Palmer Arlott invites her estranged relatives to dinner so she can tell them they are getting nothing. Few social occasions are improved by that announcement, and Katherine Wagner’s screenplay has the good sense to let the Arlott dining room become hostile before anyone reaches for a gun.
Nellie Knows Mysteries: All Manners of Murder, directed by David I. Strasser, returns Pascale Hutton’s advice columnist Nellie Parker to amateur detective work after A Fatal Engagement. Palmer contacts Nellie after reading her response to a letter about reconnecting with family to deliver painful news. She then asks Nellie to attend the gathering as a mediator. Nellie brings Detective Michael Hogan, played by Kavan Smith, which proves sensible once Palmer announces that her entire estate will go to her Pomeranian, Moxie.
The power fails. Gunshots follow. Lawyer Adam is found dead, while the damaged headpiece Palmer removes suggests one bullet came close to killing her. The first film strained to justify Nellie’s involvement in a police case. Here, the series appears less embarrassed by its own premise. That confidence matters.
A Family Built From Motives
The Arlotts are arranged around Palmer like beneficiaries waiting for a bank transfer that has suddenly been cancelled. Hux, her property-developer brother, brings the same controlling manner to business and his relationship with his son Teddy, a former professional rugby player sidelined by injury.
Carla’s connection to the family fortune runs through Palmer’s late husband Edmond. Bree, Palmer and Hux’s half-sister, already feels pushed to the edge of the family before Palmer’s announcement confirms every grievance she carries.
Wagner gives the murder a clean structural pressure point. Palmer plans to formalize her new will the next morning. Anyone hoping to preserve a claim on her wealth has a limited window to act. Adam’s death complicates the apparent plan, since the initial theory assumes the killer meant to shoot Palmer and hit her lawyer instead.
The screenplay keeps revising that theory as Nellie and Michael interview the dinner guests. Secrets alter relationships, motives shift, and the final explanation continues disclosing information after the physical details of the shooting seem settled. One part of the mystery can be anticipated fairly early, but identifying a piece of the machinery is different from understanding who switched it on.
The film is less disciplined about urgency. Nellie and Michael spend long stretches talking through the Arlott disputes, and the family melodrama sometimes occupies the foreground while Adam’s corpse becomes an administrative concern somewhere off-screen. Cozy mysteries have always understood that murder is a remarkably effective excuse for conversation. This one occasionally enjoys the conversation too much.
Still, the Arlotts have specific reasons to resent Palmer and each other. Their quarrels are attached to money, exclusion, parental control, and old family hierarchies. The suspect list has shape rather than simple quantity.
Nellie and Michael Settle In
Sheriff Burgi’s decision to use Nellie as a consultant quietly fixes one of the first film’s largest problems. Nellie no longer has to wander into police work while everyone politely ignores procedure. Her observational skills are acknowledged, and Michael can treat her theories as part of the investigation.
The funniest example comes when Nellie explains, with alarming enthusiasm, how each dinner guest might have concealed a gun. Every possibility she identifies expands Michael’s workload. The joke works because it emerges from their investigative roles: Nellie sees possibilities; Michael has to document them.
Hutton and Smith understand this rhythm. Their familiarity gives Nellie and Michael’s early romance an unusual texture. The characters are still testing a relationship, yet their banter has the timing of people who have already memorized each other’s reactions. Michael spotting his ex-wife Leah catering Palmer’s dinner and responding by hiding in the bushes is particularly useful. Smith plays the retreat with enough embarrassment to make Michael look foolish without turning him into a fool.
Leah’s later presence on the suspect board brings the romantic awkwardness into the murder case. The script also places Nellie and Michael on that board because they were present at the crime scene. Viewers know neither is the killer, but the procedural gesture gives the investigation a welcome sense of rules.
Nellie’s guilt carries greater weight. She tells Michael that Palmer arranged the dinner after following advice from her column, and Adam might still be alive had the gathering never happened. Michael’s reassurance does something the case mechanics cannot: it forces Nellie to consider the cost of being invited into strangers’ problems.
The broader comic behavior of A Fatal Engagement has been reduced. Hutton’s Nellie feels calmer, Smith gets room to reveal Michael’s compassionate side and fragments of his past, and their exchanges no longer seem written to remind viewers every thirty seconds that a mystery franchise is supposed to be charming.
The Manor and the Franchise Map
Palmer’s house does considerable character work before the investigation spreads elsewhere. Black walls surround the dining room, gold frames cut through the darkness, and a maroon rug sits against the cherry wood floor and furniture. The chandelier and carved fireplace turn the room into a display of inherited permanence. Then Palmer announces that the dog gets everything. Production design, meet punchline.
The costumes work with similar clarity. Nellie’s pink tweed jacket is balanced by black trousers, gold details, and green accessories. Palmer’s blue-gray tweed jacket, pale blouse, and powder-blue trousers give her the immaculate presentation of someone accustomed to controlling both money and atmosphere. These choices separate the women visually without resorting to theatrical caricature.
Eli Flint’s appearance from True Justice: Family Ties is less successful. A shared Hallmark mystery world could allow different investigative styles to collide, especially with Nellie and Michael already learning how to work together. Eli appears in only a couple of scenes and contributes little to the case. His presence reads like a note pinned to the franchise calendar: remember this man for later.
That is an industry impulse Hallmark understands very well. Familiar faces, repeatable pairings, lightly connected properties. Yet All Manners of Murder makes its strongest case for another installment through simpler material. Nellie complicates Michael’s investigation by finding too many possibilities. Michael hides from his ex in shrubbery. Palmer detonates a family dinner with one sentence about a Pomeranian. The series finally has a rhythm sturdy enough to survive another corpse.
The cozy TV movie mystery Nelly Knows Mysteries: All Manners of Murder premiered on Hallmark Mystery on March 14, 2026. Viewers looking to watch the second installment of the franchise can stream it on demand via Hallmark+ or purchase it through digital services like Amazon Prime Video. The story follows a sharp-witted advice columnist and a local detective who join forces to unravel an intricate web of secrets when a guest is found dead at a lavish family inheritance dinner party.
Where to Watch Nelly Knows Mysteries: All Manners of Murder (2026) Online
Full Credits
Title: Nelly Knows Mysteries: All Manners of Murder
Distributor: Hallmark Mystery, Hallmark+
Release date: March 14, 2026
Rating: TV-PG
Running time: 84 minutes
Director: David I. Strasser
Writers: Katherine Wagner
Producers and Executive Producers: Charles Cooper, Allen Lewis, Aren Prupas, David I. Strasser
Cast: Pascale Hutton, Kavan Smith, Crystal Lowe, Markian Tarasiuk, Paul McGillion, Veronica Long, Laura Soltis, Gabrielle Rose, Vincent Gale, Barry W. Levy, James Paladino, Daylin Willis, Andrea Reindl, Victoria Dunsmore
Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Production Cinematography Crew
Editors: Production Editorial Team
Composer: Hallmark Sound Department
The Review
Nellie Knows Mysteries: All Manners of Murder
Nellie Knows Mysteries: All Manners of Murder understands that cozy mystery audiences will forgive a leisurely investigation when the people conducting it are this agreeable. The Arlott inheritance dispute supplies a crowded field of motives, while Nellie’s guilt over the dinner gives the case welcome emotional consequence. The film loses some momentum when family arguments overtake the actual detective work, and Eli Flint’s brief crossover appearance feels like franchise bookkeeping. Pascale Hutton and Kavan Smith carry the picture through easy, character-based chemistry.
PROS
- Strong Nellie and Michael chemistry
- Richly staged manor setting
- Distinct suspects and motives
- Nellie's guilt adds emotional weight
- Calmer, sharper humor
CONS
- Investigation lacks urgency
- Family drama slows the case
- Eli Flint is underused
- Some franchise setup feels obvious






















































