Miss Marple is a fictional character in numerous crime novels and short stories by Agatha Christie. Jane Marple lives in the village of St. Mary Mead and acts as an amateur consulting detective. Often characterized as an elderly spinster, she is one of Christie's best-known characters. And yet she had to wait thirty-one years after her first appearance in print in 1930 to appear on the big-screen for the first time. Murder, She Said (1961) was the first in a sequence of films directed by George Pollock and starring Margaret Rutherford as Jane Marple. This was followed by Murder at the Gallop in 1963, Murder Most Foul in 1964, and Murder Ahoy also in 1964.
Murder She Said

NR1h 27m7.3

Watch Murder She Said

Miss Jane Marple's testimony of a murder is met with skepticism by the police, who dismiss it as a fabrication despite the lack of physical evidence.

Murder at the Gallop

NR1h 21m7.2

Watch Murder at the Gallop

In the midst of a patriarch's unexpected death, allegedly caused by a cat's sudden appearance, renowned detective Miss Jane Marple uncovers a complex web of lies and deceit among his four relatives, each harboring secrets and motives to benefit from his passing.

Murder Most Foul

NR1h 30m7.1

Watch Murder Most Foul

A renowned detective must unravel a web of secrets and deceit to uncover the identity of the killer among a troupe of theater performers after a blackmailer is murdered.

Murder Ahoy

NR1h 33m7

Watch Murder Ahoy

Murder strikes at sea when a mysterious poisoning leads to a series of tragic events on a merchant marine training vessel, prompting the wise and sharp-eyed Miss Jane Marple to unravel the tangled web of secrets and lies.

Miss Marple background