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szdaily -> Movies -> 
Murder on the Orient Express
    2017-11-17  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

Starring: Tom Bateman, Lucy Boynton, Kenneth Branagh, Olivia Colman, Penélope Cruz, Johnny Depp Director: Kenneth Branagh

WHILE “Murder on the Orient Express” may see master detective Hercule Poirot tackle his most challenging case, director-star Kenneth Branagh doesn’t prove comparably formidable, delivering a finely manicured but decidedly uninvolving adaptation of Agatha Christie’s celebrated whodunit.

Populated by an international cast packed into stylish costumes amidst a stale air of cosmopolitan sophistication, this stagey mystery lacks the flamboyant electricity and riveting tension that have been the hallmarks of previous versions. Much of the film’s problems are encapsulated in Branagh’s performance, which is too self-amused to really capture what’s so compelling about one of fiction’s finest crime-fighters.

Releasing Nov. 10 in China, “Murder” will benefit from audience familiarity with the Christie novel — to say nothing of its different adaptations, most notably Sidney Lumet’s 1974 film and the 2010 British TV version starring David Suchet. Here, a star-studded cast including Johnny Depp, Penélope Cruz, Judi Dench, Daisy Ridley and Michelle Pfeiffer will only sweeten the deal for some audiences, who may gravitate to this Fox offering over frenetic blockbusters such as “Thor: Ragnarok.”

Set in 1934, the film stars Branagh as Poirot; a sharp, quirky Belgian detective who is supremely confident in his peerless skill at observation and deduction. He’ll be tested, however, after boarding the Orient Express in Istanbul; after an avalanche strands the train along its route, a passenger is found murdered — leading Poirot to the realization that the killer must be a fellow traveller.

As with his most lavish Shakespeare adaptations (“Hamlet” and “Love’s Labour’s Lost”), Branagh flaunts a theatrical flair, emphasizing the material’s inherently old-fashioned qualities. Rather than worrying about modernizing the text, Branagh gives us a movie that seems from an earlier time. His army of below-the-line talent lend the train, its passengers and their wardrobe a romantic, nostalgic opulence that’s proudly, warmly retro. But Branagh, in his direction and especially in his performance, can’t help but overdo the cheeky artificiality, which keeps “Murder” feeling more like a well-designed exercise than a delectable thriller.

For decades, Poirot has been beloved; in part, because of his amusing peculiarity, which has given actors the ability to interpret him in dissimilar ways. Whereas Albert Finney played him as an awkward but relentless pit bull in the 1974 film, Suchet gave audiences a subtler, more soulful take. On the whole, Branagh’s “Murder” tries splitting the difference between those two earlier adaptations — borrowing the extravagant accents and page-turning glee of Lumet’s film and the somber moral reckoning of the Suchet edition — but his Poirot is distractingly adorable and lightweight. Branagh also flashes a knowingly ludicrous moustache (which was how Christie envisioned the detective) that ends up undercutting the character’s gravitas and brilliance.

Branagh and screenwriter Michael Green tinker with some of the story’s iconic suspects. In this “Murder,” for instance, the Swedish missionary Greta (played by Ingrid Bergman, who won an Oscar for the 1974 version) has been changed to Pilar Estravados (Cruz), a figure from another Christie work but without all that character’s specific qualities. Along those lines, the filmmakers try to throw in some surprises to this oft-told tale while maintaining the most memorable sequences and revelations.

Shot on 65mm film — another indication of the movie’s old-school bona fides — this thriller has a stately pace with an eye for period detail, both in terms of décor and in its portrait of a society.

The movie is now being screened in Shenzhen. (SD-Agencies)

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