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2002 — Kallt mord; Detective Inspector Irene Huss series #3.1 2002 — Glasdjävulen (English translation: The Glass Devil , 2007); [ 2 ] Detective Inspector Irene Huss series #4 2004 — Guldkalven (English translation: The Golden Calf , 2013); Detective Inspector Irene Huss series #5
Yellow Bird has also produced six TV movies about criminal inspector Irene Huss, based on the books by Helene Tursten. [19] In March 2009 the company acquired the film rights for Norwegian crime writer Anne Holt's books about inspector Yngvar Stubø and Inger Johanne Vik – a psychologist and lawyer with a previous career in the FBI. [20]
Irene Huss is a police detective in novels by Swedish writer Helene Tursten 1998–2007. Books in the series are: Detective Inspector Huss, The Torso, The Glass Devil, Night Rounds, The Golden Calf, The Fire Dance and The Beige Man
“Remember, you have been trained for this,” says a veteran cop to the rookies sitting in the back of a van as they approach a post-soccer match brawl at a local park. But in “Huss” nothing ...
Still Crazy Like a Fox (also known as Crazy Like a Fox: The Movie) is a 1987 American made-for-television thriller drama film based on the 1984–1986 television series Crazy Like a Fox, which reunited Jack Warden and John Rubinstein as a father and son team of private detectives.
Jill Viola Gascoine (11 April 1937 – 28 April 2020) was an English actress and novelist. She portrayed Detective Inspector Maggie Forbes in the 1980s television series The Gentle Touch and its spin-off series C.A.T.S. Eyes.
The principal character in each film is a Detective Inspector, played by a variety of actors but most frequently by Russell Napier (usually portraying Detective Inspector Duggan). [4] Many of the films feature, in supporting roles, actors later to become well-known. [ 5 ]
Maurice Richardson's "The Last Detective Story in the World" (1946) is a Sherlock Holmes pastiche in which Nero Wolfe appears along with many other detectives and villains from crime fiction history. First printed in the May 1946 issue of the British magazine Liliput , the story was reprinted in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine (February 1947).