Chattanooga Times Free Press

A new Agatha Christie mystery

- BY KEVIN MCDONOUGH UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE

Agatha Christie fans are in luck. Amazon Prime will be streaming a series of whodunits from the BBC, beginning today with “Ordeal by Innocence,” which aired to critical acclaim in the United Kingdom in April. While many of Christie’s best-known works take place between World Wars I and II, “Ordeal” is set in the mid-1950s, and fears of nuclear war loom in the background.

The cast includes Bill Nighy (“Love Actually”) as Leo Argyll, the kind of bloodless British upperclass character he has played throughout his career. He’s an amateur Egyptologi­st and writer of unread books, kept in a posh lifestyle by his late wife, Rachel, played by Anna Chancellor (“The Hour”). She’s seen frequently in flashbacks as we learn more about Rachel and Leo’s marriage and their adoption of a houseful of good-looking children. In classic Christie fashion, Leo, the children, the maid and Leo’s love interest, Gwenda (Alice Eve), all become suspects after Rachel is bludgeoned to death on Christmas Eve.

Beautifull­y produced, this three-part period piece has everything you want in a melodramat­ic mystery, including murder, betrayal, secret pregnancie­s and wayward affections that tiptoe close to the taboo. “Ordeal” faced criticism in the U.K. from Christie purists for changing some elements of the story.

‘INSATIABLE’ DISMISSIBL­E

The new Netflix comedy series “Insatiable” (TVMA) begins streaming 13 hourlong episodes today. It stars Debby Ryan as Patty, an overweight teen who faced years of abuse and invisibili­ty in her high school’s clique-ridden corridors. After a violent incident and a hospitaliz­ation, she suddenly becomes thin and a subject of interest to Bob Armstrong (Dallas Roberts), a disgraced lawyer with a passion for the beauty-pageant world.

Set in a fairy-tale version of Southern high society, “Insatiable” leaves no cliche unturned. The story is obvious, the tone brittle and the humor sophomoric. Bob’s big charity event is for “anal cancer.” If you find that hilarious, perhaps “Insatiable” is for you. Look for Alyssa Milano as Bob’s wife.

Sight unseen, “Insatiable” inspired online petitions to protest its purported “fat shaming.” The dissent only provided this dreadful series with attention it little deserves. Originally commission­ed by the CW, that network passed after seeing the pilot. Smart move.

NOVEL ADAPTATION

Also streaming today on Netflix is the 2018 romantic period comedy “The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society” (TV-14), adapted from the 2008 novel by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows. Truth be told, when I first heard of this title, I thought it was a spoof of vaguely literary British rom-coms. Lily James stars.

FOURTH ‘FREAKY’

Unavailabl­e for review, Disney debuts the fourth incarnatio­n of “Freaky Friday” (8 p.m., Disney, TV-G), a fantasy about a spirited teen (Cozi Zuehlsdorf­f) who magically switches bodies with her mother (Heidi Blickensta­ff).

OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

› Five years before her role in “Freaky Friday,” Lindsay Lohan starred in the 1998 remake of “The Parent Trap” (7:50 p.m., Freeform, TV-PG).

› John Quinones hosts “What Would You Do?” (9 p.m., ABC).

› Kevin Hart hosts “TKO: Total Knockout” (8 p.m., CBS, TV-PG).

› On two episodes of “Masters of Illusion” (CW), Nathan Burton (8 p.m., TV-14), Chris Funk (8:30 p.m., repeat, TV-PG).

› A hot ticket on “Speechless” (8:30 p.m., ABC, repeat, TV-PG).

› Employees take the moral high ground on “Whistleblo­wer” (9 p.m., CBS).

› Illusionis­ts audition on “Penn & Teller: Fool Us” (9 p.m., CW, repeat, TV-PG).

› “Dateline” (10 p.m., NBC).

› “20/20” (10 p.m., ABC). Contact Kevin McDonough at kevin. tvguy@gmail.com.

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