
Stranger in Town
Drama · TV Movie
Overview
A 13-year-old boy, whose single mother moved her family from the big city to a small town, begins to suspect that a stranger who befriends his family is not who he initially appears to be. Harry Hamlin, Graham Green, Rebecca Jenkins and Trevor Blumas star.
Top Cast


Harry Hamlin
Harry Hamlin
Jack
Harry Hamlin
Jack


Rebecca Jenkins
Rebecca Jenkins
Katherine
Rebecca Jenkins
Katherine


Graham Greene
Graham Greene
Eddie Lester
Graham Greene
Eddie Lester


Trevor Blumas
Trevor Blumas
Aaron
Trevor Blumas
Aaron


Alison Pill
Alison Pill
Hetty
Alison Pill
Hetty


Carly McKillip
Carly McKillip
Kim
Carly McKillip
Kim


Chad Krowchuk
Chad Krowchuk
Patrick
Chad Krowchuk
Patrick
Trevor Steve
Trevor Steve
Wimpy
Trevor Steve
Wimpy


Shaun Johnston
Shaun Johnston
Police Chief Waller
Shaun Johnston
Police Chief Waller
Iain MacLean
Iain MacLean
Officer Nichols
Iain MacLean
Officer Nichols
Similar Movies

Marinov is found dead, and suspects include Baev, Dimov, and Zhana. The Inspector, who deals with life’s dark side, investigates. Despite his loneliness, he shows compassion, especially towards Zhana. Ultimately, he concludes Marinov committed suicide and demonstrates that people can embrace higher morality. Based on the detective book by Bogomil Raynov.

14th-century Franciscan monk William of Baskerville and his young novice arrive at a conference to find that several monks have been murdered under mysterious circumstances. To solve the crimes, William must rise up against the Church's authority and fight the shadowy conspiracy of monastery monks using only his intelligence; which is considerable.

Humberto Ortiz, a frustrated journalist, becomes obsessed with discovering what happened one early morning in November, when Maribel Angarita allegedly murdered her usual attacker, his partner Rafael. The investigation of what appears to be a simple chronicle becomes an elusive metaphor for the conflict of an entire country.

Agatha Christie’s agents propose that it’s time for her to publish the manuscript she wrote thirty-five years earlier, a novel in which she finally kills off her most famous creation. And it’s not an entirely sad occasion. “That wretched little man,” she says. “He’s always been so much trouble. How is it Miss Marple has never upset me at all, not ever?” That night, who should appear at her doorstep but the wretched little man himself, Hercule Poirot? The great fictional detective and his creator proceed to play a very Christie-like game of cat and mouse for the manuscript – and for their own lives.
















