best of the short episodes.
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8/10
Excellent, well-acted and with a strong feeling for place and period.
jamesraeburn20039 August 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Hercule Poirot is approached by a frightened middle-aged lady called Alice Pengelley (played by Amanda Walker) who lives in the Cornish village of Polgarwith. She suspects her husband, the local dentist Edward Pengelley (played by Jerome Willis), is trying to kill her by slow poisoning her with weed killer. She is taken ill after meals, although she is fine whenever he is away, and has spotted a half empty tin of the poison, which the gardener swears he hasn't used. Poirot and Captain Hastings agree to come down to Polgarwith on the following day, but when they arrive she is dead. Alice's maid is convinced that Edward is guilty since she claims to have caught him with the weed killer and how he was startled when she spotted him with it. Meanwhile, Alice's arrogant GP, Dr Adams (played by Derek Benfield), swears she was suffering from gastritis and will not be swayed from his original diagnosis. It transpires that Alice's niece, Freda (played by Chloe Salaman), is engaged to be married to the local gentleman's outfitter Jacob Radnor (played by John Bowler) and that she had quarrelled with her aunt because she had been infatuated with him herself. In addition, Alice's will leaves her £2000 to be held in trust until she is forty while her husband gets the residue of her estate estimated to be worth £20,000. Poirot and Hastings return to London. Hastings is convinced that Edward is guilty and will surely be arrested and charged with his wife's murder before long. Whilst Poirot concurs that Edward will soon be in the dock, he believes him to be innocent and that he and his friend will have to clear his name and find the real killer. Sure enough, Edward is promptly arrested and charged and Poirot and Hastings return to Cornwall but are none the wiser as to which dogged Yard man it is who thinks that he has an open and shut case this time. It is? Yes! Chief Inspector Japp (played by Philip Jackson), of course...

All in all, The Cornish Mystery is another excellent addition to this acclaimed series. David Suchet, by now, had firmly established himself as the definitive Poirot effortlessly portraying his eccentricities and mannerisms. As ever he is complemented by the fine supporting performances of his co-stars, Hugh Fraser, Pauline Moran and Philip Jackson as his closest friends and associates Captain Hastings, Miss Lemon and the Scotland Yard man Chief Inspector Japp. In this instance, Hastings and Miss Lemon gently poke fun at Poirot's vanity whilst he insists that he is a man who is modest about his abilities as a detective. This is charming to watch as is Japp's belief that he is going to have a simple clear cut case this time until he is surprised to find that Poirot has been on to it the whole time. It certainly looks as though Edward Pengelley will be found guilty and sentenced to death as the trial is going firmly against him. Only, Poirot succeeds in trapping the real culprit by forcing him to sign a written confession in return for giving him a twenty-four hour head start to escape before he hands it over to the police. Hastings is flabbergasted, believing that his old friend has allowed sentiment to get the better of his judgement this time. Poirot replies that it is simply a case of realism since he has no hard evidence against this person. Naturally, Poirot has no intention of honouring such a bargain with a ruthless killer. And, in a hilarious finale, he hands the confession to the clerk at the court who then gets the trial adjourned whilst Japp, none the wiser, is rubbing his hands in glee in belief that he has got the right man this time. Then, as Poirot and Hastings are driven away to the train station, an astonished Police Constable runs over to hurriedly tell Japp what has happened. Naturally, he is left fuming that he has been proved wrong by his old friend yet again and must now launch a manhunt to bring the perpetrator to justice. The acting from the rest of the cast is truly superb too with John Bowler standing out as the young and somewhat untrustworthy Jacob Radnor whilst Chloe Salaman is noteworthy as Freda as are Jerome Willis as the framed man and Amanda Walker as his ill-fated wife. It is well directed by Edward Bennett, who made several excellent episodes for this series, and the costumes, lighting and settings all have precisely the right touch creating a strong sense of place and period.
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5/10
The Cornish Mystery
Prismark102 November 2017
I felt that this was a rather odd and low key episode. The episode is certainly less lighthearted and more darker of the early Poirot episodes.

Mrs Pengelley is a reluctant visitor to Poirot. She thinks that her husband, a dentist is trying to kill her and carrying on with his dental assistant. Poirot and Hastings go to Cornwall the next day but alas are too late. Mrs Pengelly is dead, the husband has gossip surrounded him and Hastings can certainly attest to the gorgeousness of the dental assistant.

However Poirot is disappointed that he let Mrs Pengelley down but some months later returns to save her husband from the gallows when he becomes the main suspect, however Poirot needs to use all his cunning to trap the real killer.

It was worth it just to see Hasting's face when he claps eyes on the dental assistant. Hastings is also in this episode enamoured with all things eastern mystical.
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8/10
Pretty good mystery
grantss30 July 2016
Hercule Poirot is approached by Mrs Pengelley from Cornwall. She is worried that someone, probably her husband, is trying to poison her. She returns to Cornwall and Poirot promises to follow her a day later. When he and Hastings arrive, Mrs Pengelley is dead. The local doctor rules that the cause of death was gastritis but Poirot knows better. Eventually he manages to get the police to exhume the body and they find that she was indeed poisoned. Mr Pengelley is arrested and the evidence all points to him doing it. Poirot is not convinced, however.

Reasonably good mystery. Not obvious who the murderer is and there's a red herring or two along the way.

Some nice sub-plots too involving Hastings (as they tend to).
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