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Agatha Christie: A Portrait; 4-Part series: Making Murder On the Orient Express - All Aboard, The Ride, The Passengers, The End of the Line; Theatrical trailer; Widescreen version enhanced for 16:9 TVs; Dolby Digital: English 5.1 surround, English restored mono, French mono; English subtitles
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. The Armstrong Kidnapping [:20]
2. Monsieur Hercule Poirot [2:29]
3. Departure of the Orient Express [3:21]
4. Dining With Total Strangers [3:32]
5. Prelude to Murder [3:08]
6. Too Many Clues [3:55]
7. Questions in the Pullman Coach [5:48]
8. Mrs. Hubbard Plays a Part [1:14]
9. Is the Countess Lying? [6:24]
10. Evasion From Princess Dragomiroff [6:06]
11. Colonel Arbuthnott's Reluctant Answer [7:02]
12. The Dagger [6:36]
13. Gamble of the Last Interrogation [:48]
14. A More Complex Solution [7:41]
15. The Time of the Murder [1:43]
16. Signor Bianchi Must Choose [2:54]
17. End Credits [4:50]
A stylish whodunit in a class that fondly recalls old Hollywood, this treatment of Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express by director Sidney Lumet is a zesty star-fest, jam-packed with big-screen images and memorable star turns. The knockout ensemble cast includes Albert Finney (as master detective Hercule Poirot), Lauren Bacall, John Gielgud, Sean Connery, Vanessa Redgrave, and Ingrid Bergman in an Oscar-winning performance. The tale takes places on a luxurious, snowbound transcontinental passenger train, as Poirot searches for a killer among the passengers. By virtue of its relatively simple plot and underlying morality play, Christie's source novel survives the transfer to film better than many of her more labyrinthine efforts. Finney, too, shines as Poirot, bringing to life to the fussy mannerisms that make the character so easily caricatured. The opening flashback sequences are striking and hauntingly effective, and the entire production is lavish and self-assured. Entertaining and appealingly old-fashioned, Murder on the Orient Express is a gripping tale of murder and retribution that reaffirms one's faith in the inescapable mechanisms of justice. Amy Robinson, Barnes & Noble
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