Episode
Murder, She Wrote: Threshold of Fear
Overview
A recluse is terrified when the killer she sees in her dreams tries to see her in real life.
Details
- Series
- Murder, She Wrote
- Season
- Season 9
- Episode
- Episode 16
- Air date
- 1993-02-28
- Runtime
- 45 min
Episode context
Threshold of Fear is Episode 16 in Season 9 of Murder, She Wrote. It aired on 1993-02-28. The runtime is 45 min.
Previous / Next
Episode 15: The Petrified Florist
Was a Beverly Hills florist killed because he was supplying more than flowers for gossip magazine editors?
Episode 17: The Big Kill
The town is concerned when a local fisherman dies, but concern turns to confusion when a second body is discovered aboard a fishing boat. Both men died from carbon monoxide poisoning, but seem to have no connection until the fisherman's daughter receives her father's logbook and nautical charts in the mail.
More episodes from this season
Episode 14: Killer Radio
The prospective owner of a radio station in the prairies is killed before the sale goes through.
Episode 18: Dead to Rights
Jessica knows her former researcher is a congenital liar, so why should she believe her now?
Episode 13: Dead Eye
Are the disappearance of a private eye in 1963 and the Kennedy assassination of the same year connected?
Episode 19: Lone Witness
A delivery boy says he was only a witness when he is found kneeling beside the victim.
Episode 12: Double Jeopardy
The confessional is the site of the last rites as an estranged father seeks absolution from his priest son.
Episode 20: Ship of Thieves
A pleasant cruise is marred by the discovery that there are thieves on board and possibly a murderer.
Episode 11: Final Curtain
The personal manager of a 'resting' actor dies just as his client returns to the stage.
Episode 21: The Survivor
Jessica's computer tech becomes an inadvertent target when she dates an undercover cop, whom she has just met.
Episode 10: The Sound of Murder
The last sound the producer hears is not from a record.
Episode 22: Love's Deadly Desire
The death of a novelist's assistant seemed to be a case of mistaken identity.