Now in theaters:
Murder on the Orient Express—Sidney Lumet’s tautly made 1974
version of Agatha Christie’s 1934 novel, with Albert Finney as Belgian master
detective Hercule Poirot, is a favorite of mine, and I admit I saw no pressing
need to remake it. But remade it has been, in a manner sufficiently different
from the original that it can be enjoyed on its own terms.
The new version is directed by Kenneth Branagh, who also assumes the role of
Poirot. As before, a shady character gets bumped off in a sleeping car of the
famed luxury line, which used to run all the way from Istanbul
to Paris. The
train is derailed by an avalanche somewhere in Croatia, and Poirot, who had been
hoping for a quiet holiday, is pressed into service to identify the guilty
party from among the shifty types aboard before the trip is back on track.
The cast ranges from Johnny Depp to Judi Dench, Josh Gad to Penelope Cruz,
Willem Dafoe to Derek Jacobi, Daisy Ridley to Leslie Odom, Jr. to Michelle Pfeiffer,
among others, and they let it rip. Offsetting this is Branagh’s impressively
reserved, melancholy OCD turn as Poirot.
As director, Branagh works in his characteristically flamboyant style,
sweeping from one melodramatic flourish to the next, even adding in some fights
and gunplay. This won’t be to the taste of every Christie aficionado, but I
enjoyed it. I also enjoyed screenwriter Michael Green’s distaste for the casual
racism that Christie, to judge from her books, would have regarded as quite proper.
But the real stars, perhaps, of this Orient Express are, first,
Branagh’s mesmerizing mustache, and second, the lushness of the
production—cinematography by Haris Zambarloukos, costumes by Alexandra Byrne,
music by Patrick Doyle. The movie may leave you in the mood for a leisurely
holiday by train. Allowing for the odd murder or avalanche, it looks like a
great time.
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