The Green Man
- Episode aired Nov 2, 2003
- TV-14
- 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Barnaby and Troy tackle two separate cases as Troy prepares to leave Midsomer after his promotion to DI.Barnaby and Troy tackle two separate cases as Troy prepares to leave Midsomer after his promotion to DI.Barnaby and Troy tackle two separate cases as Troy prepares to leave Midsomer after his promotion to DI.
Photos
Jamie Thomas King
- Steven Curtis
- (as Jamie King)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaCherie Lunghi plays Lillian Webster in this episode. She returns in episode 18.4, A Dying Art (2016), in the role of Alexandra Monkford.
- GoofsAt multiple points purportedly wild owls perched on branches or flying through the forest are seen to have straps or jesses on their legs indicating they are in fact captive birds brought to the woods for filming.
- Quotes
Constable Crabbe: There's a surprising quantity of dead people in there.
- ConnectionsReferences The Land That Time Forgot (1974)
Featured review
A great send off for Sergeant Troy.
The Green Man is a quality episode of Midsomer Murders, it would have been an injustice if Daniel Casey left with a dud episode, fortunately Troy leaves on a high.
The Green Man boasts a great story, fantastic characters, strong production values, plenty for Fox lovers, and a great goodbye scene for Troy. Despite all of those super ingredients, the standout factor, which makes this one so good, is the performance of David Bradley, he is absolutely fantastic as Tom, his acting is so sincere, so believable, I particularly loved his scenes with Barnaby.
Great character development for Troy, when you see him in this, and compare him in earlier episodes, his character really did grow up, credit to Casey's acting. There are some great scenes where Troy and Barnaby are wary about stepping on one another's toes.
Credit to the animal trainers here too, the scenes with the foxes, owl and Deer are so wonderful.
Very good indeed. 9/10
The Green Man boasts a great story, fantastic characters, strong production values, plenty for Fox lovers, and a great goodbye scene for Troy. Despite all of those super ingredients, the standout factor, which makes this one so good, is the performance of David Bradley, he is absolutely fantastic as Tom, his acting is so sincere, so believable, I particularly loved his scenes with Barnaby.
Great character development for Troy, when you see him in this, and compare him in earlier episodes, his character really did grow up, credit to Casey's acting. There are some great scenes where Troy and Barnaby are wary about stepping on one another's toes.
Credit to the animal trainers here too, the scenes with the foxes, owl and Deer are so wonderful.
Very good indeed. 9/10
helpful•501
- Sleepin_Dragon
- Oct 2, 2018
Details
- Runtime1 hour 42 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 4:3
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