Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Virtual Murder

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6.4/10
TV

Country of origin
  
United Kingdom

No. of episodes
  
6

Final episode date
  
28 August 1992

Networks
  
BBC, BBC One

6.6/10
IMDb

Theme music composer
  
Harry Robertson

Original language(s)
  
English

First episode date
  
24 July 1992

Number of episodes
  
6

Virtual Murder httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen666Vir

Created by
  
Harry Robertson and Brian Degas

Starring
  
Nicholas Clay Kim Thomson Stephen Yardley Jude Akuwudike Alan David Carole Boyd

Program creators
  
Harry Robertson, Brian Degas

Cast
  
Kim Thomson, Nicholas Clay, Stephen Yardley, Alan David, Jude Akuwidike

Similar
  
Baddiel's Syndrome, Gentlemen and Players, Brush Strokes, PROBE, CATS Eyes

Virtual Murder was an unusual investigative drama series shown on BBC television in 1992. It starred Nicholas Clay as Dr John Cornelius, a psychology lecturer at a provincial university, and Kim Thomson as his vivacious, red-headed partner, Samantha Valentine.

Contents

Subject matter and cast

Virtual Murder was in the mould of some earlier off-beat series, such as The Avengers and Adam Adamant Lives!, both shown in the 1960s. Like Steed and Emma Peel or Adam Adamant and Georgina Jones, Cornelius ("JC") and Valentine investigated a succession of rather eccentric or bizarre occurrences. They often did so in cooperation with the police, represented by Stephen Yardley as Inspector Cadogan and Jude Akuwudike as Sergeant Gummer. Complementing the occult elements and those of virtual reality, there was a thread of playful, sometimes dark humour running through the scripts and an underlying sexual frisson between Clay and Thomson.

Other regular characters were Professor Owen Griffiths (Alan David) and Phoebe Littlejohn (Carole Boyd, best known for her role as Lynda Snell in BBC radio’s The Archers).

Production

The series was created and produced at the BBC’s Pebble Mill studios in Birmingham by Brian Degas, a scriptwriter for the film Barbarella (1968) and co-creator of the TV series Colditz (1972), and Harry Robertson, best known as a composer of film music (mostly under the name of Harry Robinson). The original title of the series was Nimrod but this was changed to Virtual Murder – this was the original title of the script for what was intended to be the first episode, later renamed "Dreams Imagic". As things transpired "Dreams Imagic" was, in fact, the last episode to be broadcast. Direction of the episodes was shared between Philip Draycott and Peter Rose with the episodes recorded between 12 August 1991 and 28 February 1992 on location in Birmingham, Milton Keynes, Kidderminster and Wolverhampton as well as at Studio A in Pebble Mill. All but "Dreams Imagic" had an array of guest stars.

Episodes

Six episodes of Virtual Murder were made and broadcast by the BBC on Friday evenings in 1992:

  • Meltdown to Murder (broadcast 24 July 1992 at 9:32pm): script: Philip Martin; director: Philip Draycott; guest stars: Helen Lederer, Bernard Bresslaw, Julia Foster
  • Last Train to Hell and Back (broadcast 31 July 1992 at 9:48pm): script: Barry Smith; director: Philip Draycott; guest stars: Richard Todd, Anita Carey, Colin McFarlane
  • A Bone to Pick (broadcast 7 August 1992 at 9:47pm): script: Tom Needham; director: Peter Rose; guest stars: Tony Robinson, Hywel Bennett, Debbie Arnold, Richard Coleman
  • A Torch for Silverado (broadcast 14 August 1992 at 9:33pm): script: Tim Aspinall; director: Peter Rose; guest stars: Jon Pertwee, Bernard Horsfall, John Bluthal, Paddie O'Neil
  • A Dream of Dracula (broadcast 21 August 1992 at 9:35pm): script: Bennett Byron Sims; director: Philip Draycott; guest stars: Julian Clary, Ronald Fraser, Jill Gascoine, Alfred Marks, Peggy Mount
  • Dreams Imagic (broadcast 28 August 1992 at 9:32pm): script: Harry Robertson; director: Peter Rose; guest stars: Sean Pertwee, Tim Preece
  • Critical reaction

    On the whole, the series received a lukewarm critical response with Lynne Truss in The Times summing it up as "The Avengers re-written by someone who heard about it once but never actually saw it". Another commentator, who, on balance, judged the series a failure, described it as being pitched "uncomfortabl[y] somewhere between the camp of The Avengers and the dark fantasy of The X-Files", although the latter highly acclaimed American science fiction series post-dates Virtual Murder by over a year. Others have blamed the summer evening scheduling for jeopardising its chances of success.

    Ratings fell from 6.53 million for the opening episode to 4.9 million for the fourth episode and the series was not renewed for a second season. Virtual Murder is well regarded in some quarters: for example, the eminent television historian Andrew Pixley, recalling the show in 2002, wrote, "Finally, I thought, somebody had been brave enough to craft a modern thriller which, while captured on videotape, boasted all the style, fun and imagination of the great British film series of the 1960s such as The Avengers and Department S". However, the series remains largely forgotten today and, as of 2017, has never been repeated, nor released in any video format.

    References

    Virtual Murder Wikipedia