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Murderville

Comedic murder-mystery television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Murderville
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Murderville is an American comedic murder-mystery television series with improvised elements developed by Krister Johnson for Netflix. The series is based on the BBC Three television series Murder in Successville. Murderville premiered on February 3, 2022 with the release of all six episodes of the first season.

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In the original British series, many of the town's residents (including all the murder suspects) are well-known celebrities, played by impersonators. By contrast, in Murderville, the suspects are simply fictional characters.

A Christmas special premiered on December 15, 2022.[1]

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Premise

In the town of Murderville, Terry Seattle is a senior detective of the Murderville Police Department and the ex-husband of Rhonda Jenkins-Seattle who works as the chief of police. In each episode, a guest star plays the role of a rookie detective that Rhonda assigns to Terry on a murder investigation. However, the guest is not given a script beforehand and must improvise through the police procedural while attempting to solve the crime.

After meeting at the police station, the detectives visit the murder scene or coroner, then interview three suspects. Typically, the first suspect is questioned in an interrogation room or private office, the second in a location with numerous distractions, and the third involves undercover operations in disguise – often with Terry feeding questions to the rookie through an earpiece. The three suspects are then brought together and Rhonda arrives with uniformed police officers to hear the rookie explain who committed the crime and what clues led them to their determination. Rhonda then reveals if they are correct or not, the clues that were available, and orders the culprit arrested – while firing the rookie if they chose the wrong suspect.

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Cast and characters

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Main

  • Will Arnett as Terry Seattle, a clumsy senior detective who is going through divorce proceeding with Rhonda. He has a hard time getting over the death of his former partner Lori Griffin who died 15 years prior to the beginning of the series. He also has a tough time getting over his divorce with Rhonda.
  • Haneefah Wood as Rhonda Jenkins-Seattle, the chief of police who is in divorce proceedings with Terry
  • Lilan Bowden as Amber Kang, a coroner who assists Terry and the respective guest on the murder
  • Phillip Smithey as Darren "Daz" Phillips, a detective who starts dating Rhonda and has a poor co-worker relationship with Terry. Smithey did not appear in the holiday special.

Co-stars

These actors only appear as themself for one episode within their respective season:

Guest stars

Season 1

Special

Special guest stars

  • Jennifer Aniston as Lori Griffin (season 1), Terry's former partner who was murdered 15 years ago. She only appears in a photograph hanging in Terry's office. Aniston is given a "special thanks" credit in the season one finale.[3]
  • Sean Hayes as Johnny Blaze (special), a professional football player who is murdered while dressed as Santa Claus
  • Tawny Newsome as Mayor Palmer (special),[1] the Mayor of Murderville who helps Terry and the detectives solve the murder of Johnny Blaze.
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Episodes

Series overview

More information Season, Episodes ...

Season 1 (2022)

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Special (2022)

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Production

Krister Johnson serves as showrunner. Anna Drezen, Chadd Gindin, Craig Rowin, Jack Kukoda, Marina Cockenberg, Kerry O'Neill, Hannah Levy, and Adriana Robles also serve as writers.[4] Iain K. Morris and Brennan Shroff shared director duties for each episode.[5] The series was filmed in mid-2021.[6] Murderville was released on February 3, 2022 on Netflix.[7]

Reception

The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 74% approval rating with an average rating of 6.4/10, based on 35 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Murderville's improvisational premise can lead to stretches of dead air, but the moments of spontaneous inspiration are worthwhile—and it helps to have Will Arnett on the case."[8] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 65 out of 100 based on 17 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[9]

Kathryn VanArendonk of Vulture praised the show's concept, writing, "Arnett's flexibility and playfulness are key to making Murderville work, but strong celebrity casting is what keeps its fairly predictable shtick from getting boring."[10]

The Guardian's Jack Seale felt that the original BBC series "was a startling flash of bottled chaos that deserves to be cherished. It doesn't deserve the new US remake, Murderville (Netflix), which hacks off the concept's eccentric rough edges, then makes a mess of the less interesting show that's left."[11]

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See also

References

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