Murder on the Orient Express (1974 film)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Murder on the Orient Express
Original British quad format film poster
Directed bySidney Lumet
Screenplay byPaul Dehn
Based onMurder on the Orient Express
1934 novel
by Agatha Christie
Produced byJohn Brabourne
Richard Goodwin
Starring
Cinematography
Anglo-EMI Film Distributors
Release date
  • 21 November 1974 (1974-11-21) (UK)
Running time
128 minutes[1]
CountryUnited Kingdom[2]
LanguageEnglish
Budget£554,100 ($1.4 million)[3][dubious ]
Box office$37.7 million[4]

Murder on the Orient Express is a 1974 British

John Brabourne and Richard Goodwin, and based on the 1934 novel of the same name by Agatha Christie
.

The film features the Belgian detective, Hercule Poirot (Albert Finney), who is asked to investigate the murder of an American business tycoon aboard the Orient Express train. The suspects are portrayed by an all-star cast, including Lauren Bacall, Ingrid Bergman, Sean Connery, John Gielgud, Jean-Pierre Cassel, Vanessa Redgrave, Michael York, Rachel Roberts, Jacqueline Bisset, Anthony Perkins, Richard Widmark and Wendy Hiller. The screenplay is by Paul Dehn.

The film was a commercial and critical success. Bergman won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, and the film received five other nominations at the 47th Academy Awards: Best Actor (Finney), Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Original Score, Best Cinematography, and Best Costume Design.

Plot

The film's opening shows news clippings of the 1930 kidnapping and murder of Daisy Armstrong, the toddler daughter of wealthy British Army Colonel Hamish Armstrong and his wife, Sonia.

In December 1935, famed detective Hercule Poirot travels from Istanbul to London on the Orient Express. His old friend, Signor Bianchi, a director of the company that owns the rail line, arranged Poirot's accommodations after all first-class compartments were uncharacteristically sold out during the off-season. Other passengers include American widow Harriet Hubbard; English governess Mary Debenham; Swedish missionary Greta Ohlsson; American businessman Samuel Ratchett, who is accompanied by his secretary/translator Hector McQueen and English valet Edward Beddoes; Italian-American car salesman Antonio ("Gino") Foscarelli; elderly Russian Princess Natalia Dragomiroff and her German maid, Hildegarde Schmidt; Hungarian Count Rudolf Andrenyi and his wife Elena; British Indian Army Colonel John Arbuthnott; and American theatrical agent Cyrus Hardman.

Ratchett wishes to hire Poirot as a bodyguard after receiving written death threats; Poirot declines, finding Ratchett's case uninteresting. Bianchi, who has given Poirot his own compartment, shares a coach with Stavros Constantine, a Greek physician. A snowdrift between Vinkovci and Brod in Yugoslavia strands the train until a rescue engine arrives. During the night, Poirot is awakened by a loud moan from Ratchett's compartment that is next to his. Ratchett calls out to the night conductor, Pierre Michel that it was merely a nightmare. Ratchett is found dead the next morning. Dr. Constantine ascertains that Ratchett was stabbed twelve times in a distorted pattern and with varying accuracy and lethality.

Poirot investigates and finds a charred letter fragment which ultimately reveals Ratchett was gangster Lanfranco Cassetti. Five years earlier, Cassetti planned Daisy Armstrong's kidnapping and murder. Cassetti betrayed his accomplice and fled the country with the ransom money. Shortly after, the distraught Mrs. Armstrong died giving premature birth to a stillborn baby. Colonel Armstrong, grief-stricken, died of suicide. French maidservant Paulette, wrongly suspected of complicity in the kidnapping, also died of suicide before being found innocent. Poirot finds an overabundance of clues, including a pipe cleaner, an expensive handkerchief with the initial "H", Cassetti's broken watch, and a conductor's uniform button. Poirot determines that Cassetti was murdered at about 1:15 a.m., the time shown on the smashed watch and when the moaning was heard. As the coach was isolated through the night, the murderer must be among the coach's passengers or is the train's conductor, Pierre Michel. Mrs. Hubbard reports a man was in her compartment, and the bloodied discarded knife is found there. Foscarelli believes Cassetti's murder was due to a Mafia feud.

Poirot interviews the passengers and Pierre. He learns McQueen is the son of the

District Attorney in the Armstrong case and knew Mrs. Armstrong; Beddoes was a British Army batman; Greta Ohlsson, who speaks limited English, has been to America; Countess Andrenyi is of German descent. Her maiden name is Grünwald (German for "Greenwood", Mrs. Armstrong's maiden name); Michel's daughter died five years earlier of scarlet fever; Colonel Arbuthnott is knowledgeable of Armstrong's military decorations and reveals he and Miss Debenham will marry once his divorce from his philandering wife is finalized. Poirot questions Princess Dragomiroff and discovers she was a friend of Linda Arden, retired American actress and Mrs. Armstrong's mother; the Princess was Sonia's godmother. He also learns that the Armstrong household had a butler, a secretary, a cook, a chauffeur, and a nursemaid. Poirot flatters the Princess' maid, Schmidt, which reveals she was a cook. Foscarelli denies having been a chauffeur. Hardman reveals he is actually a Pinkerton
detective hired as Cassetti's bodyguard. When Poirot shows him Paulette's photo, he is visibly shaken.

Poirot gathers the suspects and describes two solutions to the murder. The first suggests Cassetti's murder was a Mafia killing - an unknown man disguised as a conductor, stabbed Cassetti, discarded the uniform, then escaped the train through the snow. Bianchi and Dr. Constantine reject this scenario as absurd but Poirot tells them they may later reconsider that opinion.

The second links all the suspects in the coach to the Armstrong case. In addition to the self-incriminating revelations Poirot extracted from Hardman, McQueen, Schmidt, and the Princess, the detective has deduced that Countess Elena is actually Mrs. Armstrong's younger sister, Helena. Mary Debenham was the Armstrongs' secretary. Beddoes was the Armstrongs' butler; Ohlsson was Daisy's nursemaid; Colonel Arbuthnott was Armstrong's close friend; Foscarelli was the family's chauffeur; Pierre was Paulette's father; Hardman is a former policeman who was in love with Paulette; and Mrs. Hubbard is Linda Arden, Mrs. Armstrong's mother. McQueen drugged Cassetti, rendering him unconscious and allowing the conspirators to jointly execute him (the Andrenyis stabbing together), totaling 12 – the typical jury complement. The moan and broken watch were provided by McQueen to convince Poirot the murder occurred earlier and when the other suspects would have an alibi. The suspects killed Cassetti after 2:00 a.m. when Poirot was asleep.

Poirot asks Bianchi to choose one solution before the train is freed from the snowdrift, but admits that the Yugoslavian police will prefer the simpler one. Bianchi, in sympathy with the suspects after learning how evil Cassetti was, proposes the first scenario. Dr. Constantine and Poirot concur, though Poirot struggles with his conscience. The train is freed and resumes its journey.

Cast

Production

Development

Dame

Tales of Beatrix Potter.[5]

Casting

Ingrid Bergman received her third Academy Award for her performance in Murder on the Orient Express

Christie's biographer Gwen Robyns quoted her as saying, "It was well made except for one mistake. It was Albert Finney, as my detective Hercule Poirot. I wrote that he had the finest moustache in England—and he didn't in the film. I thought that a pity—why shouldn't he?"[6]

Cast members eagerly accepted upon first being approached. Lumet went to Sean Connery first, who admitted that he had been "stupidly flattered" by Lumet saying that if you get the biggest star, the rest will come along. Bergman was initially offered the role of Princess Dragomiroff, but instead requested to play Greta Ohlsson. Lumet said:

She had chosen a small part, and I couldn't persuade her to change her mind. She was sweetly stubborn. But stubborn she was ... Since her part was so small, I decided to film her one big scene, where she talks for almost five minutes, straight, all in one long take. A lot of actresses would have hesitated over that. She loved the idea and made the most of it. She ran the gamut of emotions. I've never seen anything like it.[7]: 246–247 

Bergman won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for the portrayal.

The entire budget was provided by EMI. The cost of the cast came to £554,100.[3][dubious ]

Filming

Unsworth shot the film with

Istanbul station. The scenes of the train proceeding through Central Europe were filmed in the Jura Mountains on the then-recently closed railway line from Pontarlier to Gilley, with the scenes of the train stuck in snow being filmed in a cutting near Montbenoît.[8] There were concerns about a lack of snow in the weeks preceding the scheduled shooting of the snowbound train, and plans were made to truck in large quantities of snow at considerable expense. However, heavy snowfall the night before the shooting made the extra snow unnecessary—just as well, as the snow-laden backup trucks had themselves become stuck in the snow.[9]

Music

Richard Rodney Bennett's Orient Express theme has been reworked into an orchestral suite and performed and recorded several times. It was performed on the original soundtrack album by the Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden under Marcus Dods. The piano soloist was the composer himself.

Reception

Box office

Murder on the Orient Express was released theatrically in the UK on 24 November 1974. The film was a success at the box office, given its tight budget of $1.4 million,[10] earning $36 million in North America,[10][11] making it the 11th highest-grossing film of 1974. Nat Cohen claimed it was the first film completely financed by a British company to make the top of the weekly US box office charts in Variety.[12]

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 90% based on 42 reviews, with an average rating of 7.8/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Murder, intrigue, and a star-studded cast make this stylish production of Murder on the Orient Express one of the best Agatha Christie adaptations to see the silver screen."[13] On Metacritic it has a weighted average score of 63 out of 100, based on 8 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[14]

Roger Ebert gave the film three stars out of four, writing that it "provides a good time, high style, a loving salute to an earlier period of filmmaking".[15] The New York Times's chief critic of the era, Vincent Canby, wrote

[...] had Dame Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express been made into a movie 40 years ago (when it was published here as Murder on the Calais Coach), it would have been photographed in black-and-white on a back lot in

Culver City, with one or two stars and a dozen character actors and studio contract players. Its running time would have been around 67 minutes and it could have been a very respectable B-picture. Murder on the Orient Express wasn't made into a movie 40 years ago, and after you see the Sidney Lumet production that opened yesterday at the Coronet, you may be both surprised and glad it wasn't. An earlier adaptation could have interfered with plans to produce this terrifically entertaining super-valentine to a kind of whodunit that may well be one of the last fixed points in our inflationary universe.[16]

Agatha Christie

Christie, who died fourteen months after the release of the film, stated that Murder on the Orient Express and

hirsute creation she had detailed in her mysteries.[5]

Awards and nominations

Year Award ceremony Category Nominee Result
2005 Satellite Awards Best Classic DVD Murder on the Orient Express Nominated
1976 Grammy Awards Album of Best Original Score
Written for a Motion Picture or a Television Special
Richard Rodney Bennett Nominated
1975 Academy Awards Best Actor Albert Finney Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Ingrid Bergman Won
Best Adapted Screenplay Paul Dehn Nominated
Best Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth Nominated
Best Costume Design Tony Walton Nominated
Best Original Score Richard Rodney Bennett Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Film
John Brabourne, Richard Goodwin
Nominated
Best Actor Albert Finney Nominated
Best Direction Sidney Lumet Nominated
Best Supporting Actor John Gielgud Won
Best Supporting Actress Ingrid Bergman Won
Best Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth Nominated
Best Editing Anne V. Coates Nominated
Anthony Asquith Award for Film Music
Richard Rodney Bennett Won
Best Production Design Tony Walton Nominated
Best Costume Design Tony Walton Nominated
Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Sidney Lumet Nominated
Edgar Award
Best Motion Picture Screenplay Paul Dehn Nominated
Evening Standard British Film Awards Best Film Sidney Lumet Won
Best Actor Albert Finney Won
Best Actress Wendy Hiller Won
Writers' Guild of Great Britain Awards Best British Screenplay Paul Dehn Won
1974 National Board of Review Awards Top Ten Films Murder on the Orient Express Won

See also

References

  1. ^ AFI Murder on the Orient Express Archived 29 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine; retrieved 27 April 2020.
  2. ^ "LUMIERE : Film #61364 : Murder on the Orient Express". Archived from the original on 24 October 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  3. ^ a b Bell, Brian, "Can film-makers Carry On?", The Observer, 11 August 1974: 11.
  4. ^ "Boost for studios", The Guardian, 9 July 1975: 5.
  5. ^ a b Mills, Nancy. The case of the vanishing mystery writer: Christie liked only two of the 19 movies made from her books. Chicago Tribune, 30 October 1977: h44.
  6. .
  7. ^ Trains Oubliés Vol.2: Le PLM by José Banaudo, p. 54 (French). Editions du Cabri, Menton, France
  8. ^ DVD documentary "Making Murder on the Orient Express: The Ride"
  9. ^ a b Alexander Walker, National Heroes: British Cinema in the Seventies and Eighties, Harrap, 1985 p. 130
  10. ^ "Murder on the Orient Express, Box Office Information". The Numbers. Archived from the original on 13 April 2012. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
  11. ^ "Murder on the Orient Express' tops US charts". The Times. London. 11 February 1975. p. 7.
  12. ^ Movie Reviews for Murder on the Orient Express Archived 15 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  13. ^ "Murder on the Orient Express". Metacritic.
  14. ^ Roger Ebert reviews Murder on the Orient Express. Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 23 September 2012.
  15. ^ Canby, Vincent (25 November 1974). "Crack 'Orient Express' Clicks as Film". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 1 July 2016. Retrieved 1 June 2016.

External links