Midsomer Murders is a British television detective drama [1] that has aired on ITV since 1997. The show is based on Caroline Graham's Chief Inspector Barnaby book series, originally adapted by Anthony Horowitz.
From the pilot episode on 23 March 1997 until 2 February 2011 the lead character, DCI Tom Barnaby, was portrayed by John Nettles.
In February 2009 it was announced that Nettles had decided to leave Midsomer Murders after the conclusion of series 13 in July 2010. When his last episode "Fit for Murder" aired on 2 February 2011, Nettles had appeared in 81 episodes. [2] [3]
Since 2011 the lead character has been DCI John Barnaby (Neil Dudgeon), who permanently joined the show following John Nettles' 2011 departure. He is the younger cousin of DCI Tom Barnaby. Like his cousin, John Barnaby works for Causton CID.
As of 10 November 2024, 136 episodes have aired on ITV over 23 series in the UK, whilst a total of 140 episodes have been released (e.g., via streaming in some countries) over 24 series. Air dates may vary from region to region. IMDb lists differing dates; for example, S24 E01 ("The Devil’s Work") is listed as airing on 10 November 2023. [4]
Character | Actor/Actress | Duration |
---|---|---|
DCI John Barnaby | Neil Dudgeon | Series 13–present |
Sarah Barnaby | Fiona Dolman | Series 14–present |
Betty Barnaby | Isabel Shaw | Series 20–present |
DS Jamie Winter | Nick Hendrix | Series 19–present |
Dr. Fleur Perkins | Annette Badland | Series 20–present |
Character | Actor/Actress | Duration |
---|---|---|
DCI Tom Barnaby | John Nettles | Series 1–13 |
Joyce Barnaby | Jane Wymark | Series 1–13 |
Cully Barnaby | Laura Howard | Series 1–13 |
Dr. George Bullard | Barry Jackson | Series 1–14 |
DS Gavin Troy | Daniel Casey | Series 1–7 |
DS Dan Scott | John Hopkins | Series 7–8 |
DS Ben Jones | Jason Hughes | Series 9–15 |
DC Gail Stephens | Kirsty Dillon | Series 10–13 |
Dr. Kate Wilding | Tamzin Malleson | Series 14–17 |
DS Charlie Nelson | Gwilym Lee | Series 16–18 |
Betty Barnaby | Abbie and Georgia Mukleen | Series 16–19 |
Dr. Kam Karimore | Manjinder Virk | Series 18–19 |
Series | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||
Pilot | 23 March 1997 | |||
1 | 4 | 22 March 1998 | 6 May 1998 | |
2 | 4 | 20 January 1999 | 19 September 1999 | |
3 | 4 | 31 December 1999 | 5 February 2000 | |
4 | 6 | 10 September 2000 | 23 September 2001 | |
5 | 4 | 16 June 2002 | 22 September 2002 | |
6 | 5 | 3 January 2003 | 31 January 2003 | |
7 | 7 | 2 November 2003 | 25 December 2004 | |
8 | 8 | 10 October 2004 | 2 October 2005 | |
9 | 8 | 9 October 2005 | 17 September 2006 | |
10 | 8 | 12 November 2006 | 11 May 2008 | |
11 | 7 | 1 January 2008 | 5 May 2010 | |
12 | 7 | 22 July 2009 | 14 April 2010 | |
13 | 8 | 12 May 2010 | 2 February 2011 | |
14 | 8 | 23 March 2011 | 11 January 2012 | |
15 | 6 | 1 February 2012 | 30 January 2013 | |
16 | 5 | 24 December 2013 | 12 February 2014 | |
17 | 4 | 28 January 2015 | 18 February 2015 | |
18 | 6 | 6 January 2016 | 17 February 2016 | |
19 | 6 | 18 December 2016 | 20 May 2018 | |
20 | 6 | 10 March 2019 | 14 January 2020 | |
21 | 4 | 21 January 2020 | 28 March 2021 | |
22 | 6 | 4 April 2021 | 27 August 2023 | |
23 | 4 [5] | 14 April 2024 | 10 November 2024 | |
24 | 4 [6] |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | " The Killings at Badger's Drift " | Jeremy Silberston | Anthony Horowitz | 23 March 1997 | September–October 1996 | |
The death of elderly Miss Emily Simpson (Renée Asherson) in the sleepy village of Badger's Drift brings DCI Tom Barnaby and DS Gavin Troy to investigate. Her best friend and neighbour, Lucy Bellringer (Rosalie Crutchley), had seen her return from a walk in the woods, unnerved and shocked by something she had seen. When her death is confirmed as no accident, Barnaby and Troy start to question the eccentric and quirky residents. Nosy village resident Iris Rainbird (Elizabeth Spriggs), who spies on her fellow villagers from a high vantage point in her house, may be a key witness, but she and her eccentric son Dennis (Richard Cant) soon fall victim to the killer themselves. Emily Mortimer, Julian Glover, Jonathan Firth, and Christopher Villiers also appear. [7] |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 1 | " Written in Blood " | Jeremy Silberston | Anthony Horowitz | 22 March 1998 | July–August 1997 | |
Gerald Hadleigh (Robert Swann), chairman of the Midsomer Worthy Writers Circle, is deeply troubled when the group decides to invite writer Max Jennings (John Shrapnel) to their next meeting. The morning after Jennings's visit, Hadleigh's housekeeper finds him bludgeoned to death in his home. Barnaby and Troy discover Hadleigh was somewhat of an enigma since a witness observed an unknown woman enter his house the night before his murder. The police detectives now find themselves scrutinizing all the writers and unearth many secrets before Max himself is found dead from poisoning. Anna Massey, Joanna David, and Una Stubbs also appear. | |||||||
3 | 2 | " Death of a Hollow Man " | Jeremy Silberston | Caroline Graham | 29 March 1998 | October 1997 | |
The peace of Ferne Basset is shattered when the body of quiet animal lover Agnes Gray (Denyse Alexander) is found floating in the nearby river. Soon afterwards her cousin, Esslyn Carmichael (Nicholas Le Prevost), inadvertently cuts his own throat on stage during the final act of an amateur production of Amadeus. It turns out that the safety tape on the prop knife used by Esslyn on stage had been removed, making it lethal. As most of the other cast members of the Causton Amateur Dramatics Society loathed him, there are multiple motives and suspects for his murder. DCI Tom Barnaby needs to establish whether there is a connection behind the two deaths to solve the case. Angela Pleasence and Bernard Hepton also appear. | |||||||
4 | 3 | " Faithful unto Death " | Baz Taylor | Douglas Watkinson | 22 April 1998 | November–December 1997 | |
The villagers of Morton Fendle are up in arms when they find out that the local craft centre (a mill conversion), in which they had invested, is facing financial uncertainty. Barnaby learns that Simone (Lesley Vickerage), wife of the centre's owner Alan Hollingsworth (Roger Allam), is missing, and suspects that she has been kidnapped. Brenda Buckley (Sophie Stanton), Alan’s new mistress, follows Alan to Finchmere Market and sees him depositing a suitcase containing what appears to be a ransom payment. Shortly afterwards Brenda is murdered when her car is forced off the road and into a collision with a stationary lorry. The deaths continue when Alan is also killed. Barnaby and Troy need to track down Simone and find the reasons behind the kidnap to solve the case. Tessa Peake-Jones, Paul Brooke, Michele Dotrice, and Eleanor Summerfield also appear. | |||||||
5 | 4 | " Death in Disguise " | Baz Taylor | Douglas Watkinson | 6 May 1998 | August–September 1997 | |
Bill Carter, a founder of a New Age commune called the 'Lodge of the Golden Windhorse', dies of a broken neck after falling down stairs of the group’s country manor house. Barnaby and Troy investigate and meet the commune's quirky residents. They need to establish whether Bill's death was an accident or a premeditated murder. The investigation becomes more complex when Ian Craigie (Michael Feast), the co-founder leader of the commune, is stabbed to death with a carving knife during the spiritual ritual evening. The father of one of the commune members, a billionaire interested in buying the land, then dies of a sudden heart attack, leading both Barnaby and Troy to suspect that a further murder has taken place. A young member of the commune, who has never spoken since his arrival, may be the key witness in the case. Stephen Moyer and Judy Cornwell also appear. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 | 1 | "Death's Shadow" | Jeremy Silberston | Anthony Horowitz | 20 January 1999 | July–August 1998 | 10.41 | |
The village of Badger's Drift is again at the centre of attention when popular local property developer, Richard Bayly (Dominic Jephcott), is found decapitated in his own home. Richard had recently been diagnosed with a malignant brain tumour, and had been contemplating his likely premature death. The murder weapon, an Indian sword, is found near his body, and it turns out it was stolen in a burglary at the vicarage. Barnaby and Troy set out to find out who would go that far to kill a dying man. The police detectives realise that the key to the case is the death of a young local schoolboy years in the past. The truth finally emerges, but not until two more deaths occur, first when a handyman burns alive in his caravan, and second when another parishioner is struck by an arrow at a village fete. Richard Briers, Judy Parfitt, and Christopher Villiers also appear. | ||||||||
7 | 2 | "Strangler's Wood" | Jeremy Silberston | Anthony Horowitz | 3 February 1999 | May–June 1998 | 10.70 | |
Carla Constanza, a Brazilian actress and advertising face of Monarch Tobacco, is found strangled with a necktie in Raven’s Wood. This murder is reminiscent of three similar murders that occurred nine years ago. A German backpacker, an au pair and a hotel maid had all been raped and strangled with neckties in the wood, which soon acquired the name "Strangler’s Wood", among the press and local population. Barnaby and Troy must delve deeper into the dark secrets of Monarch Tobacco and become acquainted with the company's managing director, Bill Mitchell (Jeremy Clyde), and its marketing director, John Merrill (Nicholas Farrell). The police detectives solve the horrible case in the end, but not until another woman is found killed, run over by a car and later injected with a syringe containing liquid nicotine, and lastly when Leonard Pike (Peter Eyre), proprietor of the local hotel, is found stabbed to death in a bathtub. Toby Jones, Phyllis Logan, and Trudie Styler also appear. | ||||||||
8 | 3 | "Dead Man's Eleven" | Jeremy Silberston | Anthony Horowitz | 12 September 1999 | May–June 1999 | 11.07 | |
Tara Cavendish (Felicity Dean) is found beaten to death near a disused quarry belonging to her husband Robert Cavendish (Robert Hardy). Tara was seen leaving the house early in the morning, but when she failed to return from a walk with their dog, Robert starts to worry, and reports her missing. Barnaby and Troy start to investigate. Nine years ago, only weeks before Robert Cavendish decided to shut down his own quarry, an explosion occurred. Matthew Draper, an employee who works for Robert Cavendish, was killed in the accident. And as further inquiries ensue, Barnaby and Troy are drawn to investigate the death eighteen months previously of Robert's former housekeeper, Emily Beavis. Emily’s sister, Doreen Beavis, and witnesses Colin and Christine Cooper (Imelda Staunton), may hold the key to the case. Toby Jones also appears. | ||||||||
9 | 4 | "Blood Will Out" | Moira Armstrong | Douglas Watkinson | 19 September 1999 | June–July 1998 | 9.99 | |
Shortly after two groups of didicoys arrive in the village of Martyr Warren, local magistrate Hector Bridges is found murdered in his own library with his shotgun. Barnaby and Troy had earlier dissuaded him from forcefully evicting the didicoys, with help from his army friends. They soon learn Hector was a bully, and disliked by many people who knew him. In particular his stepdaughter Fleur (Honeysuckle Weeks) had received brutal treatment at his hands. Fleur describes a stressful life to the two detectives. Barnaby realises that Fleur’s biological father, Will Saxby (John Duttine), has a strong motive for wishing Bridges dead, then more tangled relationships are uncovered and secrets unravelled, before Barnaby and Troy can track down the culprit. Phyllida Law, Jerome Willis, Kevin McNally and Elizabeth Garvie also appear. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 | 1 | "Death of a Stranger" | Peter Cregeen | Douglas Livingstone | 31 December 1999 | October 1999 | 5.87 | |
Shortly before his retirement, Superintendent Pringle (James Bolam) arrests a local poacher for the murder of a tramp during a fox hunt in woodland close to the village of Upper Marshwood. But DCI Barnaby is unsure that the poacher was the real killer. Upon returning from holidaying in France, Barnaby is soon proved right when the poacher's father is found murdered with his own shotgun. As they reopen the investigation, they find many hidden secrets amongst the villagers. However, after he retires, Pringle is killed in an accident, which Barnaby suspects was also murder. Richard Johnson, Diane Fletcher, Simon McBurney, and Toby Jones also appear. | ||||||||
11 | 2 | "Blue Herrings" | Peter Smith | Hugh Whitemore | 22 January 2000 | June–July 1999 | 8.88 | |
Alice Bly (Phyllis Calvert), the aunt of DCI Tom Barnaby, arrives at Lawnside, a nursing home in Aspern Tallow, to rest after her hospital treatment. She soon suspects foul play when a fellow resident dies on the night after her arrival. When it is discovered that the deceased lady's valuable Cartier watch has disappeared, during the night, Barnaby agrees to investigate. Two more deaths quickly follow at the nursing home, and a mysterious visitor has also been seen lurking in the vicinity at night. DCI Barnaby and DS Troy investigate the staff and the doctor alongside all the incidents at Lawnside. Nigel Davenport and Deborah Findlay also appear. | ||||||||
12 | 3 | "Judgement Day" | Jeremy Silberston | Anthony Horowitz | 29 January 2000 | July–August 1999 | 9.65 | |
As residents of Midsomer Mallow prepare for the 'Perfect English Village' competition, local thief and lothario Peter Drinkwater (Orlando Bloom) is stabbed with a pitchfork at the abandoned Windy Whistle Farm. Barnaby and Troy must consider a number of suspects, including his accomplice (Tobias Menzies), his burglary victims, or another disgruntled villager. As the competition unfolds on the village green, one of the judges is poisoned and killed, but it seems the unknown killer may have intended the poison for another victim. Barnaby and Troy must travel back in time to identify the killer. Timothy West and Nickolas Grace also appear. | ||||||||
13 | 4 | "Beyond the Grave" | Moira Armstrong | Douglas Watkinson | 5 February 2000 | September–October 1998 | 9.40 | |
A slashed portrait of local English Civil War figure Jonathan Lowrie in the museum at Aspern Tallow brings Barnaby and Troy to investigate. A series of ghostly events follow. Things take a more serious turn when the body of his elderly descendant Marcus Lowrie is found in the tomb of his ancestor, and the two detectives encounter a mysterious escaped criminal, a therapist (Sylvestra Le Touzel) who is never quite what she seems, and a museum trustee (James Laurenson) with a hidden past. As the bodies start piling up, the detectives must step back in time before things begin to make sense. Cheryl Campbell, David Robb, and Prunella Scales also appear. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 | 1 | "Garden of Death" | Peter Smith | Christopher Russell | 10 September 2000 | June–July 2000 | 7.65 | |
The villagers of Midsomer Deverell are angered by the Inkpen family's plans to convert the public memorial garden into a tea shop. When Elspeth Inkpen's daughter Fliss is found murdered in the garden, Barnaby and Troy believe that someone may be determined to stop its destruction. Elspeth (Belinda Lang) moves to the vicarage where she too is murdered. As the investigation continues, the suspect list grows to include the daughter of the architect who designed the garden and a gardener (Neil Dudgeon) with whom both Elspeth and Fliss had been having an affair. Barnaby and Troy realise that the case will only be solved when the garden gives up a sinister secret. | ||||||||
15 | 2 | " Destroying Angel " | David Tucker | David Hoskins | 26 August 2001 | July–August 2000 | 9.99 | |
Upon his death, Karl Wainwright, owner of the Easterly Grange Hotel, leaves an estate with a number of beneficiaries, including hotel manager Gregory Chambers, his wife Suzanna (Samantha Bond), and hotel chef Tristan Goodfellow. One by one, they meet grisly deaths. Gregory is found dismembered in woodland where he had been foraging for mushrooms, Suzanna is killed with a shotgun and Tristan eats a meal of mushrooms that includes the deadly Destroying angel. Kenneth Gooders (Jonathan Coy), the solicitor handling the estate, is also killed when his large drinks cabinet topples over and crushes him. A cryptic new script for Gregory's former Punch and Judy show may provide Barnaby and Troy with some answers. | ||||||||
16 | 3 | " The Electric Vendetta " | Peter Smith | Terry Hodgkinson | 2 September 2001 | August–September 2000 | 9.99 | |
The naked body of a dead man is found in one of Midsomer Parva's wheat field crop circles. It is discovered that he was electrocuted, has puncture marks on his back, and that a piece of his hair is missing. As Barnaby and Troy investigate, more bodies turn up, including another in a crop circle. The detectives enter an alien world, dealing with the sightings of UFOs and where nothing is what it seems. John Woodvine, Ursula Howells, and Alec McCowen also appear. | ||||||||
17 | 4 | "Who Killed Cock Robin?" | David Tucker | Jeremy Paul | 9 September 2001 | September–October 2000 | 9.13 | |
The village doctor (Ian McNeice) of Newton Magna involves the police after he accidentally hits a man in the road following a party. However, the injured man is nowhere to be found. The body of Robin Wooliscroft, who disappeared over a year before, is then found in a well, having been bludgeoned to death. DCI Barnaby and DS Troy come across suspicions and all the lies, disapproving families, resentments, and hidden secrets, before another victim (Jane Lapotaire) is found and they get to the truth. | ||||||||
18 | 5 | "Dark Autumn" | Jeremy Silberston | Peter J. Hammond | 16 September 2001 | November–December 2000 | 9.77 | |
In the remote hamlet of Goodman's Land, local postman and Lothario Dave Cutler is murdered during his early postal delivery. Barnaby and Troy, together with WPC Jay Nash (Gillian Kearney), start investigating and discover Dave had had numerous affairs with women in the village. A witness later recalls having heard strange 1950s dance music before the murder. When a local man's wife, an antique dealer, and a businessman (Alan Howard) all become victims to the killer as well, the detectives need to find a possible link to connect the murders before Jay gets into a perilous situation herself. Celia Imrie also appears. | ||||||||
19 | 6 | "Tainted Fruit" | Peter Smith | Peter J. Hammond | 23 September 2001 | May–June 2001 | 9.80 | |
In the affluent village of Midsomer Malham, pariah Melissa Townsend (Lucy Punch) is found murdered by an injection of barbiturates. Miss Townsend had angered many, and received death threats after being blamed for the death of a local tenant. Both Barnaby and Troy soon discover that the barbiturates had been stolen in a burglary at the local vet's (John McGlynn) surgery. With attempted blackmail, greed, jealousy, and secrets in the mix, the detectives set out to catch the killer, not long after one man (Adrian Rawlins) dies in what appears to be a freak accident and another person is killed with barbiturates on a tennis court. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
20 | 1 | " Market for Murder " | Sarah Hellings | Andrew Payne | 16 June 2002 | August–September 2001 | 8.99 | |
A car belonging to wealthy stockbroker Selwyn Proctor (Rupert Vansittart) is set ablaze and he narrowly escapes with his life. Meanwhile a local ladies' investment group meets under the guise of a reading club. Group leader Marjorie Empson (Barbara Leigh-Hunt) is found bludgeoned to death with her own walking stick in her house. The detectives quickly suspect that a stock market connection, possibly involving insider information, may link the two events. More killings follow, involving members of the group. Ginny Sharp (Serena Gordon) is found dead in her pool and Lady Chetwood (Angela Thorne) is pushed from the roof of her manor house. Barnaby and Troy begin to realise that the motives for the killings may not be as straightforward as they first supposed. | ||||||||
21 | 2 | "A Worm in the Bud" | David Tucker | Michael Russell | 23 June 2002 | September–October 2001 | 9.52 | |
When Susan Bartlett is found murdered in Setwale Wood in Midsomer Worthy, DCI Barnaby and DS Troy discover the wood is the centre of a court case over a proposed redevelopment involving neighbouring farmers Simon Bartlett and James Harrington. Barnaby and Troy now suspect murder when two children tell them they found the body the previous afternoon. But as they investigate this case, they soon uncover a web full of witchcraft, potions, and hidden secrets. When James Harrington is also found murdered, Barnaby and Troy realise, that they need to work fast to avoid further deaths. | ||||||||
22 | 3 | "Ring Out Your Dead" | Sarah Hellings | Christopher Russell | 15 September 2002 | June–July 2001 | 9.43 | |
The bell-ringers of Midsomer Wellow celebrate their win of £30,000 on a horse race and are hopeful of winning the annual striking competition. When a grudge from the past later starts to resurface, an unknown killer soon begins to target the bell-ringers, one by one. Greg Tutt is found shot through the heart in the belfry, the next victim is the bride (Lyndsey Marshal) at her wedding, and the third bell ringer is found drowned in a creek. Barnaby and Troy realise they need to step back in time to find the answer, following all the lines of a well-known poem left next to each victim. Hugh Bonneville, Gemma Jones and Adrian Scarborough also appear. | ||||||||
23 | 4 | "Murder on St Malley's Day" | Peter Smith | Andrew Payne | 22 September 2002 | July–August 2001 | 9.37 | |
Daniel Talbot, a student at Devington School, dies after being attacked and stabbed during the annual St. Malley's Day race. DCI Barnaby and DS Troy discover that Daniel was unhappy with his membership of the school's elite Pudding Club, founded by his grandfather, and had planned to run away from both the school and his family. An early suspect is the son of the local publican, but he is cleared of involvement when a further murder is committed while he is in custody. Dudley Carew, an eccentric conspiracy theorist in the nearby village, tells the detectives to focus their investigation on the school and the Pudding Club in particular. Barnaby and Troy are initially dismissive, but when he is also found murdered and a third victim, a diplomat wearing Pudding Club cufflinks, is also found, the detectives realise that Carew's advice will lead them to the answer. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
24 | 1 | "A Talent for Life" | Sarah Hellings | David Hoskins | 3 January 2003 | May–June 2002 | 9.23 | |
Eccentric widow Isobel Hewitt (Honor Blackman) and an adulterous doctor, Duncan Goff, are found murdered while fly fishing at the riverbank. Keith Scholey, a local restaurateur, becomes a prime suspect but is discovered frozen to death in his walk-in freezer room. As Isobel had spent all her capital and nobody appears to benefit from her death, it seems there is no financial motive, but Barnaby realises all may not be as it first appears. | ||||||||
25 | 2 | "Death and Dreams" | Peter Smith | Peter J. Hammond | 10 January 2003 | June–July 2002 | 9.46 | |
Martin Wroath is found dead in his home in Midsomer Worthy. He had been shot with a shotgun using an elaborately rigged wire leading from his foot to the trigger. First appearances suggest suicide, but the autopsy reveals that he had been drugged. The police conclude he was murdered. The investigations lead to Dr. Jane Moore (Isla Blair), an old friend of Tom's and a psychologist at a local mental health clinic who knew the victim. More deaths follow when one of Jane's colleagues is found hanging in the clinic grounds and the local marching band leader is strangled. Meanwhile a series of mysterious rope thefts occur around the village, and an attempt is made on Tom's life. | ||||||||
26 | 3 | "Painted in Blood" | Sarah Hellings | Andrew Payne | 17 January 2003 | July–August 2002 | 9.45 | |
Joyce joins the local watercolour society for an open-air art class on the village green in Midsomer Florey. Shortly before taking a break, she stumbles across the body of elderly Ruth Fairfax, a fellow artist. It turns out there was more to Ruth than met the eye. Barnaby is taken off the case by the National Intelligence Squad and it is left to Troy to 'apprehensively' keep Barnaby informed on the investigation. Barnaby and Troy soon uncover that the proceeds from an armed robbery are missing. They find out all information about former criminals alongside all the secret liaisons, before they bring all the culprits to justice. | ||||||||
27 | 4 | "A Tale of Two Hamlets" | Peter Smith | Alan Plater | 24 January 2003 | September–October 2002 | 9.28 | |
At the family home of actor Larry Smith in the village of Upper Warden, a crowd has gathered to watch the promotion for the sequel to his hit film, 'The House of Satan', when Larry walks into a summer house on the grounds that suddenly explodes. His family quickly suggest that it was someone from the rival village of Lower Warden. When Larry's director, another member of his family, is also murdered, electrocuted while using an exercise bike, DCI Barnaby and DS Troy deal with affairs and secrets, alongside blackmail, to find the reason why. | ||||||||
28 | 5 | "Birds of Prey" | Jeremy Silberston | Michael Russell | 31 January 2003 | October–November 2002 | 9.32 | |
In the village of Midsomer Magna, the body of the local resident Julian Shepherd is found, having apparently drowned himself by driving into a lake. It is discovered later that he was desperately seeking a way out of bankruptcy, after visiting a local millionaire, to get back his money from a scheme in which he had invested. The post-mortem confirms that he was indeed murdered. DS Troy assists a wildlife liaison officer with an investigation into the illegal sale of protected birds' eggs. Barnaby and Troy find their cases intertwining when another man who owned a collection of illegal birds’ eggs is killed in a hit-and-run accident, and a historian is found stabbed to death by someone dressed as a witch doctor. They now deduce that the 'scheme' is being used to defraud its investors. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
29 | 1 | "The Green Man" | Sarah Hellings | Michael Russell | 2 November 2003 | May–June 2003 | 10.01 | |
Several skeletons are discovered in a tunnel during a canal restoration project near Midsomer Worthy. DCI Barnaby begins his investigations and discovers that one skeleton has modern dental work. Meanwhile, DS Troy has been promoted to Inspector. He begins his last case in Midsomer, investigating the murder of a teenager, Simon Mayfield (played by Henry Cavill), who had been shot with a gun that he and his friends had been using the previous night. The two detectives discover their cases are linked, and uncover a web of lies, affairs, and domestic arguments alongside a mysterious recluse with a hidden past. | ||||||||
30 | 2 | "Bad Tidings" | Peter Smith | Peter J. Hammond | 4 January 2004 | June–July 2003 | 9.96 | |
DS Dan Scott arrives in Midsomer as DS Troy's replacement. He is instantly involved in a case in the village of Midsomer Mallow, when a college secretary is found murdered. Soon after a retired doctor is also murdered during the village's annual garden open day. Barnaby and Scott investigate the connection between the two victims, and the murder of a homeless drunk give them the clue they need. Meanwhile, Cully organizes a reunion with a group of old school friends, with unexpected results. | ||||||||
31 | 3 | "The Fisher King" | Richard Holthouse | Isabelle Grey | 11 January 2004 | July–August 2003 | 10.17 | |
In 1970, Roger Heldman apparently died in an accident during an archaeological dig at the Midsomer Barrow. Two important Celtic pieces, a spear head and a chalice, were discovered but subsequently disappeared. In the present day, Roger's son Gareth is killed with the spear, after having had altercations with several of the villagers. Later, at the climax of the summer solstice celebration, Gareth's half-brother, David Heartley-Reade, is killed while performing a pagan ceremony to save his failing marriage. Barnaby and Scott investigate rituals, plagiarism, lies, and a tangle of relationships. | ||||||||
32 | 4 | "Sins of Commission" | Peter Smith | Elizabeth-Anne Wheal | 18 January 2004 | August–September 2003 | 9.71 | |
Barnaby and Scott arrive in Midsomer St. Michael to investigate the apparently accidental death of former prize-winning author Richard Rackham. It transpires that his neck was expertly broken before he was pushed down the stairs. Meanwhile the village celebrates its 12th annual Literary festival, which brings together feuding writers, publishers, and editors. When Mr. Rackham's editor, Neville Williams and another author are found murdered, the police are led on a trail of deception, fraud, lies, and hidden truths. | ||||||||
33 | 5 | "The Maid in Splendour" | Richard Holthouse | Andrew Payne | 25 January 2004 | September–October 2003 | 10.24 | |
The Maid in Splendour is a popular pub in the village of Midsomer Worthy. Its former publican Michael Bannerman, who is well-liked among the locals, has handed control of The Maid to his humourless son Stephen. When barman Jamie Cruickshank, and then Stephen Bannerman, are shot dead, Barnaby and Scott have to find out whether Jamie or Stephen was the intended target of the first murder. | ||||||||
34 | 6 | "The Straw Woman" | Sarah Hellings | Jeff Dodds | 29 February 2004 | November–December 2003 | 10.03 | |
An old pagan festival is revived in Midsomer Parva, with the burning effigy of a straw woman as its centrepiece. To the horror of the onlookers, the local curate, Alex Deakin, is found trapped within the effigy and burns to death. As the police investigate, a series of further deaths from apparent spontaneous human combustion follow. Barnaby and Scott soon suspect that someone is using the illusion of witchcraft to hide their true motives. | ||||||||
35 | 7 | "Ghosts of Christmas Past" | Renny Rye | David Hoskins | 25 December 2004 | January–February 2004 | 6.90 | |
Nine years after Ferdy Villiers committed suicide at the family home, Draycott Hall, his family gather at the Hall to celebrate Christmas. When Ferdy's nephew, Howard, finds a message in a Christmas cracker predicting that members of the family will be dead by midnight Boxing Day, everyone dismisses it a prank -- until Aunt Lydia falls down the stairs and is fatally injured. Barnaby and Scott investigate, uncovering many secrets and lies connected to Ferdy's death, but are unable to prevent a further death. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
36 | 1 | "Things That Go Bump in the Night" | Peter Smith | Peter J. Hammond | 10 October 2004 | May–June 2004 | 8.56 | |
In the village of Fletcher's Cross, undertaker Patrick Pennyman is found dead in his own chapel of rest by his wife. Barnaby and Scott start looking into a controversial spiritualist church in the village. Villager Elizabeth Key tells her friend Joyce of her suspicions that the murdered undertaker had been stealing from the dead and that the spiritualist church had been using very non-spiritual methods to acquire information revealed in their services. When both Elizabeth and a local labourer are also killed, Barnaby and Scott uncover more secrets in Fletcher's Cross in their quest to find the perpetrator. | ||||||||
37 | 2 | " Dead in the Water " | Renny Rye | Douglas Watkinson | 17 October 2004 | June–July 2004 | 9.13 | |
At the Midsomer Regatta, the beautiful day is interrupted when the dead chairman of the local rowing club, Guy Sweetman, is found in the water. Barnaby and Scott learn that Guy, who had a reputation as a ladies' man, had participated in secret meetings with several other members. The two detectives uncover a tapestry of lies, blackmail, jealousy, and a very well planned robbery. | ||||||||
38 | 3 | " Orchis Fatalis " | Peter Smith | Terry Hodgkinson | 9 January 2005 | July–August 2004 | 8.74 | |
When a local handyman finds a female classics teacher and a member of a group of orchid enthusiasts poisoned in her own home, DCI Barnaby finds himself heading back to Midsomer Malham, the day after he and Joyce had helped out during the village's annual garden show. It is discovered that the victim had a secret lover and had helped to smuggle a rare orchid, the Yellow Roth, out of Borneo. With suspects and motives abounding, the police find themselves dealing with grudges, jealousies, and envy. Where the orchid goes, murders follow. | ||||||||
39 | 4 | "Bantling Boy" | Sarah Hellings | Steve Trafford | 16 January 2005 | August–September 2004 | 8.80 | |
After a successful day at the races for the racehorse, Bantling Boy, it is not long before one of the horse's owners is found murdered in the horses' stables. The victim, Bruce Hartley, had been in dispute with the other owners of Bantling Boy, having had a heated argument with them over an offer to buy the horse. Things get worse for the other owners when a series of further killings follow, before a darker motive is revealed and the detectives bring the culprit to justice. | ||||||||
40 | 5 | "Second Sight" | Richard Holthouse | Tony Etchells | 23 January 2005 | October–November 2004 | 8.69 | |
John Ransom gets thrown out of the village pub in Midsomer Mere for fighting with his brother-in-law, and a short while later he is found dead on the green. It is discovered that John had been used as a guinea pig for scientific experiments by his brother Max, who suspected he had the ability of 'Second Sight'. Barnaby and Scott soon discover that another family possesses the same talent. They have to delve deeper to unravel many secrets in the village to find the truth. | ||||||||
41 | 6 | "Hidden Depths" | Sarah Hellings | David Hoskins | 13 March 2005 | November–December 2004 | 8.56 | |
Solicitor Nick Turner apparently commits suicide by walking off the roof of his home in Midsomer Magna, and his neighbour Jack Wilmot mysteriously disappears that same day. A series of unexplained events follow. Barnaby and Scott soon discover that a large amount of money has gone missing from the account of one of Nick's clients. Shortly afterwards, Nick's rival is murdered in an elaborate ritual using his own model of a medieval catapult, while his wife is forced to watch. Then Barnaby and Scott fall into danger as they are locked into an apparently forgotten wine cellar. | ||||||||
42 | 7 | "Sauce for the Goose" | Renny Rye | Andrew Payne | 3 April 2005 | January–February 2005 | 9.73 | |
The body of a visitor is found in the famous relish factory of Plummer & Son in the village of Little Upton. When the detectives begin investigating the Plummer family and its staff, it turns out that the victim, Dexter Lockwood, was known to the family and had been on a guided tour of the factory the day before his body was found. It is not long before legal documents, family resentments, and mysterious sightings add to the complexity of the case. | ||||||||
43 | 8 | "Midsomer Rhapsody" | Richard Holthouse | Richard Cameron | 2 October 2005 | February–March 2005 | 6.97 | |
Retired music teacher Arthur Leggott is murdered after disturbing an intruder at his home in Badger's Drift. It is discovered that a musical manuscript by the late composer Joan Alder has since gone missing before being sent to auction. When the manuscript shows signs that it has been written by another hand, a handwritten letter by Joan Alder turns up indicating the manuscript is a forgery. Where the manuscript goes more murders follow. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
44 | 1 | "The House in the Woods" | Peter Smith | Barry Simner | 9 October 2005 | May–June 2005 | 8.49 | |
Peter and Caroline Cave are house-hunting in Midsomer Newton and view a tumbledown cottage in secluded woodland. The following morning they are both found dead in their car near the house. DCI Barnaby and Acting DC Ben Jones enter a world where crooked estate agents, property developers, and eccentric villagers all seem to be withholding information. It is not long before another villager is murdered. The detectives find out that a years-old armed robbery holds the key to the case. | ||||||||
45 | 2 | "Dead Letters" | Renny Rye | Peter J. Hammond | 26 February 2006 | June–July 2005 | 8.54 | |
The villagers of Midsomer Barton are celebrating the annual Oak Apple Week when the body of a woman is found in a stream. The return of the festival queen event, after a hiatus of eight years, seems to be a link to a series of murders. Barnaby and Jones investigate and find some familiar faces from the past. | ||||||||
46 | 3 | "Vixen's Run" | Peter Smith | Michael Aitkens | 5 March 2006 | July–August 2005 | 8.94 | |
The wealthy, eccentric, and obese Sir Freddy Butler dies shortly after gathering his current and former wives at a dinner to make an announcement. George Bullard tells Barnaby that the death was from natural causes. The case becomes more complex when Freddy's will goes missing after his solicitor is deliberately killed in an arson attack on his home. DCI Barnaby and DC Jones work their way through the extended Butler family and uncover hidden secrets, illegitimate children, and elusive treasure before they catch the killer. | ||||||||
47 | 4 | "Down Among the Dead Men" | Renny Rye | Douglas Watkinson | 12 March 2006 | August–September 2005 | 8.07 | |
In the village of Midsomer Worthy, council employee Martin Barrett entertains a mystery woman before being shot dead through his kitchen window. Barnaby and Jones discover that Barrett was an accomplished blackmailer and believe his murderer to be one of his many victims. The investigation takes Barnaby and Joyce to the seaside town of Fennacombe Bay. The detectives find themselves questioning a former marine geologist, a police committee chairman, a cleaner, and a fisherman. The murderer is hidden in plain sight, and it is a long time before Barnaby finally realises who the culprit is. | ||||||||
48 | 5 | "Four Funerals and a Wedding" | Sarah Hellings | Elizabeth-Anne Wheal | 24 September 2006 | September–October 2005 | 7.29 | |
A 90-year-old feud between the male and female inhabitants of Broughton comes to a head with a Skimmington Ride event. When elderly Ms. Danvers is poisoned shortly before the event takes place, Barnaby and Jones must investigate whether her murder was related to the feud or another unknown cause. When the Rev. Anthony Gant is shot and killed whilst taking part in the traditional ride, and another murder follows, it seems likely that there are deeper secrets to uncover. | ||||||||
49 | 6 | "Country Matters" | Richard Holthouse | Andrew Payne | 10 September 2006 | November–December 2005 | 5.80 | |
Villagers of Eleverton-cum-Latterly are divided over a controversial new supermarket development. Soon after a heated meeting, Frank Hopkirk, an independent environmental supervisor, is found stabbed to death at a timber yard on the site of the new supermarket. When Barnaby and Jones investigate, they find he was at the village for secret assignations with various female villagers in fantasy role-playing scenarios. At the same time, he had been making investigations of his own into the possibility the future supermarket's land was contaminated. The detectives need to delve deeply to uncover what is really going on in Elverton. | ||||||||
50 | 7 | "Death in Chorus" | Sarah Hellings | David Lawrence | 3 September 2006 | January–February 2006 | 6.28 | |
Midsomer Worthy is preparing for the Four Choirs Competition when one of their members, Connor Simpson, is found dead at his home. Barnaby and Jones begin to look into the events leading to his death. The case is further complicated when a birdwatcher and estate keeper are also killed. With a mysterious figure seen lurking around the churchyard, conductor rivalry, and a possible art scam, there are many things to be investigated. | ||||||||
51 | 8 | "Last Year's Model" | Richard Holthouse | David Hoskins | 17 September 2006 | February–March 2006 | 6.78 | |
Annie Woodrow is being tried for the murder of her friend Frances Trevelyan. The prosecution alleges that her motive was her love for Frances' husband John. As Annie's trial begins, DCI Barnaby becomes increasingly doubtful of the damning evidence he provided to build the case against her. A chance remark by Frances's youngest daughter and a meeting with an old friend, a clinical psychologist, causes him to re-evaluate the case. With DC Jones awaiting news of his promotion to Detective Sergeant, they find themselves reinvestigating and uncover new evidence that puts the case in a very different light. Ben Jones promoted to DS at the end of this episode |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
52 | 1 | "Dance with the Dead" | Peter Smith | Peter J. Hammond | 12 November 2006 | May–June 2006 | 7.80 | |
Simon Bright is found dead in a vintage car at a disused airfield in Cooper's Cross. The previous evening, he had been on a romantic date with his girlfriend Laura Sharp, who is nowhere to be found. Barnaby and Jones, newly promoted to DS, need to work out whether it was a suicide pact gone wrong, or murder, and to find Laura. Their investigation reveals that the couple had met at Elaine Trim's dancing classes in Morton Fendle. The two attend a 1940s-style dance night at the village hall, before another man is found stabbed and more secrets come to light. | ||||||||
53 | 2 | "The Animal Within" | Renny Rye | David Hoskins | 19 January 2007 | June–July 2006 | 6.95 | |
Faith Alexander arrives in Midsomer to meet her long-lost uncle Rex Masters. She is shocked to discover that Rex's friends had been told she had died in a plane crash. Rex's body is soon afterwards found in the nearby river. Barnaby and Jones investigate who would wish Rex harm. Things become complicated when several friends of Rex come forward, each with a will naming them as sole beneficiary. When two more murders take place, the detectives investigate a range of suspects and possible motives. | ||||||||
54 | 3 | "King's Crystal" | Peter Smith | Steve Trafford | 26 January 2007 | July–August 2006 | 6.88 | |
On a business trip to China, Alan King suddenly dies. The family firm, King's Crystal, is in financial uncertainty, with plans to close its factory in Midsomer Magna. Six months later Alan's widow Hilary and his brother Charles are married, much to the chagrin of Alan's son Ian. With family feuds and factory workers angered by the loss of their jobs, motives abound when Peter Baxter, the firm's accountant, is found dead, stabbed with a Masonic poniard, and Ian is fatally poisoned. Barnaby and Jones suspect a disgruntled employee is guilty. With so many things to investigate, they will need to explore both the Freemasons and the family, and find that the play of Hamlet may hold the key to the case. | ||||||||
55 | 4 | "The Axeman Cometh" | Renny Rye | Michael Aitkens | 2 February 2007 | August–September 2006 | 6.87 | |
The Midsomer Rocks festival is due to take place and music fans descend on neighbouring fields to enjoy the fiesta. The recently reformed band Hired Gun is one of the headline acts, and during their opening performance, the band's vocalist Mimi Clifton is electrocuted on stage. Barnaby and Jones soon discover that other band members could be targets. When another is murdered, they discover that a former member, Ginger Foxton, who disappeared 30 years before and had been presumed dead, could still be alive. The detectives enter the world of rock music to find the killer. First appearance of Simon Dixon | ||||||||
56 | 5 | "Death and Dust" | Sarah Hellings | Douglas Watkinson | 8 May 2007 | October–November 2006 | 6.18 | |
When popular GP Dr. Alan Delaney borrows fellow Dr. James Kirkwood's new car for an evening call-out, he is mysteriously killed in a hit-and-run accident. Barnaby and Jones start investigating in Midsomer Market and discover that James may have been the intended victim. The case leads them to North Wales — the former home of Delyth Mostyn, James's fiancée, to delve further. The possible suspects for the attempted murder on Kirkwood include Delyth's children, who oppose the engagement, Delyth's husband, and other acquaintances of Doctor Kirkwood. They need to find the truth before another attempt on James' life during a walk at Mount Snowdon. | ||||||||
57 | 6 | "Picture of Innocence" | Richard Holthouse | Andrew Payne | 3 June 2007 | November–December 2006 | 7.31 | |
There is a fierce rivalry between traditional and digital photographers in the village of Luxton Deeping. When the photographic society's committee decides not to accept digital images at the annual photographic exhibition, matters take an ugly turn and there is a confrontation. The following day, photographer Lionel Bell is found murdered in woodland, strangled with the cord of his light meter. As the detectives begin to investigate, evidence seems to implicate Barnaby in the murder and he is taken off the case. He is replaced by DI Martin Spellman, a colleague disliked by Tom, who appears more interested in his upcoming wedding than the case. When another photographer is murdered, Barnaby continues his investigation unofficially to discover who is framing him and bring the guilty party to justice. | ||||||||
58 | 7 | "They Seek Him Here" | Sarah Hellings | Barry Purchese | 27 April 2008 | January–February 2007 | 7.98 | |
Inhabitants in the village of Midsomer Magna are in the spotlight when a film crew arrives at the village Manor House for a production of The Scarlet Pimpernel . Its presence coincides with the arrival of a well-known criminal, George Ince, who is spotted lurking around the Manor. When Nick Cheney, the film's director, is found dead by the use of the prop guillotine, the detectives have several motives to examine. The trail leads to an elaborate planned robbery before the truth emerges. | ||||||||
59 | 8 | "Death in a Chocolate Box" | Richard Holthouse | Tony Etchells | 11 May 2008 | February–March 2007 | 6.88 | |
Ex-convict Ronnie Tyler departs from the village of Midsomer Holm, having successfully participated in a rehabilitation scheme for reformed criminals. At his send-off are DCI Tom Barnaby and Jack Colby, a disgraced ex-policeman and former colleague of Barnaby. Jack is decidedly frosty towards his former friend and refuses to chat. When Jack is later murdered, Barnaby must search for answers in his past for motives. Shortly afterwards another reformed criminal, Eddie Marston, is murdered after having attempting blackmail. Dark secrets resurface and Barnaby must deduce whether Colby's involvement in misconduct at Causton Police Station years earlier could be the key to the case. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
60 | 1 | "Shot at Dawn" | Richard Holthouse | Michael Aitkens | 1 January 2008 | July–August 2007 | 6.62 | |
When Private Tommy Hicks is executed during WWI for cowardice and desertion by a firing party commanded by Lt. Hammond, it ignites a 90-year feud between the Hicks and Hammond families. A group of pranksters kidnap Lt. Hammond's son, retired army officer Henry Hammond. They re-enact the execution of Tommy in the village, following which Henry is murdered. The Hammonds accuse the Hicks family of the murder. A series of other incidents follow, including a remotely controlled bomb explosion where Causton mayor Dave Hicks and his father Lionel narrowly escape with their lives, and the murder of Henry's son Johnny who is gunned down by a remote controlled machine gun in front of his house. Barnaby and Jones delve deep into the history of both families to track down the killer. | ||||||||
61 | 2 | "Blood Wedding" | Peter Smith | David Lawrence | 6 July 2008 | June–July 2007 | 7.20 | |
As the preparations are underway for Cully Barnaby's wedding, Ned Fitzroy and Beth Porteous get married in Bledlow village. At the reception in Bledlow Hall, the maid of honour, Marina Fellowes, is found murdered. With the honeymoon postponed, the newlyweds and their guests find themselves under investigation by the police. Evidence soon points to a connection with archery when a fletching is found at the crime scene. Barnaby and Jones uncover a long family history with many secrets, lies, deception, and an illegitimate son. These things become even more complicated when the estate manager and former cook are also found murdered. | ||||||||
62 | 3 | "Left for Dead" | Renny Rye | Michael Crompton | 20 July 2008 | August–September 2007 | 7.25 | |
In the village of Dunstan, Barnaby and Jones investigate the deaths of a reclusive couple, Ron and Libby Wilson. Early on in the case, they learn that their son Michael, a classmate of Jones in primary school, had been killed in a hit-and-run and nearby, a fiery dispute is in full swing, between Jack Purdy, a builder who has a very short fuse and a group of road protesters, protesting about plans for the construction of a new road. With hostilities almost at breaking point, it is not long before both Jack and his brother Mark's wife are murdered, setting the village on edge. Barnaby and Jones need to find the link to unlock the motives behind the murders. | ||||||||
63 | 4 | "Midsomer Life" | Peter Smith | David Hoskins | 13 July 2008 | October–November 2007 | 7.16 | |
When the body of Charlie Finleyson is found in woodland in Midsomer Sonning, Barnaby and Jones begin to scrutinize the employees at the offices of Midsomer Life magazine. It is discovered that Mr. Finleyson was married to Christine Sandys, ex-wife of Guy Sandys, the wealthy owner of the magazine. The detectives also become aware of a dispute between Guy and the owner of the Morecroft Hotel, where Christine's brother works. Tensions rise between the locals and visitors from London. Shortly after being questioned, Guy is murdered in his office. Barnaby and Jones find out what led to the murder when Morecroft's alcoholic receptionist is killed in the laundry room and uncover the village's secrets from the past to catch the killer. | ||||||||
64 | 5 | "The Magician's Nephew" | Richard Holthouse | Michael Russell | 27 July 2008 | November–December 2007 | 7.01 | |
During a children's magic show, a performer assisting with a trick is poisoned whilst on stage. It is found that the poison came from a species of Ecuadorean frog. Barnaby and Jones discover that conflict is once again brewing between a village occult guide and enthusiast Ernest Baillol and famous writer Aloysius Wilmington, who are both searching for a treasured antique book on the subject. When others fall victim, they need to work out whether it was spellbinding, magical sorcery, something in times gone by, or a combination of them all to catch the killer. | ||||||||
65 | 6 | "Days of Misrule" | Renny Rye | Elizabeth-Anne Wheal | 24 December 2008 | February–March 2008 | 5.89 | |
New acting Chief Superintendent John Cotton plans a team-building exercise at a Territorial Army centre run by Colonel Matt Parkes. Barnaby and Jones are very reluctant to take part and when an explosion at the Parkes family haulage yard occurs, the detectives see the investigation as an opportunity to avoid the team building event. Shortly after, a body is discovered in a trunk that resurfaces from the nearby lake. The victim is identified as Alec Grainger, who had been arguing with Colonel Parkes' son Jamie. When Jamie is also found murdered, the detectives are faced with an abundance of suspects and motives, as Jamie seemed to have been universally hated. | ||||||||
66 | 7 | "Talking to the Dead" | Sarah Hellings | David Lawrence | 5 May 2010 | March–April 2008 | 5.92 | |
In the village of Monks Barton, two couples seemingly disappear from their cottages. When Barnaby and Jones arrive, they learn about the legendary and mysterious haunted woods. Shortly afterwards, a body is found in a shallow grave, giving Barnaby and Jones an accurate description of one of the "missing" persons. The detectives have to delve much deeper into the woods and beyond to find the answer. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
67 | 1 | "The Dogleg Murders" | Richard Holthouse | Andrew Payne | 22 July 2009 | June–July 2008 | 6.14 | |
The notorious 13th hole at the prestigious Whiteoaks Golf Club, known as Crisp's Folly, becomes the scene of a brutal murder when member Alistair Kingslake is found bludgeoned to death. The many suspects include fellow members and the club's staff against a background of snobbery, gambling, illegal money lending, jealousy and extortion. Before long, another member is found stabbed to death in woodland close to the course. It is a golfing clue that finally leads Barnaby and Jones to the killer. | ||||||||
68 | 2 | "The Black Book" | Peter Smith | Nicholas Martin | 29 July 2009 | July–August 2008 | 6.90 | |
A newly discovered landscape painting by the 19th-century artist Henry Hogson creates a sensation in the art world when it is discovered, and is sold at auction for £400,000. That night, Felicity Law, the previous owner of the artwork, is tortured and killed. When another Hogson is stolen in a burglary Barnaby finds himself having to investigate both crimes. Meanwhile, Graham Spate, a small-time villain, is also tortured to death, and an art dealer is found with his throat slashed. To solve these crimes, Barnaby needs to become an expert on Hogson with the help of art teacher Matilda Simms, and they uncover many hidden secrets and deceptions before the truth emerges. | ||||||||
69 | 3 | "Secrets and Spies" | Renny Rye | Michael Aitkens | 5 August 2009 | August–September 2008 | 6.28 | |
The 'Beast of Midsomer' is blamed when former secret agent Geoffrey Larkin is found murdered in the village of Midsomer Parva with savage wounds to his face. He had been staying at Allenby House, a country manor run by former spies, the Frazer family, as a safe house. Barnaby, who is himself revealed as a former spy, becomes involved in the case. With a break-in at the local museum, a cricket match, rivalries, and secret loves, other murders take place and Barnaby soon suspects the killing of Larkin has links to events in Berlin during the Cold War. After resistance to his involvement from MI6 he finally succeeds in closing the case and bringing the guilty party to justice. Gail Stephens promoted to DC in this episode | ||||||||
70 | 4 | "The Glitch" | Richard Holthouse | Michael Russell | 23 September 2009 | October–November 2008 | 6.34 | |
George Jeffers is a professor of Midsomer University and cycling enthusiast. He has invented a state-of-the-art use of computer wafers to enable more powerful computer processing. But Jeffers believes he has found a glitch in his invention which will put millions of people at risk if his discovery is improperly used. This angers software boss Clinton Finn, who fears he will lose millions if the truth is exposed. A series of incidents involving car attacks, break-ins and deaths follow, and Barnaby, Jones and Stephens find they need their cycling skills as much as their detective skills before the case can be closed. | ||||||||
71 | 5 | "Small Mercies" | Peter Smith | Peter J. Hammond | 28 October 2009 | November–December 2008 | 6.43 | |
It is the end of the tourist season for the Little Worthy model village, owned by the elderly Compton sisters. Model maker Bob Moss is carrying out his daily early morning rounds of the village when he discovers the body of Richard Tanner, stabbed and tied down in a scene reminiscent of Gulliver's Travels. As Barnaby and Jones start questioning the villagers, more deaths follow before they finally identify the family connections that lead them to a very disturbed killer. | ||||||||
72 | 6 | "The Creeper" | Renny Rye | Andrew Payne | 27 January 2010 | February–March 2009 | 6.35 | |
The 'Creeper' is a daring cat burglar responsible for a series of daring thefts across Midsomer. After the Creeper strikes twice in one night, a writer, David Roper, is found smothered to death in his bed on the Chettham family estate. The police soon learn that Mr. Roper had been planning to write a book that could have exposed many Chettham family secrets of years past. The mystery deepens when a second victim who knew the family is shot in woodland. The detectives have to search the family's history to solve the crimes and finally uncover the Creeper's identity. | ||||||||
73 | 7 | "The Great and the Good" | Richard Holthouse | David Hoskins | 14 April 2010 | March–April 2009 | 5.46 | |
Connie Bishop, a school teacher who is known to sleepwalk, begins to experience disturbing dreams and is convinced of an intruder in her home. She becomes a murder suspect when a local councillor and, soon after, a local handyman are found with their throats cut near to her house. Her friends are not convinced of her guilt and nor is Barnaby. As the investigation continues, local philanthropist Howard Richardson and his social-climbing wife Zukie irritate the community when they introduce their own plans for the annual village charity occasion. Events come to a dramatic conclusion when Barnaby and Jones unexpectedly interrupt the charity evening to arrest the killer. |
Note: the blood-red drips behind the letters of the title, present since the beginning of the series, have been changed to multi-colour.
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
74 | 1 | "The Made-to-Measure Murders" | Peter Smith | Andrew Payne | 12 May 2010 | June–July 2009 | 5.53 | |
The Milton Estate is the principal landowner for much of Milton Cross, with many people and businesses dependent on Edward Milton for their jobs and income. One of those businesses is the Woodley & Woodley tailor shop. When Sonia Woodley is found murdered in the churchyard two years after the death of her abusive husband Gerald, a set of tailor's shears are identified as the murder weapon. Barnaby and Jones discover that Sonia had passed a letter to the vicar a few days before, but the handwriting is not hers. When the vicar is also murdered shortly afterwards, the police need to uncover who wrote the letter to solve the mystery. | ||||||||
75 | 2 | "The Sword of Guillaume" | Renny Rye | Michael Aitkens | 10 February 2010 | July–August 2009 | 7.02 | |
The Midsomer county town has historic connections with the city of Brighton. During a council meeting, Causton Mayor Dave Hicks announces plans for a Chamber of Commerce reunion with its counterpart in Brighton. Barnaby suspects the mayor's proposal to buy coastal land there is fraudulent and reluctantly joins the party. But during their time in Brighton, hated property developer Hugh Dalgleish is beheaded on a ghost train ride. DCI Tom Barnaby teams up with his cousin, DCI John Barnaby of Brighton Police, to investigate who is responsible before other murders take place. | ||||||||
76 | 3 | "Blood on the Saddle" | Richard Holthouse | David Lawrence | 8 September 2010 | September–October 2009 | 6.07 | |
The Wild West Society bring their show to Ford Florey, comprising a fairground, and several re-enactments of scenes from American frontier history. Amidst the sound of gunfire, the witch on the 'Dunk the Witch' stall is shot dead. Barnaby and Jones look at possible motives, which seem to revolve around the disputed ownership of an area of local land. The investigation encounters family rivalries and a recurring Wild West theme before the killer can be caught. | ||||||||
77 | 4 | "The Silent Land" | Peter Smith | Peter J. Hammond | 22 September 2010 | October–November 2009 | 5.45 | |
On a dark night in the village of March Magna, Joyce Barnaby swerves her car, narrowly missing a shadowy figure in the road. Shortly after, a body is found in the local cemetery. The victim, Gerald Ebbs, was the Parish Council clerk with responsibility for the village library and cemetery. The police discover that Gerald had had a strange fixation on both an abandoned hospital and a particular grave in the cemetery. He seemed to have made enemies around the village, so the police do not lack suspects. As Barnaby and Jones delve deeper into his background, a second murder during a night time tour of the hospital points them to the killer. | ||||||||
78 | 5 | "Master Class" | Renny Rye | Nicholas Martin | 6 October 2010 | March–April 2010 | 6.10 | |
Devington Manor Winter School, led by internationally renowned musician Sir Michael Fielding, is a magnet for many aspiring piano students, including gifted Zoe Stock. Whilst walking by the riverbank in the manor grounds, Zoe sees a woman jump from the bridge and disappear in the water. When Barnaby and Jones start their enquiries into the possible drowning, they discover many dark connections to the past. As secrets begin to emerge, Barnaby himself is the target of a murder attempt. Two murders follow: one of Zoe's fellow students and the local priest. The detectives need to investigate the school, students and their parents, to uncover a shocking conspiracy linked to Zoe's past. | ||||||||
79 | 6 | "The Noble Art" | Richard Holthouse | Barry Purchese | 13 October 2010 | April–May 2010 | 5.70 | |
When famous boxer John Kinsella wins a world title in New York, the villagers of Midsomer Morchard are overjoyed at his success. Shortly afterwards a solicitor is found dead by his assistant and Kinsella's manager. Barnaby and Jones investigate against the background of a Victorian prize-fight re-enactment in which Kinsella and the local blacksmith portray the boxers. As the event becomes unexpectedly realistic, Kinsella's manager is found murdered in his home gymnasium. Barnaby finds the solution only after realising that his judgement has been clouded in this investigation. | ||||||||
80 | 7 | "Not in My Back Yard" | Peter Smith | J.C. Wilsher | 12 January 2011 | May–June 2010 | 6.93 | |
The Midsomer Conservation Society is up in arms when the newly built Swanscombe House is a highlight of an open garden day. An ugly confrontation ensues when some of its members make angry accusations of corruption against those responsible for the design, construction and planning approval for the house. When a leading member of the Conservation Society is stabbed to death, and evidence of an alleged conspiracy to subvert a new planning application disappears, Barnaby and Jones suspect a link between the murder and the conspiracy. One by one, those connected to the corrupt scheme are killed. The architect's neck is crushed by a sliding door and the builder is sedated and smothered in concrete, which suffocates him. Barnaby realises that the unknown killer is methodically covering their tracks. | ||||||||
81 | 8 | "Fit for Murder" | Renny Rye | Andrew Payne | 2 February 2011 | June–July 2010 | 8.10 | |
A quiet spa weekend at Swavely Manor proves far from relaxing when Tom and Joyce arrive and a female client is found murdered in the flotation chamber. Barnaby interrupts his spa treatment to investigate with Jones. The mystery deepens when the victim's husband disappears. As Tom worries about his future and health, one of the hotel proprietors is also murdered. When the case is finally solved, Barnaby announces his impending retirement. His successor is announced to be his cousin, John Barnaby, who is a newly appointed DCI at Causton CID. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
82 | 1 | "Death in the Slow Lane" | Richard Holthouse | Michael Aitkens | 23 March 2011 | July–August 2010 | 6.44 | |
New Causton DCI John Barnaby arrives in Midsomer county. Years earlier, the body of a renowned racing car driver had been found at the prestigious Darnley Park Girls School, apparently having committed suicide with a revolver. The school is now hosting a vintage car rally, but the event is disrupted by the death of one of the judges, a local celebrity DJ. Initially, his death is also presumed to be suicide, but Barnaby soon spots evidence suggesting that both victims had been murdered. | ||||||||
83 | 2 | "Dark Secrets" | Simon Langton | Michael Aitkens | 30 March 2011 | August–September 2010 | 6.32 | |
The lives of elderly eccentrics William and Mary Bingham come under police investigation when a social services inspector is found dead in the river, apparently from a canoeing accident. Barnaby is suspicious and quickly concludes the death was murder. He and Jones investigate a local artist community and the significance of the death of the Binghams' son and daughter, many years previously. The collapse of a tower of newspapers brings a further death. A printed image of the lunar surface provides the clue that enables the detectives to identify the killer. | ||||||||
84 | 3 | "Echoes of the Dead" | Nick Laughland | Peter J. Hammond | 20 April 2011 | September–October 2010 | 5.47 | |
Jo Starling arrives at her cottage in Great Worthy to find her housemate, Dianne Price, dead in the bath. The message "Blessed Be the Bride" is written on the mirror above her body in red lipstick. There follows a series of bizarre murders with similar wedding-themed messages also written in red lipstick. Barnaby and Jones believe that the killer is a local, and have a number of suspects to investigate, including a voyeuristic landlord, a retired policeman and his former brothel madame wife, and the proprietors of a donkey sanctuary. As the investigation proceeds, it becomes clear that the killer is a very disturbed individual who has been triggered to commit murder by a momentous personal event. | ||||||||
85 | 4 | "The Oblong Murders" | Renny Rye | David Hoskins | 25 May 2011 | October–November 2010 | 5.33 | |
Lucy Oliver, daughter to friends of George Bullard, disappears from a manor house being used by the Oblong Foundation, a New Age cult organisation. Bullard asks for Barnaby's help in finding out what happened to her. The Oblong Foundation is renting the manor house from Ruth Lambert, who inherited the house from her parents after they were killed in a boat explosion. DS Jones, who has recently returned from an undercover policing course, joins a group of Foundation inductees under an assumed identity. He becomes increasingly uncomfortable when one of the female inductees, along with Ruth herself, seem to be emotionally drawn to him. Meanwhile, Barnaby looks into the death of Ruth's parents, suspecting murder, and believing the events all to be linked. These suspicions seem to be confirmed when one of the Foundation leaders is found stabbed. When the case is finally solved, George Bullard announces his retirement. | ||||||||
86 | 5 | "The Sleeper Under the Hill" | Nick Laughland | David Lawrence | 21 September 2011 | March–April 2011 | 5.83 | |
Farmer Alex Preston's dead body is found in the centre of the ancient Crowcall stone circle days before the spring equinox. Early evidence points to a community of New Dawn Druids, who had been angered over Preston's plans to plough the meadow and make the sacred place inaccessible. But when one of the druids is also murdered, Barnaby realises that more complex motives are involved, and his suspicions turn in a direction that threatens to create a serious rift between him and Jones. Maps that reveal the location of a hidden Anglo Saxon treasure, along with a more modern valuable painting, provide the clues that lead to a very manipulative killer. | ||||||||
87 | 6 | "The Night of the Stag" | Simon Langton | Nicholas Martin | 12 October 2011 | April–May 2011 | 6.04 | |
Barnaby and Jones attend the Midsomer Abbas spring fair, a celebration of the village’s friendship with Midsomer Herne. After sampling the local cider, Barnaby becomes unwell, and moments later the body of Peter Slim is discovered inside the cider vat. Peter had been a tax inspector searching for illicit alcohol. The investigation reveals two very insular communities wedded to ancient traditions and suspicious of outsiders. When the bloodied fingerprints of the local cider mill owner are found on a wooden staff linked to the murder, the case seems solved. But Barnaby has his doubts. Meanwhile, the local vicar, the Reverend Conrad Walker, is appalled at plans to revive an ancient fertility rite known as 'The Stag,' and soon afterwards is himself murdered. Upon discovering that a local girl had been married to Peter Slim, the detectives realise that the motive for the killings is far darker than they had imagined. | ||||||||
88 | 7 | "A Sacred Trust" | Renny Rye | Rachel Cuperman and Sally Griffiths | 26 October 2011 | June–July 2011 | 6.38 | |
Barnaby and Jones enter the cloistered world of Midsomer Priory to investigate the death of Mother Thomas Aquinas. Earlier, an ancient stained glass window at the priory had been vandalised, leading the nuns to discuss selling their valuable collection of antique silver to finance its repair. After the murder, it is discovered that the silver has disappeared. The detectives unearth some surprises when the ownership of the priory is investigated; but the real trail leads back to a chilling event that occurred 30 years previously. Barnaby and Jones realise the killer’s identity, but finding hard evidence proves difficult until one of the nuns puts her safety at risk. | ||||||||
89 | 8 | "A Rare Bird" | Nick Laughland | Steve Trafford | 11 January 2012 | July–August 2011 | 6.43 | |
Retired financier and bird enthusiast Patrick Morgan is found bludgeoned to death in woodland. There is a wide list of suspects, including farmer George Napier, who has fallen out with Peter over his plans to drain adjacent land, and members of the Midsomer-in-the-Marsh ornithological group, whose members have had a heated argument over an alleged sighting of a rare African bird. Matters become more complicated when it emerges that Peter’s wife Nina, a former lead ballerina with the Russian Kirov Ballet, is pregnant and it seems that he cannot be the father. A further murder occurs before photographs and sound recordings lead the detectives to a very obsessed killer. |
Note: the blood-red drips behind the letters of the title have returned, after having been changed to multi-colour for two seasons.
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
90 | 1 | "The Dark Rider" | Alex Pillai | Michael Aitkens | 1 February 2012 | September–October 2011 | 6.94 | |
Legend has it that the headless apparition of Sir Geoffrey DeQuetteville, riding a grey horse, spells imminent death to any member of the DeQuetteville family who sees it. The legend seems to come true when several members of the present day family are killed after sighting the horseman. Meanwhile, a re-enactment of the Battle of Naseby reignites a long running feud between the DeQuettevilles and the neighbouring Fleetwood family, who were in opposing sides in the battle. Barnaby and Jones suspect that the killer is operating with an accomplice, as it seems impossible for a single person to be involved. Barnaby instructs Jones to track down the grey horse, as this is likely to be the key to solving the case. | ||||||||
91 | 2 | "Murder of Innocence" | Renny Rye | Elizabeth-Anne Wheal | 21 March 2012 | November–December 2011 | 5.60 | |
When Grady Felton was convicted for the murder of Daniel Denning, he protested his innocence and left a 'death list' of people he blames for his conviction, including then Constable Ben Jones. Years later, after serving his sentence, he is released from prison and returns to Binwell Village, where he grew up and the murder took place. One by one, the people on the death list are murdered. Grady seems to have a solid alibi for the killings, and when he is himself targeted in an arson attack, Barnaby and Jones realise the case is more complex than first appears. | ||||||||
92 | 3 | "Written in the Stars" | Renny Rye | Steve Trafford | 24 September 2012 | May–June 2012 | 5.05 | |
After gathering on Moonstone Ridge to observe a total eclipse of the sun, members of the amateur Midsomer Stanton Astronomical Society start to meet their deaths in bizarre ways. Three amateur astronomers are killed - the first, by a blow to the head with a meteorite, the second with a spear, and the third nearly decapitated using a bronze disc with astronomical markings. The astrological sign Scorpio seems to be a common theme of the killings, but Barnaby begins to doubt whether the case is so straightforward. | ||||||||
93 | 4 | "Death and the Divas" | Nick Laughland | Rachel Cuperman and Sally Griffiths | 2 January 2013 | April–May 2012 | 6.49 | |
When Eve Lomax, a film journalist writing a book about 1960s horror actress Stella Harris, is found dead in Midsomer Langley, it appears her neck was punctured by a vampire. Shortly afterward, Stella's more famous sister Diana Davenport returns to the village after a 40-year-old family rift. The series of killings continues, each depicting deaths similar to those in Stella's films. Barnaby and Jones finally discover who is behind the crimes. Note: This episode has atypical title, being solid blood-red letters on a scenic background, ala movie titles. | ||||||||
94 | 5 | "The Sicilian Defence" | Alex Pillai | Paul Logue | 9 January 2013 | June–July 2012 | 6.95 | |
Harriet Farmer wakes up after being in a coma for almost a year. Shortly after running away to elope with her boyfriend, Finn Robson, Harriet had been left for dead in local woodland. Barnaby and Jones look into whether the attack could be connected to rivalry in a chess club, whose members are very competitive. Before long, Harriet starts remembering that night, leading to her possibly revealing who attacked her and the whereabouts of her boyfriend Finn. The detectives need to solve chess notation to identify the culprit. | ||||||||
95 | 6 | "Schooled in Murder" | Andy Hay | Lisa Holdsworth | 30 January 2013 | July–August 2012 | 6.89 | |
Midsomer Pastures is on the map due to its famous connection with producing the Midsomer Blue cheese. When Debbie Moffett is lured to the caves and is subsequently bludgeoned by a wheel of cheese, it leads the detectives to investigate both the secret, controversial plans to modernize the dairy and the private lives of the parents of children at the local preparatory school in the same village. During the family dinner, Poppy Ordish, daughter of Beatrix Ordish and Oliver Ordish, refuses to eat beef. When more people are killed, long-held secrets about the dairy, school, and villagers are revealed and play a key role in catching the killer. In the end, John, Sarah, Sykes the dog, Ben, and Kate celebrate the Barnabys' 15th anniversary. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
96 | 1 | " The Christmas Haunting " | Nick Laughland | Chris Murray | 24 December 2013 | June–July 2013 | 4.92 | |
DCI Barnaby, assisted by new DS Nelson, arrives in the village of Morton Shallows to investigate the death of furniture maker and local philanderer Conor Bridgeman during a ghost-hunting party at the local Manor House. The murder victim had been stabbed with an antique sword. The Manor has a haunted reputation involving stories of a blacksmith's daughter, and the voice of a young girl on a tape recording from the night of the murder adds to the mystery. Ross Clymer, landlord of the Blacksmiths Arms pub, has his own version of the ghost story, but also becomes a victim when he is discovered in his walk-in freezer, having been bludgeoned to death with a blacksmith's hammer. The identities and history of many of the characters must be unravelled before the detectives arrive at the truth. | ||||||||
97 | 2 | "Let Us Prey" | Alex Pillai | Paul Logue | 8 January 2014 | April–May 2013 | 6.06 | |
Art historian Philip Hamilton is restoring a medieval fresco is unearthed in the church crypt of Midsomer St Claire. When his partner Nancy Dewar is found dead in a river, a series of murders commences that appear to be inspired by macabre illustrations in the fresco. As the village prepares for storms and flooding, Barnaby and Nelson realise that the motive for the murders is not religious but is connected to a hidden secret. | ||||||||
98 | 3 | "Wild Harvest" | Renny Rye | Rachel Cuperman & Sally Griffiths | 15 January 2014 | May–June 2013 | 6.24 | |
When the body of farmer Martin Strickland is found in woodland, it transpires that he was covered in truffle oil and mauled to death by a wild boar. Barnaby and Nelson head to Midsomer Wyvern. Strickland was the landlord of Wyvern House, an upmarket and picturesque country house restaurant run by a passionate celebrity chef, Ruth Cameron. The detectives race to find the motive for the murder, as Strickland's daughter is also killed and attempts are made on the lives of other staff of Wyvern House. | ||||||||
99 | 4 | "The Flying Club" | Luke Watson | Michael Aitkens | 5 February 2014 | July–August 2013 | 6.05 | |
When Bernard King, the owner of Finchmere airfield, is dropped to his death from a plane, Barnaby and Nelson enter a world of stunt pilots and military heroes. Upon investigating, they discover many hidden secrets. Possible suspects include anti-aircraft campaigners and employees who might lose their jobs after an imminent restructuring of the flying club. A tragic mission in World War II seems to hold a clue. | ||||||||
100 | 5 | " The Killings of Copenhagen " | Alex Pillai | Paul Logue | 12 February 2014 | September–October 2013 | 6.54 | |
Eric Calder, Chairman and boss of Calder's Biscuits, is found murdered whilst on a business trip in Copenhagen. He had been poisoned with strychnine applied to a box of Calder's biscuits. It is discovered the box had been sent from the village of Badger's Drift, home to Calder's firm. The detectives team up with two female Danish police officers to investigate, where suspects and motives abound before the mystery is unravelled. First appearance of Betty Barnaby |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
101 | 1 | "The Dagger Club" | Alex Pillai | Chris Murray | 28 January 2015 | April–May 2014 | 5.91 | |
The crime festival and book fair open in the village of Luxton Deeping. Shortly after, an announcement is made, during a meeting of a newly discovered manuscript by the late crime writer George Summersbee. When the manuscript is stolen and a woman is found dead after spinning a roulette wheel trap, Barnaby and Nelson know they are set to work to uncover many secrets and obsessions within the village. | ||||||||
102 | 2 | "Murder by Magic" | Charles Palmer | Rachel Cuperman & Sally Griffiths | 4 February 2015 | June–July 2014 | 5.59 | |
When the village church becomes the setting for a magic show by famous illusionist Gideon Latimer, it starts a series of mysterious events in Midsomer Oaks, when pub landlady and pianist Hannah Altman is crushed during the opening set piece. After the box that Gideon had made his entrance in suddenly falls, Kate Wilding discovers the safety wires had been sabotaged, leading Barnaby and Nelson to wonder if Gideon had been the real target. More murders follow and the police need to act quickly to catch the killer and find out why. | ||||||||
103 | 3 | "The Ballad of Midsomer County" | Renny Rye | Paul Logue | 11 February 2015 | May–June 2014 | 5.39 | |
Little Crosby are hosting its folk festival and event organiser Toby Winning is shortly found dead, having drowned in a bowl of eggs and live eels. The murder seemed to have been inspired by a ballad by late musician Johnny Carver. Toby had recently announced plans to relocate the event to London, which would have proved very costly for entrepreneur Frank Wainwright. Many villagers come under suspicion, and when two more murders echo lyrics from the same song, the detectives need to catch the person responsible. | ||||||||
104 | 4 | "A Vintage Murder" | Nick Laughland | Lisa Holdsworth | 18 February 2015 | August 2014 | 5.03 | |
The launch of the latest sparkling wine, which is produced by the Carnarvon Estate Winery in Midsomer Vinae, loses all its fizz when wine critic Nadia Simons gives it a very harsh review. Moments later, guests who had been sampling the vintage start collapsing. Owner William Carnarvon suspects the Farmers' Wives' Association of trying to destroy his business. Kate Wilding tells Barnaby and Nelson that the glasses had been laced with slug poison. There are many suspects and motives and the detectives set out to piece the puzzle together. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
105 | 1 | "Habeas Corpus" | Alex Pillai | Rachel Cuperman & Sally Griffiths | 6 January 2016 | March–April 2015 | 6.04 | |
When wealthy landowner Gregory Lancaster's body goes missing on the night of his death, it starts a series of mysterious events in the village of Little Malton. DCI Barnaby, DS Nelson, and new forensic pathologist Kam Karimore enter a very macabre world of body-snatching. Nothing is quite what it seems, and when another strange event takes place, the detectives set out to catch the culprit. | ||||||||
106 | 2 | "The Incident at Cooper Hill" | Renny Rye | Paul Logue | 13 January 2016 | April–May 2015 | 5.90 | |
Nothing prepares a forest ranger for, when driving through the forest, she suddenly gets stopped by mysterious lights in the sky over UFO hotspot Cooper Hill. She subsequently disappears from her truck. UFO spotters visiting the site of her disappearance are convinced alien activity is to blame. When her dead body is found, Barnaby and Nelson share the spotters' thoughts, and their investigation brings them to the local RAF base. The detectives discover suspicions, betrayals, and long held buried secrets dating back over twenty years. They also unearth that secret research was being conducted at the RAF base, too, using aerial spying equipment. The case also leads them to uncover secret affairs between villagers and RAF personnel to catch the culprit responsible. | ||||||||
107 | 3 | "Breaking the Chain" | Rob Evans | Chris Murray | 27 January 2016 | June–July 2015 | 5.80 | |
The village of Burwood Mantle is hosting an international cycling competition, when the race leader defies orders, beats his teammate to the finishing line, and is subsequently murdered. It literally opens up many jealousies and betrayals amongst his fellow competitors, with sponsorship concerns, blackmail, bribery, and more to explore, before more murder occurs. | ||||||||
108 | 4 | "A Dying Art" | Matt Carter | Jeff Povey | 3 February 2016 | July–August 2015 | 5.54 | |
A new sculpture park opens in the village of Angel's Rise. On its opening night, Brandon Monkford is found murdered beside one of the centrepiece sculptures. It transpires that after Brandon’s wife Alexandra had started a relationship with Daniel Fargo, Brandon had cut Alexandra and their two children from his will, leaving the sculpture park instead to Tony Pitt. There is fury in the village when Tony reveals all of his plans for the sculpture park. Tony is the next murder victim and is discovered near the sculpture park. Further mystery ensues when it emerges that Lance Orden, the famous artist believed to have created the sculptures, had plagiarised his ideas. | ||||||||
109 | 5 | "Saints and Sinners" | Renny Rye | Lisa Holdsworth | 10 February 2016 | August–September 2015 | 5.83 | |
When the archaeologists working on the dig in Midsomer Cicely unearth Cicely herself, this causes celebration. But shortly afterwards, the leader of the dig is murdered and found in one of the excavated trenches. DCI Barnaby and DS Nelson soon uncover many misdeeds in the village, and almost everyone has a skeleton in the closet that they would rather keep hidden. The truth will resurface but not before more murders take place. | ||||||||
110 | 6 | "Harvest of Souls" | Nick Laughland | Caleb Ranson | 17 February 2016 | September–October 2015 | 5.60 | |
When the annual harvest fair arrives in the village of Whitcombe Mallet, it reopens old wounds for some villagers. After the son of an equestrian centre owner is found trampled by his own horse, the detectives have to look into a case with much complexity that has its roots in the past, in order to solve an investigation where nothing is what it seems. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | UK air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
111 | 1 | "The Village That Rose from the Dead" | Nick Laughland | Rachel Cuperman & Sally Griffiths | 18 December 2016 | April–May 2016 | 5.68 | |
The village of Little Auburn, which had been requisitioned by the army in World War II and afterwards abandoned, is to be reopened. There are competing visions among the villagers for its future. Finn Thornberry, who had envisioned an eco-friendly village, is found crushed to death by a tank. DCI Barnaby and new DS Jamie Winter investigate and find suspects among the factions of rival bidders. When Roderick Craven, the head of the judging panel that will decide Little Auburn's redevelopment and his brother Milo are also found murdered, an unexpected new beneficiary of the rights to the village comes to light. | ||||||||
112 | 2 | "Crime and Punishment" | Renny Rye | Paul Logue | 4 January 2017 | May–June 2016 | 6.25 | |
The Bleakridge Watch is a vigilante group established by Ingrid Lockston after her brother was killed in an unsolved hit and run incident. The police investigate when Watch member Angus Colton is found dead in his butcher shop whilst looking into a series of burglaries. The Watch does not have everyone's support, with a notable opponent being pub landlord Mitch McAllister, who becomes a prime suspect when another member of the group is killed. Barnaby and Winter suspect that both murders are connected to the previous death of Ingrid Lockston's brother. | ||||||||
113 | 3 | "Last Man Out" | Matt Carter | Jeff Povey | 11 January 2017 | June–July 2016 | 6.55 | |
Lower Pampling sees a cricket tournament with a new format that controversially breaks with tradition. When star cricketer Leo Henderson is murdered in the club's training shed, DCI Barnaby and DS Winter eventually find out that this case is about gambling, bribery, burglary, and the disappearance of a local woman. Winter finds it suspicious when the man who found the body, Jack Morris, keeps showing up before him and Barnaby as they investigate. Barnaby is surprised when he sees Morris for the first time. It is former DS Ben Jones, now promoted to DI in Brighton, and working undercover. | ||||||||
114 | 4 | "Red in Tooth & Claw" | Steve Hughes | Lisa Holdsworth | 18 January 2017 | August–September 2016 | 5.98 | |
When the annual summer pet show comes to the village of Bellville, it is rocked by the murder of a local estate agent, Seb Huntington. He is discovered in the marquee, surrounded by live rabbits. DCI Barnaby and DS Winter explore whether the motive was animal-rights activism, theft of one of the prize-winning pets, or something more sinister, to catch the culprit. | ||||||||
115 | 5 | "Death by Persuasion" | Alex Pillai | Chris Murray | 13 May 2018 | September–October 2016 | 5.82 | |
Shortly after a young woman takes a walk into woodland dressed in period attire from a Jane Austen event in the village, her body is found stabbed with a quill. It is discovered that she was a journalist curious about the village's new trial healthcare drone delivery programme. Barnaby and Winter find themselves with many suspects and motives and work out that the answer lies in the past. | ||||||||
116 | 6 | "The Curse of the Ninth" | Matt Carter | Julia Gilbert | 20 May 2018 | October–November 2016 | 4.98 | |
At the end of the Thassington classical music festival in the village church, the winner of the Falconer Award is announced as Jacob Wheeler. There are many shocked and disappointed musicians and audience members, who feel that pianist Zak Sowande should have won. When Jacob is found strangled with a violin string and the treasured Stradivarius violin on loan to him disappears, Barnaby and Winter must delve into rivalries, disappointments, and hidden identities. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | UK air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
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117 | 1 | "The Ghost of Causton Abbey" | Matt Carter | Helen Jenkins | 10 March 2019 | March–April 2017 | 6.39 | |
Adam Asoba is found murdered, having been boiled to death in one of the vats at the newly opened brewery of the famously cursed abbey in Midsomer. Dr. Fleur Perkins, a new pathologist, tells Barnaby and Winter that Adam Asoba was living under a false name, and that he actually died three years earlier, under the name Adam Dumont. Adam’s widower, Kwame Asante, turns up at Adam’s house admitting the truth. It seems that he and Adam had big debts, and the only solution for them was for Adam to fake his death so that Kwame could start a new life by collecting a life insurance. The first murder seems to be the end of it, but when Emani Taylor, the woman responsible for the new brewery, is also murdered, Barnaby and Winter must look deeper to find the killer. | ||||||||
118 | 2 | "Death of the Small Coppers" | Paul Harrison | Chris Murray | 17 March 2019 | April–May 2017 | 6.00 | |
The body of Mahesh Sidana, butterfly collector and founding member of an elite IQ society, is found pinned to a wall in a manner akin to his treasured butterfly specimens. This is the first of a series of strange murders that evoke trapped insects. DCI Barnaby and DS Winter are thrust into a crime that impacts not only their community, but internationally. With the help of an old friend, they set out to catch the culprit before another victim is found. Note: To mark the 20th anniversary series, 20 'Easter eggs' references were included in this episode. | ||||||||
119 | 3 | "Drawing Dead" | Toby Frow | Jeff Povey | 19 May 2019 | May–June 2017 | 4.76 | |
After receiving a head injury from a horse kick, Francesca Lounds falls into a coma for two years. As she awakens, she is murdered when someone unplugs her life-support respirator and a rolled-up comic book is inserted into her throat. Her son, Barrett Lounds, is later found murdered when someone pulls him onto a large and sharpened paper cutter, slitting his throat in the process. During these murders, the village of Carver Valley is hosting a comic book festival, and it appears that someone has predicted the murders. A third murder attempt follows, and Barnaby and Winter find out that the murders are connected to events on the same night when Francesca Lounds was injured. | ||||||||
120 | 4 | "The Lions of Causton" | Matt Carter | Nick Hicks-Beach | 26 August 2019 | June–July 2017 | 4.65 | |
Mark Adler is found dead in a cryogenic treatment chamber, where the temperature was set to -150 degrees C, freezing him to death. He had bought and professionalized a local rugby club in Midsomer, the Causton Lions, but it seems that isn't the only reason others bore grudges against Mark. Then the talented baker and chocolatier at the shop owned by Mark's wife Samantha, Dominic Braun, is found dead in the kitchen, drowned in chocolate. Now, it is up to Barnaby and Winter to find the real connection between the murders, and solve the riddle of a blackmailer's missing photos. | ||||||||
121 | 5 | "Till Death Do Us Part" | Audrey Cooke | Helen Jenkins | 6 January 2020 | July–August 2017 | 5.59 | |
Laurel Newman is found murdered on the night of her wedding to Gavin Webster, son of Sarah Barnaby's old friend Hazel. A talk radio host, Laurel had been receiving online harassment as well as packages containing dead animals, which Gavin accuses the police of not taking seriously. Serena Madison, who Gavin previously jilted, had to provide Laurel's wedding dress from her design and vintage business because their wedding package was won in a magazine competition. When Serena is murdered while modelling one of her dresses at a wedding fair fashion show, Barnaby and Winter find a new link between the two victims. They will have to unravel the connections amongst Laurel's co-host Jordan, their producer Aisha, Laurel's widowed friend Marcia, Jordan's daughter Grace, the wedding planner Juliet, and Gavin's parents Phil and Hazel, before it is too late. | ||||||||
122 | 6 | "Send in the Clowns" | Nick Laughland | Julia Gilbert | 14 January 2020 | August–September 2017 | 5.12 | |
Terry Bellini, a circus performer, had told his partner Les Morrison that he was about to leave the town, with his wife and daughter, as he had been offered a role at another circus. Soon afterwards, Terry is shot dead while performing. Later, Ashley Denton, a volunteer for a sword show, is killed because the prop swords used in the trick act had been tampered with. Curtis Ferabbee, brother of the circus ringmaster Joe Ferabbee, wants to get rid of the circus, but when he is found murdered at his own abattoir, the circus lives on. It is later revealed that a previous death is the central theme of the murder case, and the murderer now seeks revenge. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | UK air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
123 | 1 | "The Point of Balance" | Audrey Cooke | Nick Hicks-Beach | 21 January 2020 | March–April 2019 | 4.82 | |
Ballroom dancer Rosa Corrigan is found murdered in her home on the night after the start of the annual ‘Paramount Dance Extravaganza’. Her brother Duncan is also found murdered. Barnaby and Winter must investigate rival dancers and their jealous partners, while also having to contend with corporate sponsors and Barnaby's estranged father Ned. | ||||||||
124 | 2 | "The Miniature Murders" | Toby Frow | Helen Jenkins | 4 February 2020 | May–June 2019 | 5.62 | |
Prolific real estate agent Alexander Beauvoisin is murdered in front of a crowd at the unveiling of a new dolls house collection at Midsomer Museum of the Family. Alexander was known as an unpopular landlord in the village, and is discovered to be an estranged husband who had betrayed his wife for a new lover known as Holly Ackroyd. But when Jamima Starling is murdered, suspicions are roused when it is revealed that Jamima was also in love with Alexander. Holly Ackroyd is found to be police Sergeant Leanne Carpenter. A previous incident is soon revealed, helping Barnaby and Winter to find the person responsible for the killings and how the two murders are connected. | ||||||||
125 | 3 | "The Sting of Death" | Matt Carter | Julia Gilbert | 21 March 2021 | April–May 2019 | 5.56 | |
Apley Court, in the village of Granville Norton, is home to historic beehives that produce a well top-of-the-range ‘Apley Gold’ honey. Master beekeeper Ambrose Deddington attributes his survival from a life-threatening cancer to a combination of Apley Gold and bee venom. When he is injured trying to prevent the theft of his beloved bees, Barnaby and Winter investigate. Later the local doctor, Serena Lowe, is found murdered, and stung to death. Barnaby and Winter discover that a previous event is the key to the case. | ||||||||
126 | 4 | "With Baited Breath" | Jennie Darnell | Jeff Povey | 28 March 2021 | July–August 2019 | 4.94 | |
Tensions run high in the village of Solomon Gorge when a fishing competition, and an extreme obstacle course, are both scheduled for same weekend. The excitement for these two events soon turns to fear when the electrocuted body of Lex Bedford is found within the water obstacle. Two further murders, of Ned Skye and Cornelius Tetbury, soon follow. But it is only later when Barnaby and Winter learn of the death of Lola Silvermane ten years previously, who had been believed to be travelling the world after she left the village, that they uncover the key to the case. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | UK air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
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127 | 1 | "The Wolf Hunter of Little Worthy" | Matt Carter | Chris Murray | 4 April 2021 | October–November 2020 | 5.18 | |
There is a full moon over Little Worthy at Halloween and the people in the area are thrilled when local photographer Steve Skelton wins a competition in the village with his own creation of the Wolf Hunter. Unexpectedly, the Wolf Hunter is becoming a viral meme, with people coming from miles around to explore the woods of Little Worthy in the hope of catching a glimpse of the beast. The excitement turns into fear when Jez Gladberry is found murdered in the woods, killed in the unique way of the Wolf Hunter. | ||||||||
128 | 2 | "The Stitcher Society" | Roberto Bangura | Jeff Povey | 11 April 2021 | November–December 2020 | 4.99 | |
Having been controversially acquitted of the murder of Viola Deepdale, Toby Wagner tries to settle down in the village of Tamworth Springs. His desire to join the local Stitcher Society is not well received by the other members. Reuben Tooms, Viola's brother in law, tries to persuade them that Toby is innocent. Later, Rueben is found murdered with a shinai stick in his chest. Shortly after, Georgie Tremayne is found murdered at the Stitcher Society’s premises, and the detectives suspect that she had spoken to Reuben about Toby on the night that he was murdered. Then a third victim dies in a suspected clay pigeon shooting accident, but it seems that someone tampered with the shotgun. There is a long list of suspects with many motives ranging from blackmail to revenge. | ||||||||
129 | 3 | "Happy Families" | Audrey Cooke | Nick Hicks-Beach | 3 October 2021 | January–February 2021 | 4.58 | |
Barnaby and Winter are stranded on a remote island manor due to a storm after Victor Karras, owner of Karras Games, dies falling down the stairs and hit with a falling statue. Victor’s wife, Eleanor, is pregnant and plans to give the child to her sister Alicia. Later, Hugo Welles is also murdered and Barnaby and Winter discover the key to the case. | ||||||||
130 | 4 | "The Scarecrow Murders" | Christine Lalla | Helen Jenkins | 29 May 2022 | March–April 2021 | 3.47 | |
Naomi Ashworth is found murdered, dressed up as a scarecrow in her own shop during the first day of the Midsomer Scarecrow Festival in the village of Little Upton. Barnaby and Winter learn later on that Naomi and her friend Adele Paige ran the Old Vogue Vintage Emporium together. A reporter starts to take pictures and when Winter tries to stop her and tell her to leave the scene, he recognises her instantly. It is his old girlfriend from school, Caitlin Dawson. Caitlin makes Barnaby and Winter aware of Oscar Hayden and the £15 million he won back in 2008. Oscar is the latest Reverend in Little Upton and lives in a mansion with his daughter, Bryony. A while later, Oscar Hayden is found murdered, displayed and then dressed up as a scarecrow. Barnaby and Winter starts talking with the responsible sales manager at the company Ventuity, Thea Stannard, and they become conscious of her current relationship with Stephen Ashworth, Naomi’s husband. Thea Stannard is soon found murdered, and the pieces start to fall into place. Barnaby and Winter get the full picture of Ventuity and it is revealed that Naomi Ashworth, Oscar Hayden and Thea Stannard all had connections to a company that may have put people’s lives at risk. | ||||||||
131 | 5 | "For Death Prepare" | Toby Frow | Julia Gilbert | 28 May 2023 | April–May 2021 | 3.62 | |
An amateur operatic society, The Midsomer Mummers, are busy rehearsing for their charity concert, The Pirates of Penzance, when the body of an unknown man, later identified as Vince Summersby, is found in their theatre. Later, while the preparations are still underway, Katisha Empson dies falling down the stairs. Her niece, Phyllis Fernsby, tells Barnaby of her suspicion that Katisha’s doctor, Simon Charteris, might have been involved in her aunt’s death as it is revealed that he was the main beneficiary of her will. Later, Graham Handsworth is found dead at the theatre’s stage, and Jeremy Whittingdale almost gets murdered on the night before the Pirates of Penzance premiere. Barnaby and Winter realise that the culprit must be someone connected to the play. | ||||||||
132 | 6 | "The Witches of Angel’s Rise" | Gill Wilkinson | Maria Ward | 27 August 2023 | May–June 2021 | 3.37 | |
Barnaby and Winter have to step into the world of spirituality when the body of Tilly Mulroney is found surrounded by ritual symbols on the first night of the Angel’s Rise Psychic Fayre. Simeon Dagley falls under suspicion when it is revealed that one of his Devil Tarot cards was found beside Tilly’s body, but a while later, Simeon is also found murdered, hanging upside down from a tree in the woodland. It transpires that Simeon may have figured out the identity of Tilly’s murderer, by looking at his Tarot cards. DCI Barnaby soon learns the truth about the previous death of Bea Saint-Stephens and he realises that her passing may be the key to the murder case. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | UK air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
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133 | 1 | "The Blacktrees Prophecy" | Roberto Bangura | Jeff Povey | 14 April 2024 | March–April 2022 | 3.77 | |
The village of Blacktrees-on-Marsh has always been haunted by the shadow of the Blacktrees Prophecy, and for some the fear has seeped into them so deeply that a small group of locals founded Midsomer’s first doomsday prepper group. One morning, their leader, Warren Kaine, receives the call he has been waiting for. The nuclear missiles have launched. Vindicated, Warren races to the bunker and radios for the other preppers to meet him there. But as dawn breaks over Blacktrees-on-Marsh, the sun rises over village green serenity, rather than a scorched earth. Warren’s resentful wife, Clodagh, arrives at the bunker to tell him it was a hoax, but discovers Warren dead. Later on it is revealed that Clodagh has been having an affair with her best friend’s husband, Guy Burrows, who once used to be in the prepper group. During a conversation with Guy, Clodagh admits she is relieved that she is finally free of Warren. As Clodagh awaits to collect Warren’s life insurance, she informs Paige that she wants to partner up with her, using the money from Warren’s well paid life insurance to save Paige’s bookshop. The joy is however short-lived. Barnaby and Winter informs Clodagh that Warren called off the life insurance, as he believed it was no longer necessary, and it may seem like Warren was aware of Clodagh’s affair with Guy. All seems well, but when Guy Burrows is found murdered shortly after being struck by a lifeboat, the suspicion soon falls on Clodagh, now that both her husband and lover are dead. Paige collects Guy’s life insurance, and her bookshop is saved. Randall Salt, a former member of the prepper group, soon falls victim to the killer and the Blacktrees Prophecy has been completed. Soon, a matter of parentage comes to light. The drowning death of a young woman, and a photo of a child in a car, help Barnaby and Winter to solve this case. | ||||||||
134 | 2 | "The Debt of Lies" | Gill Wilkinson | Nick Hicks-Beach | 16 July 2024 | April–May 2022 | 2.94 | |
Sarah and John Barnaby are attending an event to celebrate the retirement of DCS Elaine Bennet. At the party, Sarah is introduced to Sebastian Cabot, former colleague of John Barnaby. Sebastian informs the pair that Elaine is his new neighbour, as she has recently moved into Challis Court. Set up by an independent charity fifteen years ago, Challis is a collection of desirable apartments within a grand estate providing comfortable and secure housing for retired police officers. As the event draws to a close, Barnaby sees that behind the handshakes and smiles, some of the officers are harbouring resentment and bitterness. After bidding farewell to her colleagues, Elaine heads home, only to be found dead in the Bennet’s family car the following morning after crashing into a tree. The stolen heist money in the village years previously, which acquired the name "The Goldman-Forbes Job", draws attention to Barnaby and Winter, and it may seem like the murder of Elaine Bennet might be connected. However, when Elaine Bennet’s husband, Damian Bennet is found murdered, it is revealed that the two murders are connected to a well kept secret. | ||||||||
135 | 3 | "A Grain of Truth" | Paul Gibson | Julia Gilbert | 23 July 2024 | May–June 2022 | 3.21 | |
The residents in the village of Lower Blissingham are up in arms concerning Tom and Chrissie Larkton, the proprietors of the bakery at the mill in the village. At first glance, it looks like the situation is manageable, but when Chrissie receives a cake with the word "cursed" baked inside the sponge and Tom ends a contract with Nathan Duncroft after accusing him of using pesticides, everything changes. The situation turns to fear when Chrissie and some of the people at the Highwayman Inn pub get poisoned. Chrissie has seizures during the poisoning and Tom and Gabriel Arnson save her from drowning, when they watch her walking towards the water. Nathan Duncroft is found murdered shortly afterwards and it is revealed that he may have been responsible for the village poisoning as revenge for the cancelled contract with Tom and Chrissie Larkton. Lara Milton attends one of Tom’s courses under the false name of Sophie Rendal and it seems like she was previously in a relationship with Tom. Vanessa Debouverie, a friend of Sarah who has lived in California for many years, comes to visit the Barnaby’s during her trip to Midsomer, and she starts flirting with both Tom Larkton and Jamie Winter. Ricky Naybury is lured to his death and Tom Larkton gets knocked out and then tied up. Chrissie comes to the rescue and does everything she can to help him, but to no avail. When he is pulled into the water a moment later, Winter saves him from drowning. It is revealed that the victims posed a threat to someone in Lower Blissingham and the deepest wish the killer has is to protect that person from being hurt again. | ||||||||
136 | 4 | "Dressed to Kill" | Leon Lopez | Maria Ward | 10 November 2024 | June–July 2022 | 2.92 | |
The residents in the village of Elverton-Cum-Latterly are about to start their rehearsals for a charity drag queen extravaganza, when Lois Springfield is found murdered. After receiving a warning message, Malik Payne is almost run over by a car and it now seems that someone is not happy about the charity drag queen extravaganza. At the end of the show, Evelyn Hardy is found murdered and the terminally ill Rocco Templeton collapses at the village green. It soon transpires that someone wants to start a new life at a new place. A well kept secret has been held concealed, and someone’s life has been changed forever. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | UK air date | Filming Date | Viewers (millions) | |
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137 | 1 | "The Devil's Work" | Roberto Bangura | Julia Gilbert | T.B.A. (U.K.) | March–April 2023 | TBA | |
Henry Shirewell, patriarch of the Shirewell family, has lately passed away from natural causes, and a funeral is being held for him at the chapel of Stourwick Estate. A family meeting is taking place shortly afterwards, and the other members of the Shirewell family are up in arms when Lucian Shirewell, the eldest son of Henry Shirewell, informs his family about his plans for the Estate. The Shirewell‘s tenure ends with him, as the Estate now will become the home of a free-thinking artist’ community. Lucian reveals that Long Cross farm will become a solar park, the dower house will be changed into an artist’s retreat and the chapel will be turned into a gallery. Jordana Linsbury, who lives on the premises, is later found dead and it is revealed that she had a row with Lucian shortly before she was murdered. Sarah and Betty come to Stourwick Estate to attend an open day event. During the house tour, Betty goes missing. She is soon found and admits she wanted to explore the house on her own to find the gold that disappeared from the Estate earlier that day. Francis Shirewell is murdered the same evening when he is garroted with a medium-gauge wire. Caleb Blundell is pushed inside the klin and is burned alive when the killer closes the door in front of him and the temperature increases. It soon transpires that the death of Clarissa Shirewell in 1985 and the death of a child hold the clues to this case, as someone can’t bear the thought of losing Stourwick Estate. | ||||||||
138 | 2 | "Book of the Dead" | Gill Wilkinson | Jeff Povey | T.B.A. (U.K.) | April–May 2023 | TBA | |
The residents in the village of Mods Mire are gathered at the village church to celebrate the 10th anniversary of "The Seeker", a book written by Bertram Jewel. It transpires that his famous book will be republished with an additional page where a new set of clues have been drawn. The excitement, however, turns to anger when the reporter reveals that Bertram Jewel was imprisoned 24 years ago at the time he went by his real name, Robert Grimes and that the new edition of "The Seeker" may just be another con. Shortly afterwards, Bertram is found murdered in the woodland and during a conversation with Ludo Trask, DCI Barnaby discovers that Bertram showed Ludo the new additional page shortly before he was killed in the woodland. Venetia Butts walks into the forest and is murdered a moment later when a sheet is thrust over her head. She is strung up between two trees with the sheet covering her dead body. Venetia’s son is found murdered in the village church after being drowned in a pail of water and then placed in a yoga position. Barnaby and Winter are looking for answers and find out that Bertram had an accomplice when he was imprisoned 24 years ago. A nickname for Bertram that Barnaby has heard before uncovers the truth and shortly afterwards the murderer is brought to justice. | ||||||||
139 | 3 | "Claws Out" | Paul Gibson | Helen Jenkins | T.B.A. (U.K.) | May–June 2023 | TBA | |
The residents in the village of Binwell are searching for a lost dog. Frank Bailey and his wife Kim, Madeline Saunders, Reece Fleming, among other volunteers, find the dog after receiving coordinates suggesting that the dog is located at Briar’s farm. Frank Bailey is soon found murdered inside a dog cage, moments after blaming Daniella Saunders for being clumsy. Kim Bailey informs Barnaby that a Czechoslovakian wolfdog by the name of Storm has been missing for the last four days. Kim Bailey reveals that the cage Frank was found murdered in belongs to Storm. Tai Yang, the boy who found Frank’s body, appears to be Frank’s nephew and shortly afterwards, Kim receives the news that Tai will inherit fifty percent of Frank’s estate when he turns twenty-one. Tai is found murdered in his caravan after being electrocuted with a dog training collar. A while later, Lorna McIntosh is murdered with a dog snare and it transpires that someone wants to protect a person they love dearly. | ||||||||
140 | 4 | "A Climate of Death" | Leon Lopez | Maria Ward | T.B.A. (U.K.) | June–July 2023 | TBA | |
Sleepy Goodman’s Land is now well known as the greenest village in Midsomer and has recently been purchased by the American oilman Rooster Harlin. All seems well in the village until Danny Tarleton is found murdered after being stabbed with a weathervane. His father Liam is soon found murdered as well and during the chili competition in the village, Aldo McLean falls to the ground and dies. Fleur informs Barnaby and Winter that she suspects the chili is dipped in Capsaicin, an active component of chili peppers, also known as 8-Methyl-N-Vanillyl-6-nonenamide. Rooster Harlin is revealed to be a representative of the actual buyer of Goodman’s Land, but agreed to pretend he was the buyer so that the real buyer could go under the radar. Barnaby and Winter understand that this case is not really about climate change, or ownership to the village of Goodman’s Land. It is later revealed to be something much more dangerous than that, love towards another person. |
Midsomer Murders is a British crime drama mystery television series, adapted by Anthony Horowitz and Douglas Watkinson from the novels in the Chief Inspector Barnaby book series created by Caroline Graham. It has been broadcast on the ITV network since its premiere on 23 March 1997. The series focuses on various murder cases that take place within small country villages across the fictional English county of Midsomer, and the efforts of the senior police detective and his partner within the fictional Midsomer Constabulary to solve the crime by determining who the culprit is and the motive for their actions. It differs from other detective dramas in featuring a mixture of lighthearted whimsy and dark humour, as well as a notable soundtrack with a title theme that includes a theremin.
John Vivian Drummond Nettles, is an English actor and author. He is best known for his starring roles as detectives in the crime drama television series Bergerac (1981–1991) in the title role, and Midsomer Murders (1997–2011) as Detective Chief Inspector Tom Barnaby. He has also narrated several television series.
John Hopkins is an English actor. Some of his best-known roles include Sgt. Dan Scott on Midsomer Murders (2004–2005), Lowell in Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland (2010), and Sir Francis Basset in the British TV series Poldark (2017–2018). In addition to his television and film work, Hopkins also acts on stage and does voiceovers for video games, television and radio.
Daniel Casey is an English actor. He is best known for playing DS Gavin Troy, the original sidekick of DCI Tom Barnaby, for the first six series, with a guest appearance in series eleven, of the long-running television programme Midsomer Murders.
Neil Dudgeon is an English actor who, since 2010, has played DCI John Barnaby in the ITV drama series Midsomer Murders. He replaced John Nettles in the lead role in 2011. Credited role in 1989 film Red King White Knight
Detective Chief Inspector Thomas Geoffrey "Tom" Barnaby is a fictional detective created by English writer Caroline Graham as the protagonist in her Chief Inspector Barnaby novel series and adapted into one of the main characters in the ITV drama Midsomer Murders.
"Electric Vendetta" is the third episode of the fourth season of Midsomer Murders and the sixteenth episode overall. It stars John Nettles as Detective Chief Inspector Tom Barnaby and Daniel Casey as Detective Sergeant Gavin Troy, where in a long-held grudge of forty years triggers a series of deaths disguised as alien abductions.
Betty Kathleen Willingale was a British television producer and script editor, best known for her work on BBC Television adaptations of classic literature in the 1970s and 1980s.
Written in Blood is a crime novel by English author Caroline Graham, first published by Headline in 1994. The story follows Chief Inspector Tom Barnaby as he investigates the murder of a retired civil servant. It is the fourth volume in Graham's Chief Inspector Barnaby series, preceded by Death in Disguise and followed by Faithful unto Death. It has been adapted into an episode in ITV drama Midsomer Murders.
The Killings at Badger's Drift is a mystery novel by English writer Caroline Graham and published by Century in 1987. The story follows Chief Inspector Tom Barnaby investigating the murder of an elderly spinster in a rural village. It is the first volume in Graham's Chief Inspector Barnaby series, followed by Death of a Hollow Man. In 1997, it was adapted as the pilot of Midsomer Murders, a popular ITV television series based on Graham's books.
Faithful unto Death is a crime novel written by English writer Caroline Graham and first published by Headline in 1996. The story follows Chief Inspector Tom Barnaby investigating the case of a missing woman. It is the fifth volume in Graham's Chief Inspector Barnaby series, preceded by Written in Blood and followed by A Place of Safety. It has been adapted into an episode in the ITV drama Midsomer Murders.
Death in Disguise is a crime novel written by English writer Caroline Graham and first published by Headline in 1992. The story follows Chief Inspector Tom Barnaby investigating the murder of a cult member. It is the third volume in Graham's Chief Inspector Barnaby series, preceded by Death of a Hollow Man and followed by Written in Blood. It has been adapted into an episode in the ITV drama Midsomer Murders.
Fiona Dolman is a Scottish actress known for playing Miss Pamela Andrews in the ITV 2008 daytime drama series and spinoff to The Royal, The Royal Today, and Sarah Barnaby in Midsomer Murders.
Sykes was a dog actor from Clifton, Oxfordshire, England. He was best known in the UK for his appearance as Harvey in Thinkbox's television commercial and, under his real name, in Midsomer Murders. He also appeared in several Hollywood blockbusters, as well as a UK TV movie, several series, and a miniseries. Originally found as a stray, he was owned by animal trainer and stunt dog specialist Gill Raddings. Since January 2016 Sykes had been in semi-retirement with him no longer being displayed as available for hire on Gill Raddings' agency website. In September 2016, Midsomer Murders announced that Sykes had retired. He died in June 2019.
"Market For Murder" is the first episode of the fifth series of Midsomer Murders and the twenty second episode overall. It stars John Nettles as Detective Chief Inspector Tom Barnaby and Daniel Casey as Detective Sergeant Gavin Troy.
Gwilym Lee is a British actor. He is best known for his roles in Midsomer Murders (2013–2016), A Song for Jenny (2015), Jamestown (2017), Top End Wedding (2019), The Great (2020–2023), and for playing guitarist Brian May in the Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody (2018).
"The Christmas Haunting" is the first episode in the sixteenth series of Midsomer Murders. The episode aired on Christmas Eve 2013. This series starred DCI John Barnaby. Barnaby was accompanied by new Detective Sergeant Charlie Nelson. In overnight figures, the episode suffered a dip, dropping to 3.66 million viewers, with an audience share of 15.7%. When the episode was repeated on ITV+1 a further 401,300 viewers tuned in, receiving an audience share of 1.8%. The consolidated figure reached 4.92 million viewers.
The Killings of Copenhagen is the 100th episode of the British TV series Midsomer Murders. The episode is also the first where a murder takes place outside the United Kingdom, and only the second outside the fictitious county of Midsomer. It was filmed and produced in late autumn 2013. In Britain this episode first aired on 12 February 2014.
Nick Hendrix is an English actor, best known for his role as Detective Sergeant Jamie Winter in the ITV police detective show Midsomer Murders.