Press clippings Page 29
Radio Times review
When we first see Jonathan Creek, there's something horribly wrong. In place of the familiar shabby duffel coat, he's wearing a suit and apparently doing something "grown-up, responsible and creatively challenging" in the world of marketing. However, after Joey Ross brings news of a corpse that's mysteriously disappeared without a trace despite being locked in a study guarded by his wife, the detective is straight back on the case (and in his usual attire).
This locked-room scenario is one that writer David Renwick has employed before, but this time he throws in all sorts of murder-mystery clichés, including a spooky country house; memories of a macabre death at a Catholic girls school 50 years earlier; and a sinister local society. It's a confusion of every Midsomer Murders and Agatha Christie you've ever seen, with elaborate interlocking clues and dead ends.
But alongside Alan Davies and Sheridan Smith is a cracking supporting cast that includes Joanna Lumley, Nigel Planer and Rik Mayall who ham it up beautifully.
Jane Rackham, Radio Times, 1st April 2013Creek creator David Renwick delivers a new feature-length case for the inquisitive illusionist. At the home of a politically charged polymath, a body is discovered which mysteriously appears to be more mobile than your average cadaver. Paranormal investigator Joey Ross tries to coax Creek out of retirement in order to undercover the truth. Alan Davies and Sheridan Smith are joined by a guest cast including Joanna Lumley, Nigel Planer and, making a welcome return to our screens, Rik Mayall.
Mark Jones, The Guardian, 1st April 2013The last time we met the veteran solver of impossible mysteries was three Easters ago and the intervening years have seen a disconcerting transformation. Suited and booted, his curls now swept back in greying executive waves, it seems Creek (Alan Davies) has sold his soul to Mammon, or the advertising industry at least. But can he resist the lure of his favourite old-style puzzle - yet another locked-room mystery? His on-off sidekick Joey Ross (Sheridan Smith) sums it up: "A dead man in a room, seen and photographed by witnesses, evaporates into thin air. Walls, floors and ceiling are all rock solid. No way could he have got out the window or through the door which was being watched the whole time. And yet..." (No change in the basic plot then.) Creek professes to be uninterested in the affair until he learns that the victim was celebrated intellectual Franklin Tartikoff (Nigel Planer), and the chief witness his famously matter-of-fact wife Rosalind (Joanna Lumley). But meanwhile Creek's paraplegic arch-rival Gideon Pryke (Rik Mayall) has got his sole functioning digit wrapped round the investigation. A starry cast, a festering rivalry, a mind-boggling puzzle; for many the perfect Easter Bank Holiday drama.
The Telegraph, 29th March 2013Alan Davies: 'Mysteries get darker'
Alan Davies returns as Jonathan Creek in a one-off Easter Monday Special on BBC1. We talked to him about the latest case and his beloved duffle coat...
What's On TV, 29th March 2013Alan Davies: Jonathan Creek, QI, 'Creek Geeks' & more
We chatted to Alan Davies about forthcoming Jonathan Creek Easter Special, the new series, QI, stand-up, and more...
Rachel Bowles, Den Of Geek, 27th March 2013Alan Davies: I'd love Stephen Fry to appear on the show
Alan Davies has said that he'd love for his QI co-star Stephen Fry to join him on Jonathan Creek, ahead of the Easter special this weekend.
Metro, 27th March 2013Alan Davies could pay £200,000 in tweet libel case
A tweet by comedian Alan Davies could cost him as much £200,000 in damages - almost half the number of people to which he retweeted a false allegation linking Lord McAlpine to a child abuse scandal last year.
Angela Haggerty, The Drum, 27th March 2013Alan Davies: I nearly quit QI after BBC axed Whites
TV star Alan Davies has revealed that he almost quit top quiz show QI over the BBC's decision to axe his comedy Whites.
Sherna Noah, The Independent, 26th March 2013Alan Davies interview
After a three-year break, duffle coat-wearing, tousle-haired detective Jonathan Creek is back for a feature-length episode.
Graham Kibble-White, TV Choice, 26th March 2013Davies up the Creek after phone dropped down loo
Comic Alan Davies has revealed he took a fortnight to say yes to the latest Jonathan Creek show - after losing his phone down the toilet.
Leigh Holmwood, The Sun, 13th March 2013