Father Brown

1974

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1
7| TV-PG| en| More Info
Released: 26 September 1974 Ended
Producted By: BBC Drama Productions
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Father Brown was a Catholic priest who doubled as an amateur detective in order to solve mysteries.

Genre

Drama, Crime, Mystery

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Father Brown (1974) is now streaming with subscription on Britbox

Director

Production Companies

BBC Drama Productions

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Father Brown Audience Reviews

Micitype Pretty Good
Mjeteconer Just perfect...
Lachlan Coulson This is a gorgeous movie made by a gorgeous spirit.
Zlatica One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
blake-36398 We are watching Kenneth Moore's Father Brown series and find it extremely boring. The character he plays has no personality or depth. The stories are slow with no real interest and then all of a sudden he solves the mystery and it is over. The only good thing about the series is that I enjoy recognizing actors in their younger days. Watching these once is enough. I know that it is an old series, but they could have done a bit more with it.
Yury (gja822) These TV series are poorly made. I do not mean the technical side, with respect to age of the series and TV format it could be considered satisfiable.I mean, actors' playing is bad almost for all of them. Sometimes the plot lines are vague and characters are unbelievable.May be, one of the strong sides is that acting doesn't always look like theatrical performance. We get some interesting views and interiors.I am not a good reader, so I've considered to watch this version. And I've got nothing. I couldn't assemble the plot, I can't understand the clerical point of view, I do not believe in acting. Just a few personal features and authors statements are well pronounced.I wouldn't keep this historical TV production in my archive.
jonfrum2000 I've been listening to the BBC radio adaptations of the Father Brown stories with Andrew Sachs in the lead role. I have to say I much prefer Sachs' version of Father Brown, but this series is perfectly good with Kenneth More in the role. Considering when the series was made, the production is reasonably good, and the acting, while occasionally stiff, is fine overall. Some changes are made from the stories, which I have no problem with. Of the episodes I've seen so far, none have been damaged by the changes. It is important that Father Brown is a Catholic priest, and not just another amateur detective, and in this sense some of the religious reference seem to have been taken out of the stories. This subtracts from the distinctive flavor of the stories, but it plays fine on television.You won't get the production values or the acting found in the later Christie series, but these are well worth trying if you favor British detective/mystery series. I'm certainly happy I found them, and I'll be watching them one per night until I've through the lot.
pensman Kenneth More makes for a rather interesting Father Brown. His Brown while a Jesuit is more of a 21st Century humanist rather than a 20th Century priest. He is not so much a deductive reasoner as an inductive one. And he does share a quality with the master of deductive reasoning, Sherlock Holmes, in that he like Holmes does not necessary object that the criminal set his own end rather than wait to be brought to justice. Not quite an appropriate Catholic conviction. While Chesterton wrote 52 stories, this series ended with a mere 13 stories; far too few. And not all of the dramatizations are equally good but More is interesting to watch as a very erudite but self-effacing priest whose interest in puzzles makes him a rather capable detective. Nonetheless, this short but basically well executed series is worth a look. If nothing else it might bring the viewer to become a reader of Chesterton's stories.