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Seasons & Episodes

1
EP1  The Golden Spiders
Dec. 24,1981
The Golden Spiders

A boy is injured in his attempt to tell Nero about an abduction he's witnessed, to which the only clue is a pair of golden spider earrings worn by the victim.

EP2  Death on the Doorstep
Dec. 24,1981
Death on the Doorstep

Nero becomes involved when Archie's college football teammate Barney is found dead on his doorstep.

EP3  Before I Die
Dec. 24,1981
Before I Die

Nero must narrow down the suspects when a beautiful girl is killed after being hired by a mobster to act as a decoy for his daughter.

EP4  Wolfe at the Door
Dec. 24,1981
Wolfe at the Door

Nero leaves his brownstone when called to identify Archie's body at the morgue, only to find that it was an impostor and Archie is accused of his murder.

EP5  Might As Well Be Dead
Dec. 24,1981
Might As Well Be Dead

Nero locates a young man who has been missing for nine years, only to find that he is on trial for murder.

EP6  To Catch a Dead Man
Dec. 24,1981
To Catch a Dead Man

Nero and Archie's lives are in danger because someone does not want them to locate the missing CEO of a large shipping firm.

EP7  In the Best of Families
Dec. 24,1981
In the Best of Families

Nero is hired by a wealthy socialite to learn the source of the large sums of money her playboy husband has been throwing around.

EP8  Murder by the Book
Dec. 24,1981
Murder by the Book

Nero and Archie use a computer to figure out the connection among three murders, an apparent suicide, and a missing manuscript.

EP9  What Happened to April?
Dec. 24,1981
What Happened to April?

Nero suspects it was no accident when the dead body of a woman who specialized in an underwater striptease is found floating in the East River.

EP10  Gambit
Dec. 24,1981
Gambit

A brilliant criminal with a grudge booby-traps Nero's apartment.

EP11  Death and the Dolls
Dec. 24,1981
Death and the Dolls

The daughter of a wealthy sportsman urges Nero to investigate her father's death.

EP12  The Murder in Question
Dec. 24,1981
The Murder in Question

A former prosecutor's wife and then his secretary are killed in apparent attempts on his life.

EP13  Blue Ribbon Hostage
Dec. 24,1981
Blue Ribbon Hostage

A hood kidnaps one of Nero's priceless orchids in order to force Nero to prove his innocence in a murder.

EP14  Sweet Revenge
Dec. 24,1981
Sweet Revenge

Two paid killers track Nero and Archie.

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Nero Wolfe Trailers

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Nero Wolfe enjoys a life of refined self-indulgence in his comfortable Manhattan brownstone — reading, dining, spending regular hours in his rooftop plant rooms, and only reluctantly involving himself in the detection of crime. Famously sedentary, Wolfe relies on his legman Archie Goodwin to collect the clues and the suspects in any case at hand, while he spars with his live-in chef Fritz Brenner and bickers with his resident orchid nurse Theodore Horstmann. Often assisted by freelance detective Saul Panzer, Wolfe and Archie customarily gather the suspects in Wolfe's office and present the solution to the exasperated Inspector Cramer of Manhattan Homicide.

Nero Wolfe Audience Reviews

Platicsco Good story, Not enough for a whole film
Neive Bellamy Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
Roy Hart If you're interested in the topic at hand, you should just watch it and judge yourself because the reviews have gone very biased by people that didn't even watch it and just hate (or love) the creator. I liked it, it was well written, narrated, and directed and it was about a topic that interests me.
Darin One of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.
loza-1 I had never come across the character Nero Wolfe before, and I had never read any of Rex Stout's books. Then I saw this.I had seen William Conrad before in Canon. Here he is playing a different role. He is more selfish and testy than Canon, and barks out orders to the three people who work for him, and is rude to everybody else. Yet he still has a streak of affability that makes him likable.To me, this seemed strange. A man who is a private detective, but is obese to the point of invalidity, so he never leaves the house, and travels about the brownstone in an elevator. He hires a younger, fitter man to do all the legwork for him. He has a greenhouse on top of his brownstone, where, with the help of an ex-employee of a British botanical garden, he keeps and cultivates rare orchids. He also employs a chef to cook rich food for him. I must have seen all manner of TV detectives, but I had never seen anything like this before.I thought William Conrad was brilliant. He was genuinely funny. As well as a case that had to be solved, there were also the interchanges between Wolfe and the wisecracking Archie. The arguments between Wolfe and Theodore in the greenhouse; and between Wolfe and Fritz in the kitchen are hilarious. The row between Wolfe and Fritz about which portions of garlic and saffron to put into the marinade for the shish kebab is classic. In one episode Wolfe pours a bottle of Dutch beer into a pint mug, then drinks the lot down in one draught. In another episode, Archie tells the police that Wolfe takes his exercise by throwing darts from his bedside, then walks round the bed to collect the darts from the dartboard.Sadly they only made one series of this, so maybe the show didn't catch on, or maybe they stopped it because George Voskovec, who played Fritz, sadly died.Watch this series. It will change your life!
Ellen Evans This was my introduction to Nero Wolfe, starting a happy 3+ decade relationship with Rex Stout's detective fiction. While this series didn't use the period settings that the later A&E series did, it has my affection for a number of reasons.First, William Conrad. He is certainly a less gifted actor than Maury Chaikin, but his voice is marvelous, and he uses the declarative, falling cadence that Stout's punctuation indicates. "Archie. I read it because it is a book. And I read books." Chaikin too often uses a rising cadence, which took getting used to, for me.Second, most, if not all (I am going from memory here) the episodes were, as with the A&E series, adaptations of actual Stout stories and novels, which was also welcome for me as a new reader.Sure, one could say I like the series because it set the tone of the characters for me, and that likely has a good bit of truth. But I've noticed that, among my acquaintance, the greatest fans of the books are the least enthusiastic about the A&E series, and more tolerant of this series. My husband won't watch the old series when we find it on TV, and doesn't like the books. He loves the A&E series. I also am fond of the A&E series, mostly for the affection with which it was so obviously made, for the period sets, and for the wonderful repertory-ensemble cast, with best acting honors to Kari Marchett, who makes every episode she is in sing.But see this series for a different and valid take, and the best-voiced Nero Wolfe I know of.
oxie_h I thought Lee Horsley was the definitive Archie Goodwin, and I'd like to know if this series will ever be released on DVD. Although I like Timothy Hutton (in the AE version), he's a little too polished for the role of AG and Maury Chaykin a little too vehement for Nero Wolfe. I had not seen the AE version of Nero Wolfe until recently when I checked the DVDs out of our local library. I enjoyed them, but I'm a real fan of the Nero Wolfe books; and the characterizations of Wolfe and Goodwin were just a little "off." I remember the 1981 series set me to reading the books, and I had no difficulty visualizing Lee Horsley as the wise-cracking Archie. I would love to see this older series again.
eiffler123 Lee Horsley was the perfect Archie Goodwin. I'm a big fan of the books & when I read them I can see only Horsley as that character. He can come & rescue me anytime!!! William Conrad was also very good as Wolfe. I wish that they still showed them on tv so I would have a chance to tape them .