Overview
Working from his home in a converted windmill, Jonathan Creek is a magician with a natural ability for solving puzzles. He soon puts this ability to the use of solving impossible crimes and mysterious murders.
| Original Air Dates: | — |
|---|---|
| Country: | UK |
| Genre: | Drama, Mystery, Crime |
| Network: | BBC One |
| Watched by: | 2 288 1 008 527 |
| Total running time: | 1 day 13 hours 50 minutes |
| Episode duration: | |
| Episodes: | 26 |
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It seems to me that this series was always not so much about crimes as about human nature, and it taught us a very important thought - that all monsters are people. That there is always a logical explanation, even for the seemingly inexplicable. Jonathan, being a skeptic, a nihilist, an ironic cynic, still does not look like such images known to us.
This series retains the same atmosphere as it was almost 20 years ago, the same subdued tones, unhurried narration. It's probably hard to call the denouement unexpected, since this is a closed detective story, but to be honest, I thought about each participant in the story during the series. And it's also very impressive that Jonathan Creek is also wrong, and we're being shown that. And Jonathan Creek is not afraid to admit it.
This character will always remain for me one of the best in culture, and I fell in love with Alan Davies after this role, and he contributed a lot to this image. Lived it.
I want to believe that Jonathan's story is not over.
Maddy: What makes you think that?
Kid: Because you were fighting.
Jonathan: We are not married. We're just fighting. In sin.