CBS and Paramount+ detonated the most audacious reboot in television history: Murder, She Wrote 2025. Gone is the gentle Cabot Cove cardigan-and-tea vibe of the 1984–1996 original. In its place stands a sleek, blood-soaked espionage machine starring 66-year-old Jamie Lee Curtis as a reinvented Jessica Fletcher — older, deadlier, and gloriously unapologetic.

The premise is pure adrenaline: thirty years after retiring from the bestseller list, Jessica Fletcher is dragged back into the game when a former CIA asset she once helped disappears in Prague. What begins as a favor spirals into a globe-spanning conspiracy involving black-site prisons, leaked Pentagon files, and a kill list with Fletcher’s name at the very top. George Clooney, executive producing and guest-starring as a charming but treacherous Langley veteran, and Tom Selleck, reprising a grizzled version of his 1980s recurring character Frank Hackett (now a disgraced ex-NYPD commissioner), form an uneasy alliance with Curtis’s unstoppable sleuth.

Jamie Lee Curtis Confirms 'Murder, She Wrote' Reboot

“She’s not solving murders over scones anymore,” Curtis told Variety in a cover story that crashed the magazine’s website. “This Jessica has seen things. She’s lost people. And she’s done asking nicely.”

The transformation is breathtaking. Showrunner Michelle King (The Good Fight) and director Susanne Bier (The Night Manager) have turned the cozy mystery formula inside out: no more bicycle rides and knitting circles. Instead, we get drone strikes in Marrakesh, brutal interrogations in abandoned Baltic warehouses, and a mid-season twist that sees Jessica waterboard a U.S. Senator on live television (off-camera, naturally, but the implication is chilling).

Critics who attended the world premiere at the Paris Theater in New York last week are still reeling. The Hollywood Reporter called it “a masterclass in reinvention — Jessica Fletcher just became John Wick in sensible shoes.” Variety dubbed Curtis “the most dangerous woman on television,” praising her ability to shift from warm grandmother to cold-blooded avenger in the space of a single close-up. The Guardian went further: “This isn’t a reboot. It’s a hostile takeover of the entire genre.”

Early episodes are relentless. Episode one ends with Fletcher discovering her own obituary pre-written on a dark-web forum. Episode three features a 12-minute single-take chase through the souks of Fez that rivals Children of Men. And Clooney, sporting silver hair and a limp from an old Kabul injury, delivers what insiders call “the darkest performance of his career” as a man who may or may not be trying to recruit — or eliminate — Jessica.

Selleck, now 80 but moving like a man half his age, brings heartbreaking gravitas as Hackett, a former admirer turned reluctant protector. Their chemistry crackles; a quiet scene over bourbon in a safe house is already being called Emmy gold.

The original Angela Lansbury estate gave its blessing, with Lansbury’s children releasing a statement: “Our mother always said Jessica Fletcher could evolve with the times. Jamie has honored that wish in ways we never imagined.”

Ratings for the two-hour premiere shattered Paramount+ records, outpacing even Yellowstone’s final season. Social media exploded with #JessicaFletcherIsOverParty and #GrandmaGotGuns trending worldwide. TikTok is flooded with edits of Curtis’s ice-cold stare set to trap beats.

Love it or hate it, one thing is undeniable: the queen of mystery is back, and this time she’s writing in blood. Murder, She Wrote 2025 isn’t just television’s biggest gamble of the decade — it might just be its greatest triumph.