I love me some Agatha Christie and have seen several adaptations of her works--the good, bad and mediocre-- but I've always had a soft spot in my heart for Murder on the Orient Express. It's the perfect Whodunnit---a large group of people trapped on a train; one of them MUST be the murderer--or are they? Was it someone from the outside? How on Earth could you get away with it and not be seen by someone else? And, of course, as nearly everyone knows, this story covers all of this in probably one of the most contrived ways EVER---but I still love it.
I've seen a few adaptations of it over the years--the Albert Finney movie (excellent), the Alfred Molina tv-movie (which was god-awful) and the David Suchet version (which I ADORE, despite or perhaps because of additional material added to bookend the story). The Branagh version? I didn't like it, as much as I love the story and the actor; it felt rushed, even muddled. The suffering of the people involved was barely discussed; what would actually happen wasn't mentioned. I couldn't help but wonder if someone unfamiliar with the story would even understand what really happened at the end.
There's so little set-up that we really don't get to know the characters at all. You have a wonderful, talented cast, many of whom get only a few lines of dialogue. The wonderful Olivia Coleman gets only a few minutes of dialogue; Dame Judy Dench gets even less, William Defoe even less than that. Branagh's Poirot is fit, active, even daring as he dashes out into the snow ("Poirot" and "dashes" don't belong in the same sentence), dodges bullets and fights men half his age (gimme strength). All we know about him from this film is he's a detecting machine, terribly OCD (but only as a "charming" character trait) and is always right. We get to know nothing of him, why he does what he does or of his devotion to justice. There's a fairly ham-fisted attempt at getting into his thought process at the end but it's really under-whelming. The worst perhaps is that this "final test" takes place at "the big reveal" moment---which is NOT in the train car but rather in the tunnel, as all the main characters are marched out and set up at a makeshift table that for some reason recreates a "Last Supper" scene in the snow (*sigh*).
I really, REALLY wanted to like this, but I was rather disappointed. If you really want to see this, I would suggest waiting until it comes on Netflix or some such; save your money.
So.....any other mystery buffs out there? How do you think it rates with the other versions?
I've seen a few adaptations of it over the years--the Albert Finney movie (excellent), the Alfred Molina tv-movie (which was god-awful) and the David Suchet version (which I ADORE, despite or perhaps because of additional material added to bookend the story). The Branagh version? I didn't like it, as much as I love the story and the actor; it felt rushed, even muddled. The suffering of the people involved was barely discussed; what would actually happen wasn't mentioned. I couldn't help but wonder if someone unfamiliar with the story would even understand what really happened at the end.
There's so little set-up that we really don't get to know the characters at all. You have a wonderful, talented cast, many of whom get only a few lines of dialogue. The wonderful Olivia Coleman gets only a few minutes of dialogue; Dame Judy Dench gets even less, William Defoe even less than that. Branagh's Poirot is fit, active, even daring as he dashes out into the snow ("Poirot" and "dashes" don't belong in the same sentence), dodges bullets and fights men half his age (gimme strength). All we know about him from this film is he's a detecting machine, terribly OCD (but only as a "charming" character trait) and is always right. We get to know nothing of him, why he does what he does or of his devotion to justice. There's a fairly ham-fisted attempt at getting into his thought process at the end but it's really under-whelming. The worst perhaps is that this "final test" takes place at "the big reveal" moment---which is NOT in the train car but rather in the tunnel, as all the main characters are marched out and set up at a makeshift table that for some reason recreates a "Last Supper" scene in the snow (*sigh*).
I really, REALLY wanted to like this, but I was rather disappointed. If you really want to see this, I would suggest waiting until it comes on Netflix or some such; save your money.
So.....any other mystery buffs out there? How do you think it rates with the other versions?