“I may be wrong. But frankly, I doubt it.” That line, or words to that effect, are a common refrain on “Murder, She Wrote.” It takes a certain amount of flinty self-confidence for a character to pull that off without sounding smug. We live in uncertain times. Hollywood is in its flop era. But when all else fails, there’s always Jessica Fletcher.
No matter my mood or what other TV offerings may be available, I find myself returning to “Murder, She Wrote” over and over again, at least once a week, spotting new details in episodes I’ve seen countless times before. It is my comfort watch, but it has also been instructive for me as a TV critic. Once you start analyzing the show’s various components, it becomes clear that too many of those elements are missing from more recent case-of-the-week procedurals. These basics were once considered standard but I suspect writers are out of practice. For the last decade or so, they’ve focused on the short seasons and serialized format of streaming endeavors. But writing 22 crackerjack stories a year? A lost art, I fear.
“Murder, She Wrote” — which celebrates its 40th anniversary on Sept. 30 — ran for 12 seasons on CBS and wouldn’t have worked half as well with another actor. Angela Lansbury built her career playing all kinds of eccentrics on stage and screen. But with “Murder, She Wrote,” she understood that wasn’t needed. Give us a personable woman with a good head on her shoulders and let compelling writing do the rest.
The premise is simple but wildly effective every time: Mystery novelist Jessica Fletcher goes about her day — whether at home writing or out traveling the world — when someone turns up dead. Suddenly her common sense and all that background research for her books comes in handy. Sometimes she has a personal connection and that’s why she’s compelled to help. Sometimes she’s just aggravated — offended, even — by incompetent police work. Either way, she’s going to get to the bottom of things. She’s dogged and not above a little subterfuge. But she always comports herself with class, no matter how lurid the circumstances.