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Cadfael - One Corpse Too Many

Cadfael - One Corpse Too Many

List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $17.96
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "We deal with what is"
Review: As complex as any of the Cadfael series, this one tells the story of how Master Hugh Beringar becomes sheriff. Also as Cadfael states, "By my reckoning there is one corps too many."

During the time of the civil war between King Stephen and the Empress Maud, the abbey tales a neutral stance. However Brother Cadfael is given a new assistant. The young lad is anything but; as he is a she. Naturally Cadfael being a man of the world detects this and must find out why she is hiding.

Meanwhile back to the war Shrewsbury Castle is under siege by Stephens's men for being a Maud holdout. When Stephen finally gets the castle he orders the rebel soldiers executed. Cadfael is preparing them for a Christian burial when he counts 95. It is trivial to the king but Cadfael presses that it would not bode well for a king to dismiss a murder under his very nose. Looks like it may have been the work of Hugh Beringar, a man who has appeared to have conveniently changed sides in the war. King Stephen is not unaware of this.

This time will Cadfaels tuition, forensics, and logic. Prove the case?
Is Hue a villain or will he turn out to be a friend?



Rating: 5 stars
Summary: We deal with what is
Review: As complex as any of the Cadfael series, this one tells the story of how Master Hugh Beringar becomes sheriff. Also as Cadfael states, "By my reckoning there is one corps too many."

From the back Jacket:

When a Novice Monk arrives at Shrewsbury Abbey and turns out to be a young girl in disguise, Cadfael decides she is in need of a friend. But when he discovers his Novice's true identity, Cadfael finds himself caught in the Crossfire of the Civil ware between King Stephen and the Empress Maud.

He is called upon to bury 94 rebel soldiers executed on the King's orders after the fall of Shrewsbury Castle. But when Cadfael counts up the dead bodies and finds one corps too many, it sets him on a murder trail. His investigations lead him to suspect the shadowy Hugh Beringar - a man who appears to have recently pledged his allegiance to King Steven...

This time will Cadfael's tuition, forensics, and logic. Prove the case?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: We deal with what is
Review: As complex as any of the Cadfael series, this one tells the story of how Master Hugh Beringar becomes sheriff. Also as Cadfael states, "By my reckoning there is one corps too many."

From the back Jacket:

When a Novice Monk arrives at Shrewsbury Abbey and turns out to be a young girl in disguise, Cadfael decides she is in need of a friend. But when he discovers his Novice's true identity, Cadfael finds himself caught in the Crossfire of the Civil ware between King Stephen and the Empress Maud.

He is called upon to bury 94 rebel soldiers executed on the King's orders after the fall of Shrewsbury Castle. But when Cadfael counts up the dead bodies and finds one corps too many, it sets him on a murder trail. His investigations lead him to suspect the shadowy Hugh Beringar - a man who appears to have recently pledged his allegiance to King Steven...

This time will Cadfael's tuition, forensics, and logic. Prove the case?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Must see for all mystery and history lovers
Review: Even though this movie takes place several thousands of years ago, it had my attention the whole way though. You thought Nany Drew and the Hardy Boys were great classic adventures, but wait untill you see this. From begging to end One Too Many Corpses is filled with many twists, and seemingly dead ends, but then a chance for light. If you don't see this movie One Too Many Corpses, than you will not missing out on a great mytery but a fabulous adventure.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best of the series.
Review: I enjoy a good murder mystery of the classical type, and the Brother Cadfael series is particularly good. The author Ellis Peters (Edith Pargiter, 1913-1995), like Agatha Christie, Nagio Marsh and Dorothy Sayers, was popular during the mid-20th Century and wrote prolifically during that time. There are some 20 Cadfael books. The film One Corpse Too Many, based upon the book of the same name, was the first one I saw on Public TV. It hooked me irrevocably. The setting is incredibly authentic and colorful. The different orders of society: nobleman, servant, military man, tradesman, artisan, abbott, monk, and priest are carefully wrought to produce a period piece with more detail and clearer dialogue than a Shakespearean play. It would be a wonderful way of introducing young people to history.

The setting of the story is 12th Century England, a period of particular turmoil. Henry I had died without a legitimate male heir, and he had designated his daughter Matilda as his successor, binding his nobles by oath to support her. Although many of them did, including her very able half brother, an illegitimate son of Henry made an Earl by his father, many of them threw their support behind her cousin, Steven. Matilda, or Maud as she is referred to, was a granddaughter of William the Conqueror and no push over herself. She fought her cousin from a base in coastal France, where the family held land in fief of the King of France and where marriage alliances had placed her as wife of Geoffery, the Duke of Anjou. With her Norman support in France and her loyal factions in England, she made enough of a threat to Steven's rule to ultimately obtain a guarantee of succession to the English throne for her son Henry, ultimately Henry II. Until that time, warfare turned most of England into a battle ground and life for everyone a matter of ceaseless uncertainty. Added to this was the rancour still apparent in the social divisions between the largely Saxon population and their Norman rulers. The fall of the Saxon monarchy was only a hundred years previous and hostility still existed.

Cadfael, the central character of the series, is a Dominican monk and herbalist, and Dereck Jacobi is the perfect personification of him. He has a presence which suggests strength, wisdom, and compassion. Unlike most of the other brothers, Cadfael had spent most of his life in the secular world where he participated in the crusades, had adventures, fell in and out of love, and took his order after finding the ways of the world wanting. He comes from a different culture, that of Wales, and sees that of England through an outsider's more objective eyes. His experience with life and the motives of men and his keen awareness of detail makes him the perfect sleuth, and when murder is committed, the civil authorities are more than willing to have him clear things up for them.

In One Corpse Too Many, probably the best of the series, the forces of Queen Maude and those of Steven clash. The castle and Maude's supporters are captured, but not until the leaders of the rebellion make their escape. Steven vows to have them, and puts the castle's owner to torture to extract the information from him. When he refuses, Steven puts all the defenders to death. The monks of the Abbey having asked the king's leave to bury the victims, request Cadfael, who has "experience in these matters" to take over the detail of returning the bodies to the families. He agrees but discovers that there is "one corpse too many." Once Steven is convinced that a murder unpunished will reflect badly upon the king's justice, he commissions Cadfael to discover the villain. This is the first time that the character of the nobleman Hugh Beringer (Eorin McCarthy) is introduced. In his attempt to win the trust of Steven, he is given a mission which places him athwart Cadfael. The two match wits with interesting outcomes. The end of the film is a fine display of trial by combat. A thoroughly real and well researched visit to the Middle Ages.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best of the series.
Review: I enjoy a good murder mystery of the classical type, and the Brother Cadfael series is particularly good. The author Ellis Peters (Edith Pargiter, 1913-1995), like Agatha Christie, Nagio Marsh and Dorothy Sayers, was popular during the mid-20th Century and wrote prolifically during that time. There are some 20 Cadfael books. The film One Corpse Too Many, based upon the book of the same name, was the first one I saw on Public TV. It hooked me irrevocably. The setting is incredibly authentic and colorful. The different orders of society: nobleman, servant, military man, tradesman, artisan, abbott, monk, and priest are carefully wrought to produce a period piece with more detail and clearer dialogue than a Shakespearean play. It would be a wonderful way of introducing young people to history.

The setting of the story is 12th Century England, a period of particular turmoil. Henry I had died without a legitimate male heir, and he had designated his daughter Matilda as his successor, binding his nobles by oath to support her. Although many of them did, including her very able half brother, an illegitimate son of Henry made an Earl by his father, many of them threw their support behind her cousin, Steven. Matilda, or Maud as she is referred to, was a granddaughter of William the Conqueror and no push over herself. She fought her cousin from a base in coastal France, where the family held land in fief of the King of France and where marriage alliances had placed her as wife of Geoffery, the Duke of Anjou. With her Norman support in France and her loyal factions in England, she made enough of a threat to Steven's rule to ultimately obtain a guarantee of succession to the English throne for her son Henry, ultimately Henry II. Until that time, warfare turned most of England into a battle ground and life for everyone a matter of ceaseless uncertainty. Added to this was the rancour still apparent in the social divisions between the largely Saxon population and their Norman rulers. The fall of the Saxon monarchy was only a hundred years previous and hostility still existed.

Cadfael, the central character of the series, is a Dominican monk and herbalist, and Dereck Jacobi is the perfect personification of him. He has a presence which suggests strength, wisdom, and compassion. Unlike most of the other brothers, Cadfael had spent most of his life in the secular world where he participated in the crusades, had adventures, fell in and out of love, and took his order after finding the ways of the world wanting. He comes from a different culture, that of Wales, and sees that of England through an outsider's more objective eyes. His experience with life and the motives of men and his keen awareness of detail makes him the perfect sleuth, and when murder is committed, the civil authorities are more than willing to have him clear things up for them.

In One Corpse Too Many, probably the best of the series, the forces of Queen Maude and those of Steven clash. The castle and Maude's supporters are captured, but not until the leaders of the rebellion make their escape. Steven vows to have them, and puts the castle's owner to torture to extract the information from him. When he refuses, Steven puts all the defenders to death. The monks of the Abbey having asked the king's leave to bury the victims, request Cadfael, who has "experience in these matters" to take over the detail of returning the bodies to the families. He agrees but discovers that there is "one corpse too many." Once Steven is convinced that a murder unpunished will reflect badly upon the king's justice, he commissions Cadfael to discover the villain. This is the first time that the character of the nobleman Hugh Beringer (Eorin McCarthy) is introduced. In his attempt to win the trust of Steven, he is given a mission which places him athwart Cadfael. The two match wits with interesting outcomes. The end of the film is a fine display of trial by combat. A thoroughly real and well researched visit to the Middle Ages.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Derek Jacobi and cast bring Ellis Peters' novel to life.
Review: ONE CORPSE TOO MANY was the second novel in Ellis Peters' Cadfael series, but it was chosen to be the first adapted for television. The adaptation stays very faithful to the novel, which is actually a hinderance, as Cadfael solves the mystery through a stroke of luck more than sleuthing abilities. And yet the telefilm is well cast; Derek Jacobi is perfect as Cadfael, bringing all the qualities of the warrior-turned-monk into his performance. Also well-cast is Sean Pertwee (son of DOCTOR WHO's Jon Pertwee) as Hugh Beringer, a man who may or may not be Cadfael's ally. Other series regulars such as Michael Culver (as Brother Prior), Julian Firith (Brother Jerome), Michael Copley (Abbot Heribert), and even Mark Charnock (briefly, as a yet-unnamed Brother Oswain) all show up to get the CADFAEL series off to a steady, if unspectacular, beginning. END

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: TWO HEADSTRONG ALLIES
Review: Shrewsbury is engulfed in war and the abbey cannot ignore all that is going on with the suffering of the people. King Stephen has called for the execution and Christian burial of those he deems his enemies. Shrewsbury Abbey has the honor of preparing the dead. Brother Cadfael is the leader for this morbid task. Ninety-four are dead but he counts ninety-five. Something is wrong, for corpse ninety-five was not killed in the same way as his dead companions. Cadfael suspects murder and thus unravels the great mystery of who done it.

You will encounter a cross dressing monk (transvestite?), betrayers left and right, a former colleague during Cadfael's soldiering days and the crafty Hugh Beringar. Master Hugh and Cadfael begin to lock horns. Who is the one more craftier and sly? Beringar does his best to out guess this unusual monk. For Cadfael is different from any monk that he's encountered. Cadfael is at his best in this entertaining video which mystery lovers will enjoy. By all means include this one in your video library.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: TWO HEADSTRONG ALLIES
Review: Shrewsbury is engulfed in war and the abbey cannot ignore all that is going on with the suffering of the people. King Stephen has called for the execution and Christian burial of those he deems his enemies. Shrewsbury Abbey has the honor of preparing the dead. Brother Cadfael is the leader for this morbid task. Ninety-four are dead but he counts ninety-five. Something is wrong, for corpse ninety-five was not killed in the same way as his dead companions. Cadfael suspects murder and thus unravels the great mystery of who done it.

You will encounter a cross dressing monk (transvestite?), betrayers left and right, a former colleague during Cadfael's soldiering days and the crafty Hugh Beringar. Master Hugh and Cadfael begin to lock horns. Who is the one more craftier and sly? Beringar does his best to out guess this unusual monk. For Cadfael is different from any monk that he's encountered. Cadfael is at his best in this entertaining video which mystery lovers will enjoy. By all means include this one in your video library.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Cadfael at his sleuthing best...
Review: This is a great adaptation of Ellis Peter's book "One Corpse too Many." It pretty much follows the plot of the book and all the wonderful characters are bought to life by an excellent cast, headed by the brilliant Sir Derek Jacobi. He is absolutely FANTASTIC as the monk Cadfael, and I agree with one reviewer who says the voice of Jacobi is now the voice of all Cadfael books. "One Corpse too Many" starts with the execution of a garrison of men by King Stephen, and in the midst of all this confusion a murderer tries to pass his victim off as one of the executed. Enter Cadfael who realizes that murder has been committed and sets out to find the culprit. It is here we are also introduced to Hugh Beringer, now the King's man and perhaps an ally of Cadfael but only time will tell. Cadfael finds himself in the thick of something more than just murder, including a young girl pretending to be a boy-monk to avoid capture and a hidden treasure that is hunted for by both Beringer and the elusive murderer. This is a great film, suspenseful, well acted and a credit to Ellis Peter's book. Let's hope that all the Cadfael books get made into films, it's too good an opportunity to miss in my oppinion.


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