The Remorseful Day (Inspector Morse)

"The Remorseful Day"
Inspector Morse episode
Episode no. Episode special
Directed by Jack Gold
Written by Stephen Churchett (screenplay)
Original air date 15 November 2000
Guest actors

"The Remorseful Day" is the final episode of the British television detective mystery show Inspector Morse. Based on the novel The Remorseful Day by Colin Dexter, the screenplay was written by Stephen Churchett and directed by Jack Gold. It was first broadcast on 15 November 2000 on ITV.

Plot

Yvonne Harrison (Meg Davies) is found by her husband Frank (Paul Freeman); she has been murdered and left in a sexually compromising position. Morse is taken off the case after two months and no progress is made until an anonymous letter suggesting that Harry Repp (Eddie Webber), who is to be released from prison, may be the perpetrator.

Because of Morse's failing health, Sergeant Lewis assumes a more active role. Paddy Flynn (James Benson), the cab driver who drove Frank Harrison to his home on the night of the murder, is found dead in a local rubbish dump. Harry Repp is also found dead, in the boot of a stolen car. A local lothario, John Barron (Jesse Birdsall), is killed in a fall from a ladder. It turns out that the three men were blackmailing whoever killed Yvonne, and it further appears that Barron killed the other two so that he could keep the blackmail money for himself.

It is revealed that Sandra Harrison (Anna Wilson-Jones) had killed her mother in a jealous rage over John Barron, while Sandra's illegitimate half-brother Roy (Aidan David) says he killed Barron under instructions from Frank. But then a teenage boy admits to having caused Barron to fall off the ladder by crashing into it with his bicycle.

Just after uncovering the truth, Morse collapses and later dies in hospital of a heart attack.[1] His last words are "Thank Lewis for me".

Production notes

John Thaw, who played Morse and executive produced this episode, died on 21 February 2002, 15 months after this last episode aired. In the United States, this episode was separated into two parts.

References

  1. Leonard, Bill (2004). The Oxford of Inspector Morse. BFS Entertainment & Multimedia Limited. p. 77. ISBN 0-7792-0754-8.