Just about a week after its premier on BBC One, things aren’t looking too good for new crime series Death in Paradise, A Emmanuel reports in this review of the reviews in indiewire.com.
Ben Miller stars in the lead role as Detective Inspector Richard Poole. Danny John-Jules(Red Dwarf, The Crouches), Lenora Crichlow (Sugar Rush, Being Human), and French actress Sara Martins (C.I.D., Orpailleur) co-star in the BBC/France Télévisions 8-part co-production that one critic has labeled “nonsense”.
Per the BBC:
Death In Paradise is a fish-out-of-water story about a quintessential English cop posted to the Caribbean island of Saint-Marie. To anyone else it would be paradise, but for Detective Inspector Richard Poole (Miller) it’s hell!
From what I have been able to gather (and without giving away too much of the story) this Poolecharacter is dispatched to Saint-Marie (actually Guadeloupe), to help solve a crime that the local police force is, supposedly, just too inept to do on its own. SMDH.
I’m glad to see so many actors-of-color working, but this sounds like it was doomed from the start. And it would appear that that sentiment is shared by some who have actually seen the program.
The Telegraph gave Death In Paradise 2 out of 5 stars, and said:
Much of the first 40 minutes was filled with perhaps the densest collection of Caribbean clichés ever assembled on British television. A goat wandered around the police station. Everyone took forever to do anything. The sinister beach-owning millionaire was having an affair, and so was his wife. The police force only had one car. The local detective was distracted by a radio cricket match (in England, by the sounds of things, even though it was evening in the Caribbean and therefore the small hours of the morning in Britain). It was hot. Poole’s luggage didn’t arrive. The locals thought of the Brits as uncool.
Amid this nonsense, a plot of sorts began to emerge, and it was actually pretty gruesome: a mix of double-crossing, police corruption and human trafficking. But the tone never reflected this. The background music, saturated colours and jaunty flourishes (chief offender: a hilariously bad CGI lizard in Poole’s beachside hut) made it seem at times like a macabre advertisement for a tropical juice drink.
The Yorker had this to say about the program:
From the painfully bad CGI lizard to the tin-pot police station, the fictional island of Saint-Marie is so swamped by cliché that it would fit better in a panto than the location for a grim web of corruption, murder and adultery. In fact, the ‘tropical paradise’ devised for Detective Inspector Poole (Ben Miller) to feel out of place in is so simplistically painted that it doesn’t feel exotic, it feels irritatingly British.
Furthermore, the fact that they have flown in an Englishman to help out the ‘backward locals’ is verging on patronising, and perhaps explains why the entire show is spent trying to make fun of the repressed Poole – to ultimately no end as he solves the case on his own.
I don’t know . . . it’s not looking too good for DIP right now. But these are only the opinions of a few. So if any of our readers in the U.K., who have seen the show, would like to chime in and give us their take on Death In Paradise, please do so. I’d really like to hear from the S&Afaithful on this one.
For the original report go to http://blogs.indiewire.com/shadowandact/archives/2011/10/31/is_bbc_ones_death_in_paradise_d.o.a._sara_martins_danny_john-jules_lenora_c/#

I quite like it. It’s silly, but it does brighten up an otherwise gloomy Autumnal evening.
By: Pete on November 3, 2011
at 3:14 am
I like it – It is tongue in cheek quirky. The couple of episodes I have seen have been fine and I am prepared to give it some space to see how it develops. Anyway it is a lot better than some of the other ‘fly on the wall’ rubbish like ‘big brother’ and ‘get me out of here’ beer and pizza club, a very british party, tool academy, sorority girls, the biggest loser and the list goes on…
By: Carole on November 15, 2011
at 5:10 pm
It’s just being done for a laugh. There is no patronising, and the cliches are cliches but they are cliches on purpose! Chill out I say! It’s meant to be enjoyed and not taken seriously. Stephen from Ireland.
By: stephen on November 28, 2011
at 3:15 pm
This is easy viewing: Tuesday night at 9 p.m. is perhaps a strange timing, when it might have been better suited for a Sunday evening. Nevertheless, the format of comedy drama works well and you do find yourself trying to work out whodonnit before Richard does. I like!
By: Robert on December 12, 2011
at 12:09 pm
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By: hotel tunbridge wells on January 4, 2012
at 5:43 pm
Come on! Its cracking escapism
By: Bill renton on May 28, 2012
at 6:35 pm
They are filming a second series so bo****ks to all you sad critics.
By: Nic on September 12, 2012
at 5:36 pm