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The New "Murder on the Orient Express" (BIG SPOILERS for 1974 and 2017 Versions)


One question raised often about Gus Van Sant's Psycho was "why?" i.e. Not only why remake such a masterpiece, but why remake a film with a twist ending "known to all."

Well, I suppose after 38 years, the twist WASN'T known to a new, young generation. And it was rather fun to see the old lines spoken by new people, the old shots restaged...

And I suppose that's the reason for a new "Orient Express," too.

I take note -- from the trailers alone -- that the new Orient Express looks far more plush and expensive than the 1974 movie by Lumet. Also, director Kenneth Branaugh and his writers(or is HE the sole adaptor of Christie?) seem to have "opened up" things immensely.

In the '74 OE, the train got snuck in the snow and we got intermittent documentary-like flat shots of snowplows at work digging the train out. In the new version, an avalanche stops the train -- on a bridge, with a huge Vertigo drop. Action seems to be staged on top of the train, hanging by a rope from it...all sorts of efforts are made to "action up" this very static tale.

Fair enough.

To me, the big miss of the new movie is: star power. The 1974 film had a superb mix of "new stars"(the biggest was Sean Connery, whom friend Lumet used to bring in the other stars; but Vanessa Redgrave, Michael York and Jackie Bisset were on board, too) and "classic stars"(Ingrid Bergman, Lauren Bacall, John Gielgud.) And of course, for Psycho fans, we had a sublime reunion between Norman and Arbogast (Perkins and Balsam), who, together, were somewhere between new stars and classic stars. And of course, this was their second reunion, after Catch-22(with Balsam memorably addressing Perkins from the toilet.)

So who we got this time? The biggest star is Johnny Depp -- but he's under siege as a fading star(and in this time of Hollywood scandal, had a lil' bit of infamy attached to the break-up of his marriage.) Moreover, Depp has a "very special role" of limited duration.

Which leaves director Branaugh himself as Poirot(his moustache is getting mixed reviews; it takes over his face) -- not quite Albert Finney, not quite in such magnificent disguise as Finney was. (And yes, I know there is Suchet in the TV version -- but I'm comparing movies here.)

Michelle Pfeffier -- still gorgeous, working her way back slowly as a star in the middle-aged Susan Sarandon tradition --- is probably the next starriest star in line, and its not enough. Though she is perfectly cast in what was the Lauren Bacall role -- they are roughly equivalent in age and history at the time.

Dame Judl Dench is here -- certainly a star (though evidently concerned now about her tattoo of Harvey Weinstein; she really has one.) The role played by skinny Anthony Perkins is now being played by young, stout Josh Gad -- the voice star of "Frozen," the live star of " Beauty and the Beast" so -- HE's big right now.

Willem Dafoe looks bizarre and this is evidently a big year for him with the Oscar bait "Florida Project."

And...and...and...who else? Oh, yeah, that chick from Star Wars. And Penelope Cruz.

The cast is starry enough, but just not in the league of 1974, you ask me. And it was probably impossible to get that kind of cast anymore. We don't have that many "old stars" and everybody is so expensive to get, now...

But I will see this. It looks good; I like Depp(still, in spite of everything), the rest of the cast is interesting if not spectacular.

And I'll be interested in the gross. Not much, I figure.

PS. I recently saw the true story of doomed wildland firefighters, "Only the Brave." Other than having a title similar to that of the great "Lonely are the Brave," this isn't much of a special, Oscar-type film. But it moved me immensely; tears at the end. I've reached the point where a movie can move and satisfy my heart even if its not a "critical favorite." (This movie shares with my favorite, The Perfect Storm, a sense of men who make the wrong moves unto death.) Jeff Bridges is there to to give us his current patented "Robert Duvall coot of the 2010's" role, but he's great, especially reacting when tragic news reaches him. Josh Brolin is just right as the fire team leader(he's like a military squad commander without a war); Jenninfer Connelly is his long-suffering, loving wife. But hey -- Connelly was curvy and buxom and va-va-voom in her youth, now she's all skin and bones. Oh, well, she's an Oscar winner.

Recommended.


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I like the classics but I have zero interest in this. Zero.

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OK.

The gross may reflect that. Grosses have been low this season.

What someone has written is that this isn't so much a "why" about remaking the story, but a "why" about deciding this was a movie that people would want to see in 2017.

It reflects Hollywood's continual cannibalism of its own past product "just because". Or as someone else wrote: "Who was clamouring for a remake of Orient Express?"

My one thought is that if they had really, really, REALLY stocked this film with stars (like, say, Brad Pitt in the old Connery role and J-Law in the Vanessa Redgrave part)...maybe folks would be more interested.

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I think this movie will do decent at the box office. Of course I'm basing this solely on my having gone to an 11AM showing this morning and the theater was approximately half full, which is actually a good sign for a movie like this. Than being said I for the most part enjoyed this film.

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I think this movie will do decent at the box office.

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And it did. A "better than expected" opening weekend of 28 plus million. Shaded by "Daddy's Home 2"(starring current Number One Star Mark Wahlberg and Mel Gibson as his macho dad - Gibson was perhaps the first of our big stars to meltdown, but it wasn't for sex scandal -- he's sorta, kinda back.)

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Of course I'm basing this solely on my having gone to an 11AM showing this morning and the theater was approximately half full, which is actually a good sign for a movie like this.

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And I can report a 3/4 full house for my afternoon showing. All seats except in the three front rows were full.

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That being said I for the most part enjoyed this film.

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I enjoyed aspects of it. Others, not so much. I'll post elsewhere on this thread "for what its worth." Hah.

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Thanks, EC. I have no desire to see the OE remake, love the original too much. It's not perfect but it's classy, and I can't see it outclassed. The old-time players make it work,--and that includes Balsam and Rachel Roberts--while the young ones don't embarrass themselves. It's a delight. The things left unsaid, unresolved, never bothered me. That's the story, flawed to begin with (to say the least), not the movie itself, which is aces.

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Thanks, EC. I have no desire to see the OE remake, love the original too much.

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Understood, telegonus. You know, the original Murder on the Orient Express came out during the same Christmas season of 1974 as The Towering Inferno, and I recall as a young college-age movie fan(so I felt I finally knew something about movies and movie stars), I felt the two movies were the "battle of the all-star casts." The Towering Inferno had the greatest "All-American All-Star Cast" I'd ever seen (McQueen AND Newman; AND Holden AND Astaire AND Faye Dunaway...); But Murder on the Orient Express had the "classy international All-Star cast (Connery AND Bergman AND Bacall AND Perkins AND Balsam AND York AND Bisset AND Cassel.) It was an exciting Christmas "at the movies."

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It's not perfect but it's classy, and I can't see it outclassed.

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I have now seen it, and it isn't. This new one has a bevy of perfectly solid stars "of a certain level," but they just can't compete with the decades-wide roster of the 1974 crew.

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The old-time players make it work,--and that includes Balsam and Rachel Roberts--while the young ones don't embarrass themselves. It's a delight.

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And within that All-Star cast are plenty o' Hitchcock veterans: Bergman, Connery, Gielgud, Perkins and Balsam.

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The things left unsaid, unresolved, never bothered me. That's the story, flawed to begin with (to say the least), not the movie itself, which is aces.

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Having now seen both versions, I must admit that though I can "skim the solution" and understand it in general, the tale seemed to get murky in both version as to certain background details as to who was who and why what happened happened. No matter. I went with the flow in both versions.

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To a larger personal point. You, telegonus, have elected to take a pass on what is, admittedly, "another unnecessary remake." But I chose it as my weekend movie to view, and for rather sheep-like reasons: I liked the original a lot, kinda/sorta "wanted to see it again with new cinematography and technology employed," like mysteries much as I like thrillers, like Johnny Depp(still, IMHO, one of the few REAL movie stars we have, fading as he may be)....just sort of felt comfortable going to this.

Other than young people who don't know the story, I'm exactly the weak, non-demanding middle-brow movie fan for whom the new Orient Express was made.

As a matter of comparison, I see the two "Orient Express" films comparatively as I saw the two "True Grits":

The "old" one looks a bit flat and workmanlike in the cinematography and production value, whereas the new one is burnished and polished and modern to a 21st Century fare-thee-well. But the OLD one works better as an involving story with great characters. And in both the new True Grit and the new Orient Express, the remake falls down totally at the end compared to the original.

Which was interesting to me, and another reason I like to see remakes. "Comparative analysis" -- mental fun.

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And so, a look at the new Orient Express, by me, with some comparisons to the old one(and an apologetic lack of having seen the Suchet one):

First up: I had lunch with a group before heading off to the movie, and sure enough the young people at the table(under 30) had no knowledge of whodunnit in Orient Express, and one said to me the immortal words "I don't know the ending, please don't spoil it for me." So the remake is for HIM.

The rest is "abstract thought":

Unlike Van Sant's Psycho, this new Orient Express is NOT a shot for shot, line for line remake. Certain scenes line up perfectly with the original, such as the one where the gangster (Richard Widmark, Johnny Depp) first meets with Poirot to try to hire him as a bodyguard. Its a compelling scene in both movies because the gangster is so clearly a bad, dangerous man, and Poirot must parry his offer of employment. But the dialogue is much entirely different in the two versions.

And that's the case with every single scene in the new version versus the old. Its a totally re-written script for dialogue, and some characters and incidents have been changed. I found myself wondering: which movie matches Christie's book in these details: the '74 or the '17?

Gone is Ingrid Bergman's speech about caring for "little brown babies"(Penelope Cruz has the part and never gets the Oscar-winning screen time that Bergman got.) Gone is the running gag of Martin Balsam's railroad exec always crying out "He did it!" or "She did it!" after each interrogation(A tall handsome young actor now replaces Balsam, and I don't know who he is). Gone is Tony Perkins' trademark tic-ridden dialogue(about Mother), replaced with an entirely new TYPE of secretary to the gangster as enacted by funny, chubby Josh Gad (sucking down whiskey, he notes "My boss is dead, I have no job and I'm broke.")

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Director Kenneth Branaugh(who stars as a thin, handsome and comparatively young Poirot, with a flair for physical combat), did not write the script as it turns out, but the guy who did(he also wrote Blade Runner 2049) is responsible, I suppose , for some salutory "opening up" of the claustrophobic tale. The train still gets stuck in the snow, but this time we get a CGI avalanche, a dangerously high trestle, a nearby train tunnel, and such scenes as Poirot electing to interrogate one suspect (Star Wars Daisy Kenyon) outside the train with two chairs and a table made available(all I could think was: how cold that must be.)

And for the long final "rounding up of the suspects for the whodunnit reveal" -- which was done in a single train car in the original -- this movie has Poirot take the group out to the tunnel and to seat them "Last Supper style" at a long table (where'd tHAT come from?) with flaming torches set out to warm them. Doesn't make much sense, but it is visually arresting.

And THAT could be the strongest card that the new Orient Express has to offer: it is visually arresting. I'll get the technicals wrong here, but the movie was filmed, I think, much as QT filmed The Hateful Eight(65 mm? 70mm?) The screen was gigantic and the images were overpowering. The movie LOOKS like The Hateful Eight -- rich blues, fiery gold, and -- just like The Hateful Eight -- is snowbound. Given that The Hateful Eight was my favorite of 2015 as much for its rich visuals as for its vile content -- Orient Express looks a lot like The Hateful Eight and I enjoyed them exactly the same way. (THAT said, the rich CGI train travel imagery reminds me of ANOTHER movie about ANOTHER Express: the very great Polar Express of IMAX memory.)

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Kenneth Branaugh is an interesting actor/director to me. It seems he's always been around. I recall a thriller he directed and starred in from way back in 1991 called "Dead Again," in which he starred with a handsome, elegant, sad-faced older actor named Derek Jacobi -- and here they are again, 26 years later, paired for a scene or two(Jacobi has John Gielgud's butler part -- always a nice match to "Arthur" in my memory.) I felt a weirdly warm memory of "Dead Again"(which I liked but can barely remember) and a weird feeling: its 1991 again?

Branaugh has a reputation for some vanity, I guess, and I must admit he cuts a far more handsome and dashing figure as Poirot than Albert Finney -- except Finney's "his face is totally gone; that CAN'T be Albert Finney" performance as Poirot(Oscar nommed) is among the most incredible disappearing acts I've ever seen in movies. Still, a handsome Poirot is kinda different -- and Branaugh is captured in one close-up as he reveals who dunnit at the end --a close-up returned to again and again and again as the suspects react to his reveals-- which screams "movie star." His vanity is well-earned; he's a pleasure to watch.

And indeed, in the early scene in which Branaugh's Poirot is forced to dine with Depp's Ratchett(great name) -- we are given the pleasure of TWO movie stars, both handsome, both charismatic -- sharing a scene and reminding us what its like to enjoy handsome men with great acting chops(Branaugh is doing his Belgian accent; Depp is doing a dese-dem-dose American gangster) trading duelling lines.

..which rather throws off the balance of the rest of the cast. Finney and an older Richard Widmark traded these lines in the original -- but Widmark wasn't the biggest star in the movie. Here, Depp is and --

Well I will now move to a SPOILER POST

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BIG SPOILER for BOTH ORIENT EXPRESSES

...but Widmark wasn't the biggest star in the movie. Here, Depp is and --

...he is the murder victim. Which means he is out of the movie pretty early, Marion Crane style. Though I think we were given more flashbacks for Depp than we got for Widmark; Depp can be seen pretty much all through the movie every five minutes or so. (Unlike with Widmark, the flashbacks are not only to action on the train, they are to Depp's criminal actions in the past.)

Still, with Depp gone as an active player, the rest of the cast simply doesn't have a Bergman or a Bacall or a Perkins or especially a Connery to keep us "star-struck." And, quite frankly (the vanity thing), we instead get a LOT of handsome Kenneth Branaugh investigating and interrogating.

One interesting change-up: in the original, Sean Connery's tough military man and Vanessa Redgrave's simply radiant redhead (dazzling smile, flirtatious wink), were lovers. In the new one, the Connery character is converted into an African-American DOCTOR with background as a military man(he was a sharpshooter.) I'm not familiar with the actor in question here. The story hints at his romance with the Redgrave character(here played by the Star Wars gal)...but doesn't go "all the way" on it. And the race of the doctor becomes an uncomfortable element in the story -- he's the initial "best suspect" to some simply because of his race(though others fight for his honor against the bigots.) Still -- it seemed a detour. And since we aren't talking Sean Connery and Vanessa Redgrave, we don't KNOW this man.

I got two more places to go with this analysis, and then I'll go quiet.

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SPOILERS

I noted that the new one falls down at the end. Two scenes from the original are botched or missing -- and both of those scenes were dependent on the all-star aspects OF the original:

ONE: The murder flashback. Those of us in the know know -- "Whodunnit? EVERYBODY done it!" Well, twelve passengers dunnit --- or was it 13? The young royal couple wielded one knife stab together. All 12 had their lives ruined by the evil Ratchett -- and the they became a "jury of 12" to judge and execute Ratchett.

In the original, each star is given a moment to execute their single downward stab into the drugged Ratchett(unseen below the shot.) Some stab him with weak timidity(Ingrid Bergman), some stab him with flourish(Gielgud), some stab him with power(Connery), some stab him with experience(Perkins.) One spits on him first and THEN stabs him(Dennis Quilley, a Robert Preston lookalike! And indeed, not a star, not EVERYONE in the original was a star.)

In the new one -- probably because the 12 killers don't include many stars -- the mass stabbing is a mob scene of frenzied handing off of the knife and it doesn't seem that everybody is even there. Its a mess and lacks the "cumulative one-at-a-time power" of the original(which, in one of that film's few stylistic touches, takes place entirely in BLUE LIGHT, the Orient Express cabin light also made famous in Connery's "From Russia with Love" fight with Robert Shaw.



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TWO: The final disposition of the 13 killers. In the original, they were relieved and -- yes --HAPPY -- when Poirot decided to clear them and tell the cops Ratchett was killed by a Mafia assassin. And -- on direction of Sidney Lumet -- each star(and the lesser actors, like Dennis Quilley) gets a "curtain call toast" from ringleader Lauren Bacall(who is ably matched by Michelle Pfeiffer in the new film -- she's the next starriest star after Depp and Branaugh.) Each star's "curtain call moment" is worthy of applause and the movie ends on a genuinely happy note....if rueful...Poirot leaves the ``13 to "consider their consciences."

Well, the new version doesn't have an all-star cast, so there are no curtain call toasts. Rather, director Branaugh has the train pull away from Poirot (in the snowy silence of a mountain stop) and we see the troubled faces of each killer in the windows of the train as it pulls away. The upbeat curtain call flourish of the original is replaced with a tragic sense of sadness and doom -- THIS murdering of a bad man has left the killers bereft and guilty and sad.

It didn't play for me.

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About that moustache.

I've read a lot of Orient Express reviews and everybody's talking about that monstrous moustache that Branaugh wears. It fronts his face and stretches back across his cheeks to his ears on either side. It is gigantic and a character choice of great power -- rather like Nicholson's slashed nose in Chinatown, you can't see the actor's face for the effect. Except I found Branaugh handsome anyway, so...it worked for me.

And its not the first time Branaugh has elected to put bizarre facial hair on his countenance.

I give you: The Wild Wild West (1999.)

That movie looms large in my mind. It was a 100-million budget version of one of my absolute favorite TV spy shows as a kid. The TV show brilliantly combined James Bond with Gunsmoke to give us "James Bond goes West." Robert Conrad was muscular tough guy James West; Ross Martin was amiable master-of-disguise and ideas man Artemis Gordon; and the most-used villain on the show was dwarf Michael Dunn as the villainous "Dr. Loveless"(it is said that the series employed the little Dunn because the very short Conrad could then tower over him in scenes.)

The big budget summer blockbuster version gave us a very big star -- Will Smith -- as West(we'd been hoping for Mel Gibson.) And Kevin Kline as Artemis. And -- slumming for big bucks -- Kenneth Branaugh as Dr. Loveless.

The CGI gimmick was to make Branaugh's Loveless "short" not by converting him into a dwarf, but by presenting Loveless as a man who had lost his legs in battle and now got around in a super-duper 1870's wheelchair that could be "pumped up" to make him as tall as need be.

Loveless now became a super-bigoted Southern Civil War loser who hated, hated, hated Will Smith's black secret agent. The racial animosity at the heart of the new Wild Wild West was only one uncomfortable part of the package.

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But worse to us fans was this: on the TV show, spying partners Jim West and Artemis Gordon were the best of friends, constantly rescuing each other and backing each others play. It was a great fantasy for a 60's boy: the brawny guy was FRIENDS with the brainy guy(and the brainy guy got just as many women as the brawny guy.)

Well, the movie elected to portray James West(Smith) and Artemis(Kevin Kline) as hating each other for the whole movie -- with West finding Artemis a bit of a dolt. The final line of the movie is Smith's: "Shut up, Gordon."

Even for a "fluffy summer blockbuster," that final line -- and the whole West/Gordon relationship -- was an insult to our childhood, a travesty of a great TV team(I mean can you imagine Captain Kirk saying "Shut up, Spock.")

The Wild Wild West was a huge bomb. Nobody seemed to know why at the time except we fans of the original show. I personally believe this bomb ended up crippling Will Smith's career. It was an "ego bomb" based on his treatment of the Artemis Gordon character and general big-headed version of West.

But...but...but...if there is one thing I remember as actually being great about The Wild Wild West it was:

Kenneth Branaugh. And his wild, wild, way-over-the-top Southern accent(as only a trained Shakespearan actor can do) , as when he says: "Mistah West, how verrrry good of yuh to bring such COLUH to the occashun...."

And...his facial hair. You see, in the movie, Dr. Loveless has a gigantic "war machine" that walks on six legs and looks like a five-story high taranatula. He CALLS it the tarantula.

And his facial hair LOOKS like a tarantula. Its beard, a goatee, sideburns AND a moustache, all assembled into a package that surrounds Branaugh's mouth, nose, chin and cheeks like battle armor.

I never forgot Kenneth Branaugh's "tarantula beard" in The Wild Wild West -- and here he brings us the sequel: Poirot's moustache.

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I didn't see the above observation in ANY review of the new Orient Express (of the Branaugh Tarantula Beard sequelled by the Branaugh Poirot Super Moustache). You read it here first -- because its the kind of worthless trivia I carry with me.

But I will say if there is one(and only one) thing I like about the movie of The Wild Wild West it is how Kenneth Branaugh(no doubt for high pay) "slummed" as a summer spy movie villain and really delivered the goods. That syrupy Supah-Suthun voice. That superbeard. Whenever I take a look at The Wild Wild West movie from time to time on cable(and they don't show it much, Will Smith was too embarrassed), I only watch the scenes with Branaugh.

....and thus I thought of those scenes as I watched Murder on the Orient Express.

OK, that's enough...

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Doesn't sound like it would play well for me either.

TO me, one brilliance of the ending is that in retrospect it's totally obvious and really, the only possible ending. The reason most people don't see it coming on first reading or viewing is that it's an established convention in this type of story that there are a LOT of folks who are highly suspect but the detective has to narrow it down to just one. In real life, the detective would solve the crime in a few minutes, since it can't just be coincidence that everyone has some relation to the kidnapped girl's family.

The second brilliance is that this clearcut solution is then rejected in favor of the "simple" solution of an unknown, lone killer.

By the way, did they keep the moment when Poirot finishes the first solution in about a minute and someone asks "Is that ALL?" Priceless line.

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Doesn't sound like it would play well for me either.

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I must admit, having everybody happily toast their successful murder(with cheerful, triumphant music) in the first one seems a bit "off key." But having them all rail into a dark sunset as a crowd of guilt-ridden mopers -- worse.
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TO me, one brilliance of the ending is that in retrospect it's totally obvious and really, the only possible ending.

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I think in the new one, all the interrogation scenes are significantly cut down. Nobody gets the time to give a speech like Ingrid Bergman gave, or even like Anthony Perkins gave. Thus, the solution arrives so fast that one barely senses Poirot "detecting" anything. They were all connected. They all did it.

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The reason most people don't see it coming on first reading or viewing is that it's an established convention in this type of story that there are a LOT of folks who are highly suspect but the detective has to narrow it down to just one.

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That is correct. I'm an afficinado of the 60s whodunit series, "Burke's Law," where often a suspect would say: "I gotta admit I'm a suspect. I hated him. I would have killed him if I had the chance. But I didn't." A STANDARD line on that show.

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In real life, the detective would solve the crime in a few minutes, since it can't just be coincidence that everyone has some relation to the kidnapped girl's family.

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The 1974 version opens with a splendid recreation of the kidnapping -- which includes doubles for many of the star/killers. Its all in blue(to match the car for the final murder) and it wasn't directed by Lumet. He farmed it out to a small movie-making company. Its almost the best "action" scene in the movie.

Between that weird opening and all the stars in it, the 1974 version diverts us from the solution.

I'd say the new movie uses a gigantic screen of CGI mountain ranges to divert us...

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The second brilliance is that this clearcut solution is then rejected in favor of the "simple" solution of an unknown, lone killer.

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A Mafia killer, to boot. In 1974, this was trendy.

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By the way, did they keep the moment when Poirot finishes the first solution in about a minute and someone asks "Is that ALL?" Priceless line.

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Sorry, I cannot remember for sure. It IS funny.

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Kenneth Branaugh is an interesting actor/director to me. It seems he's always been around. I recall a thriller he directed and starred in from way back in 1991 called "Dead Again,"
Branagh had an incredibly high profile in the UK in the '80s and '90s. He was the first UK person since Olivier to try to really grab for Olivier's brass ring: he conquered the Shakespearean stage becoming the lead actor and director of the national theater while barely 30, snapped up the best/classiest new actress around, Emma Thompson, as his wife, had a near triumph with his first film (the same as Olivier's first film!), Henry V - in which he starred as well as adapting and directing it. And then he stars in and directs his first American film, Dead Again, co-starring his wife....and lo and behold it's pretty good! a fun, tidy thriller with lots of black and white flashbacks in full on imitation of Welles to make a film buff's heart race. The unbridled ambition was pretty intoxicating. In the UK especially, Branagh and Thompson were the King and Queen of all media.... and all this before Branagh was 40.

This was as high as Branagh got - interestingly things started to dip for Olivier at around the exact same triumphant point in *his* career. Here's how the first half of the great BBC doc. on Olivier ends, capturing this maximal, mid-career moment:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nz-d_aaRlJM

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Branagh's done lots of good things since Dead Alive but he's not continued the irresistible forward momentum of the first half of his career. Soon after Dead Alive, Branagh started an affair with Helena Bonham-Carter that ended his marriage to Emma Thompson. His next films were more Shakespeares: Much Ado About Nothing and (again following in Olivier's directorial footsteps) Hamlet, both of which were good not great. Bonham-Carter soon waltzed on to Tim Burton...so was it worth it Ken? And a new generation of theater stars and directors soon emerged in London, including Danny Boyle and Sam Mendes, many of whom have ended up being closer to real-film-guys than Branagh.

I'd say that Branagh's roles in things like Harry Potter and, yes, Wild Wild West, and directing-for-hire things like Thor 1 have ended up being the peaks of his post-Dead Alive career. Maybe the slight disappointment that attaches to that was inevitable given that his models were so clearly Olivier and Welles, who also had their share of second-half-career disappointment (almost nothing but in Welles' case).

BTW, the wonderful music in the Oliver doc. clip above was composed by Stephen Oliver, John Oliver's genius gay uncle, who died in 1992 of AIDs-related conditions. His early death was an incredible loss to music generally and film music in particular. He'd have done some incredible superhero film scores I'm sure.

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I'd say that Branagh's roles in things like Harry Potter and, yes, Wild Wild West, and directing-for-hire things like Thor 1 have ended up being the peaks of his post-Dead Alive career. Maybe the slight disappointment that attaches to that was inevitable given that his models were so clearly Olivier and Welles, who also had their share of second-half-career disappointment (almost nothing but in Welles' case).

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I appreciate your run-through of the entire Branaugh career, swanstep. I know he's hung in there a long time(else why get both star and director roles in Orient Express?) And I always forget that EVERYBODY did a Harry Potter(Alan Rickman, Emma Thompson.)

I looked at Wild Wild West the movie again, in parts(yep, I bought it -- as a compliment to my owning the entire TV series, which, really, was made to be watched by 12 year old boys.)

MAN, was that movie bad. The lines. The poor comic timing OF the lines(too slow, usually.) Especially -- sorry , Will -- Will Smith's reading of the bad lines. (His career really did take a hit from this one, it was pushed in his face by comics like Chris Rock a decade later.)

It COULD have been at least OK. The Mission Impossible movies and the starless Man From UNCLE show you how to do it right. But this has one of the worst scripts ever plus -- Branaugh's main henchmen are henchwomen, which would be fine except they are vapid models who cannot throw a punch or fire a gun with any realism when the script demands it.

Branaugh does almost save things with his WAY-over-the-top line readings, mainly Southern, but also with a twisted French line, plus "Mi casa is TUUUUU casa!" You have to hear it to believe it.



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I cannot tell a lie. Smith doesn't say "Shut up, Gordon" at the end. But its almost as bad:

Gordon: Do you mind if I ask you a question, James?
West: As a matter of fact...I do.

Angrily. The End.

Kevin Kline took the Artemis Gordon role after Young George Clooney(then, a reasonable James West, Artemis not so much) dropped it. Clooney could read a script, I guess. Kline went for the biggest bucks of his career. Such an interesting actor -- matinee idol handsome looks, but a rather fey manner, I guess, quiet and pleasant in a very masculine way. He's not bad in Wild Wild West, either. Its Will Smith on an overacting, too-sold-on-his-own wonderfulness rampage does 'em all in. And the script. Kline can't save it; Branaugh dives in for campy fun.

PS. To earn his superstar pay, I guess Smith had to film an "added" scene by a hanging tree that is one of the worst scenes ever given any major actor to play.

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Kline went for the biggest bucks of his career. Such an interesting actor -- matinee idol handsome looks, but a rather fey manner, I guess, quiet and pleasant in a very masculine way.
Since we moan al the time about Oscar 'getting it wrong' it's worth mentioning that Kline's Supporting Actor Oscar for Otto in A Fish Called Wanda is one of the cases in which the Academy got things gloriously right! One of the best Oscar wins ever in my view. Famously too, Kline's married (apparently happily) to every straight guy's default '80s fantasy-girl-next-door, Phoebe Cates. Well-played Mr Kline.

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Since we moan al the time about Oscar 'getting it wrong' it's worth mentioning that Kline's Supporting Actor Oscar for Otto in A Fish Called Wanda is one of the cases in which the Academy got things gloriously right! One of the best Oscar wins ever in my view.

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He was hilarious in that, crazed and over the top and just right..and actually, both before (Silverado) and after(Wild Wild West) that performance, Kline specialized in low-key, deadpan work.

Perhaps my favorite Kline movie is "Dave" -- in which he plays a nice guy who looks like the US President and "substitutes" for the Prez(an ultra-conservative louse) while the Prez is in a coma that the public doesn't know about. And suddenly the President is making "good guy decisions" opposed by his villainous advisors. The movie succeeds at being "Capra for the 90's" with a charming score and the Goodest Good Guy Alive performance by Kline - it is touching how an imperious First Lady (Sigourney Weaver) who hates the real President comes to fall in love with this fake version. "Wild Wild West," btw, makes allusions to "Dave"(Kline's biggest solo hit?) when Artemis goes into disguise as President Grant. I can't quite buy into the pie-in-the-sky political ideas in "Dave"(its more fantasy than reality), but the idea that a good man or woman as President could make all the difference is...a nice fantasy.

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Famously too, Kline's married (apparently happily) to every straight guy's default '80s fantasy-girl-next-door, Phoebe Cates. Well-played Mr Kline.

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Yep, he done that one right. There were cluckings about the age difference between the two, but they've stuck it out over the years until age didn't much matter, and she(as many attractive young actresses do) seems to have checked out of Harvey-land and semi-retired.

I think they did several movies together, but I remember Cates doing a cameo in "I Love You to Death," that really made me laugh. Kevin Kline is playing a married philanderer who you can't help liking: he plays the Italian-American with a big moon-hitza-your-eye likea biga pizza pie accent.

Anyway, away from his wife one night at a dance club, Kline comes upon Cates and his come-on is downright vicious: he asks her to point out what man she is at the club with. She points the man out. Kline is incredulous: "HIM? That guy? A man who looks like THAT is out with a gorgeous , perfect beauty like YOU? I don't believe it!"

Ouch. Soon, Cates is saying "Well, he's just a friend" and later...she's in bed with Kline.

Which is among the reasons the wife tries to kill Kline. Many times. Funny movie.

Hey, I guess I like a lot of Kevin Kline movies.

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I have very mixed feelings about Dave. On the one hand, the movie itself is just fine. On the other hand, I don't like its promotion of the phony populist notion that the presidency isn't the hardest job in the world, just as long as you have someone in there who's honest with a little common sense, we'll be fine. Worried about the massive deficit? Hey, just have your brother in law come in and look at the books!

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I have very mixed feelings about Dave. On the one hand, the movie itself is just fine. On the other hand, I don't like its promotion of the phony populist notion that the presidency isn't the hardest job in the world, just as long as you have someone in there who's honest with a little common sense, we'll be fine.

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Well, its the weirdest thing about me and "Dave." Politically, I am so cynical at this point that I just tend to ignore things. (I mean, for all the caterwauling about Trump it as if we lost the chance at a saint in...Hillary Clinton?)

And Dave is clearly meant to be somewhat of a progressive...but what he's mainly meant to be is NICE. Just getting all the nation and the world to be nice, too. He's not a social justice warrior or self-righteous or into racial identity politics. He just wants to do good. Indeed, his character runs an employment agency where his motto is "Its Monday...everybody's gonna have a job!"

And this...the movie has a final scene with sweet, buoyant wrap-around-music that delivers the "lovers kiss" happy ending AND a great wonderful send-em-home happy twist about how Tough Guy Secret Service Man Ving Rhames(a year before Pulp Fiction) is now Dave's City Council campaign bodyguard. Effervescent stuff.

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Worried about the massive deficit? Hey, just have your brother in law come in and look at the books!

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It was a "gimme" laugh and applause line from the ever-deadpan Charles Grodin: "If I ran my business like the government, I'd go broke." Which actually shifts Dave to the fiscal conservative side where everything else in it is kind of liberal.

Oh well. Feel good movie. Classy cast -- Kline as both Presidents, Weaver as the regal First Lady destined for an emotional thaw with Dave; Frank Langella as the villainous advisor, Ben Kingsley as the decent Vice President who gets the job...

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Not much more to add here, EC but my (repeated) affection for the "original" Murder On The Orient Express and how, like Sleuth and a few other films of mostly the early Seventies it recaptured some of the glory of studio age Hollywood at its best; and it's the entertainment stuff they did best back then.

A new Grapes Of Wrath or life of Pasteur or Zola or Curie wouldn't do. Nor would a new "go" at at modern light classics such as Noel Coward's Private Lives, Grand Hotel or The Petrified Forest. It's probably just as well they stopped when they did. I mean, it would have been nice to see another truly first rate mystery-whodunit done in the grand manner, and there were some good ones; and I wish the western had gone out in a burst of glory rather than gunfire, but them's the breaks.

We're lucky we got as much as we did get back in those days, with not just the stylish in the grand manner Sleuth but the stylish in the modern manner Last Of Sheila, in its way just as good, and a whole lot funnier. Gothic horror went out more with parody than style, though some of the parodies were stylish (Young Frankenstein, the two "campish" Dr. Phibes pictures). Nor should we forget such rock solid old school fare as Murder By Death and The Seven Percent Solution.

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Not much more to add here, EC but my (repeated) affection for the "original" Murder On The Orient Express and how, like Sleuth and a few other films of mostly the early Seventies it recaptured some of the glory of studio age Hollywood at its best; and it's the entertainment stuff they did best back then.

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Hey, telegonus! It does occur to me now that the original Orient Express hit in that very grim movie year if 1974 -- when the dramas had downbeat endings(Chinatown, The Conversation, Parallax View, Godfather II) and the "entertainments" were often disaster movies(Airport 75, Earthquake, The Towering Inferno.) We could USE a little glamour. That said...even Orient Express is on the grim side -- all these "good people" conspiring to personally stab a bad man, one by one of them.

I too remember feeling good when a fairly old time entertainment showed up in the 70s. Aside from Golden Era filmmaking, even the lush productions of 60s movies like Dr. Zhivago and The Sound of Music seemed "over" in the gritty 70's.

I do remember feeling that John Huston's "The Man Who Would Be King" (1975) ALMOST captured that globe-trotting big budget old entertainment feeling. One reason why: the roles for Connery and Caine were first adapted(from Kipling) for...Gable and Bogart! By director John Huston, who had Golden Era Roots. (He tried for a Burton/O'Toole version in the 60s, and then pitched Newman and Redford in the 70's -- it was Newman, a Huston pal, who said -- "No, its gotta be Connery and Caine.")

The 1974 Orient Express had a rich, buoyant score that added to the old-fashioned pleasure of the film, too. For a movie about 13 killers...it sure has a happy ending.

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Well, EC, in the context of the time and year of its release Murder On The Orient Express was dang near wholesome family entertainment of the Disney-Sound Of Music sort! It was a fun movie, but for grownups only. I had a great time watching that one with my best friend's wife! Nothing really happened between us that night but we enjoyed the movie much more than if "he" had been along, but that's another matter altogether...

But seriously, it was 1974 and we were adults, one and all, and yet still in our early twenties! Can you imagine a sophisticated film like that going over with the twentysomethings of today? I can't. On the other hand I hope I'm wrong about this. It would be great to see fun, smart movies come back into fashion but my sense is that between them the high tech "demands" of younger moviegoers combined with the damn near humorlessness of political correctness have killed much of the fun of what used to be called mass entertainment.

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Well, EC, in the context of the time and year of its release Murder On The Orient Express was dang near wholesome family entertainment of the Disney-Sound Of Music sort!

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Absolutely. Even the murder feels rather abstract and antiseptic -- even though the victim is stabbed 12 times. (This is the case with Depp in the new one, too.)

And like Airport, part of the draw of Orient Express was the ability to see some "old time stars" on the screen in good parts: grandma and grandpa came out for Ingrid Bergman and Lauren Bacall.

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It was a fun movie, but for grownups only.

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A bit of an intellectual game. And -- honestly -- quite static. Its Poirot questioning people in rooms on a motionless train. The "movement and excitement" comes from the stars BEING stars -- both individual and when grouped.

And as one of those stars, Michael York pointed out: at the end, when Finney is delivering his long, long long sum-up of the case(hey, there, Simon Oakland)...all those high-priced stars just had to sit and stand there...."with their mouths shut."

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I had a great time watching that one with my best friend's wife! Nothing really happened between us that night but we enjoyed the movie much more than if "he" had been along, but that's another matter altogether...

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Ha.Ha. Ha. I think many of us guys have been THERE. Dutiful friend to the wife....

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But seriously, it was 1974 and we were adults, one and all, and yet still in our early twenties! Can you imagine a sophisticated film like that going over with the twentysomethings of today? I can't.

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One of the weirder things I've read was that the high art, depressing deep-think films of INGMAR Bergman(not to be confused with Ingrid, though as a kid, I did)...is that their fans were largely COLLEGE STUDENTS. Which mean, early twenty-somethings. Which is pretty hard to picture, today.

On the other hand, if young 20-somethings can invent Facebook and become billionaires, I suppose others could absorb intellectual high art.

Author/critic Camille Paglia noted that while her college student peers of some decades ago went for Ingmar Bergman movies, her college student STUDENTS of the last decade go for...Hitchcock. I can see why: he melds art and narrative to today's CGI world of excitement.(Hitch would have loved CGI for Vertigo, NXNW, The Birds and The Psycho House.)

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On the other hand I hope I'm wrong about this. It would be great to see fun, smart movies come back into fashion but my sense is that between them the high tech "demands" of younger moviegoers combined with the damn near humorlessness of political correctness have killed much of the fun of what used to be called mass entertainment.

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Almost on autopilot, I go to whatever action spy films are out there nowadays, and for about the last 20 years, the villains have been AMERICAN FBI and CIA agents. Rarely if ever are foreign governments brought in on the bad guy side. Its as if the studios don't want to offend anybody but white American men(and some women --we've had some villainous white American female CIA agents, too.)

My point is: mass entertainment now has "the edges filed off" and its fairly safe.

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A new Grapes Of Wrath or life of Pasteur or Zola or Curie wouldn't do. Nor would a new "go" at at modern light classics such as Noel Coward's Private Lives, Grand Hotel or The Petrified Forest.

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Yes, certain types of films had to stay back in the eras in which they were made.

Though screenwriter William Goldman wrote that he was hired to write a new "Grand Hotel" in the 80s...to take place at the MGM Grand in Vegas! The project fell through.

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It's probably just as well they stopped when they did. I mean, it would have been nice to see another truly first rate mystery-whodunit done in the grand manner, and there were some good ones;

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I rather like the "Orient Express" follow up of 1978 -- Death on the Nile. Ustinov starts his run as Poirot, and the cast was ALMOST as starry as before: Bette Davis, David Niven, Maggie Smith, Mia Farrow, Angela Lansbury, George Kennedy(?), Jack Warden(?) -- and "Frenzy"'s Jon Finch(in a script by Anthony "Frenzy" Shaffer here.)

The new "Orient Express" ends with a suggestion that there will be a new Death on the Nile, I might add.

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and I wish the western had gone out in a burst of glory rather than gunfire, but them's the breaks.

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Well, it went out in a mix of Spaghetti Westerns(which I don't much like) and the ultra-gory but ultra-exciting and ultra-moving "Wild Bunch"(which I love.)

I could offer 1985's "Silverado" as a far less violent, far less "muddy and murky" attempt to bow the Western out with a "fun presentation." But its not a classic.

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There was a real wickedness to the wit of The Last Of Sheila, hey?

Don't let's forget James Mason's (literally) curious line reading of "little child molester?". Could that have been a reference to Roman Polanski, who was little and...aw heck!

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There was a real wickedness to the wit of The Last Of Sheila, hey?

Don't let's forget James Mason's (literally) curious line reading of "little child molester?". Could that have been a reference to Roman Polanski, who was little and...aw heck!

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The issue here is that Hollywood has always known itself...

And let's face it: a few years back, they gave Polanski the Best Director Oscar and a standing ovation. They know where their TRUE sentiments lie.

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I'm reminded of the passage in the novel The Godfather in which mob lawyer Tom Hagen witnesses a sweet young child actress wannabe go into movie producer Woltz's bedroom and emerge...all messed-up and "taken"(with her mother proud it happened.)

THAT's why the Corleones put the horse head in the bed(in addition to getting the movie role for Fontaine.)

Coppola filmed the scene with the girl actress character and Hagen, but cut it. I've seen it on some DVD.

Anyway, I read that scene when I was in my early teens, and I never forgot it. I doubt the millions who read The Godfather ever did, either.

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I liked Death on the Nile also, and I think, there was an Evil Under the Sun, also with Ustinov.

And then there was The Mirror Cracked, with Angela Lansbury as Miss Marple (great audition for Murder She Wrote) plus a who's who of 50s Hollywood: ROck Hudson, Liz Taylor, Tony CUrtis, Kim Novak...

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I liked Death on the Nile also, and I think, there was an Evil Under the Sun, also with Ustinov.

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Yes...Orient Express was the big hit that launched a new Christie franchise by the same producers. The Poirot films and then a Miss Marple...which was "The Mirror Crack'd."

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And then there was The Mirror Cracked, with Angela Lansbury as Miss Marple (great audition for Murder She Wrote)

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I've always "merged" Miss Marple and Jessica Fletcher. Though, in the 60s, we got frumpy old Margaret Rutherford in some "Marple" films -- with a really catchy theme song. My Christie-fan mother made the family see all of them. I really liked that theme song.

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plus a who's who of 50s Hollywood: ROck Hudson, Liz Taylor, Tony CUrtis, Kim Novak...

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I remember being a bit charmed and a bit sad seeing those four Fifties Icons together again in 1980...it was a tough reminder that even the biggest of stars can't really hang on too long(though they hang on longer today.)

It was rough on La Liz and Kim to maintain bosomy sex appeal in their roles...but they did it. The Rock was still The Rock.

But Tony Curtis was best...still tough and modern as a movie agent stuck in England getting on the phone with an operator and saying "Get me the Coast...whaddya mean , WHICH coast?"

Great line.

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Interesting about Angela Lansbury, EC: although she wasn't actually in the cast of Murder On The Orient Express that movie's success and near overnight cult classic status was probably the first step on the road for a Murder She Wrote-like TV series starring someone like (who else?) Angela Lansbury.

It's just there, in the film itself, with its "guest superstars". Murder She Wrote featured more modest, in terms of star power, players, but not necessarily less talented ones. They got some of the most gifted players in the business, and most of them not old but at the least fairly seasoned and well known, which seemed a prerequisite for getting cast on that show.

Speaking of which, btw, that too was a classic when it was fairly new. You could see (and feel) the cult aspects of the series growing. I seldom watch or even then watched modern, contemporary TV series but I made the occasional exception for that one. Columbo and McMillan were two others like it. (I've yet to be bit by the "Matlock bug". Nor have I seen the Dick Van Dyke "doctor" crime show,--can't even remember the title, darn!)

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We're lucky we got as much as we did get back in those days, with not just the stylish in the grand manner Sleuth

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With screenplay by Anthony Shaffer, from his hit Broadway play, and who wrote Frenzy for 1972 release along with Sleuth -- HIS year!

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but the stylish in the modern manner Last Of Sheila, in its way just as good, and a whole lot funnier.

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A whodunit co-written by Anthony Perkins! With Stephen Sondheim! Both men had intelligent, witty reputations, and this movie proves it. Biting Hollywood in-jokes, good cast.

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Gothic horror went out more with parody than style, though some of the parodies were stylish (Young Frankenstein, the two "campish" Dr. Phibes pictures). Nor should we forget such rock solid old school fare as Murder By Death and The Seven Percent Solution.

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Those are good examples of how the 70's weren't a "monolithic" decade -- certain types of movies slipped through the system, usually from makers with clout(Mel Brooks for Young Frankenstein, Neil Simon for Murder by Death.)

Murder by Death seemed a quaint throwback to me. Peter Sellers and David Niven were in it -- they'd done The Pink Panther in the 60s and now seemed "ancient." Alec Guinness was in it -- a comeback right before Star Wars. Peter Falk was in it...riding his "Columbo" wave with a decent Bogart impression. Fun movie.

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December 2017

I've read an article that says the new "Murder on the Orient Express" was enough of a big hit around the world that there will be another Poirot mystery with Branaugh: Death on the Nile, in which he will step into Ustinov's shoes and others will try to recreate Bette Davis and David Niven.

The "Orient Express" movie ends weirdly, with someone telling Poirot that there has BEEN a death on the Nile and he needs to get over there, quick.

But in the movie Death on the Nile, the murder didn't occur until AFTER Poirot boarded the Nile death boat.

Oh,well...

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Meanwhile, on the Johnny Depp front:

I saw an amazing photograph the other day that I missed before:

It was a collection of known male stars(and one woman) posing together for Universal's big attempt to match the Marvel Universe and the DC Universe.

The project is "The Dark Universe." An attempt to reboot Universal's monsters ala Marvel. Tom Cruise and Russell Crowe are in the photo because they were in The Mummy and Crowe is Dr. Jekyll. But Johnny Depp's in the photo too(because he will be The Invisible Man.) And Javier Bardem is in the photo , too(because he will be The Wolf Man.) The woman in the photo is the Mummy Woman.

Except the failure of The Mummy has evidently shut down the Dark Universe(in which the various stars would have guested in each other's movie.)

An effort to get Johnny Depp "un-cast" out of the next Harry Potter offshoot has been rebuffed by JK Rowling herself.

Its a bit interesting, these attempts to cut guys like Matt Damon and Johnny Depp out of movies because of real or accused crimes against women. I'm not sure I'm supportive of what is going on here...at the farther reaches.

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Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year, EC. Before I forget, that is...

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And both to you as well, telegonus. Come around and comment some times, won't you? Always enjoyable.

Ah the wonders of the internet. We've never seen each other, don't really know each other -- but informative exchanges have been had, and kind words of have spoken.

Though not acknowledged by all(understandably), for me it is the season of good cheer and good wlll towards men. ]

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Yes, EC, and the last fourteen words of your post agree entirely with my sentiments. I wish we could keep this going all year around, however the nature of how we live in even the "new and improved" modern world makes this impossible.

As to abuses against women, Psycho's Norman Bates puts 'em all to shame (alas, no LOL emoji to deploy). Psycho deals with all this, carries abuse and control to a different level from where the power brokers of today take it. He's their deprived/depraved country cousin who never got a chance.

In a strange way, Norman's a lot more like the rest of us, in his relative powerlessness and impoverishment; as to how much money he has in the bank, where he can go, what he can do with his life. Sam's in a similar predicament but he can get girls. Both young men are trapped. I suppose most people are to one degree or another or Psycho wouldn't have such a broad appeal.

That it was set early in the Christmas season and the holiday doesn't figure in the story speaks volumes,--maybe--as the season of joy isn't joyous for all; nor, least of all for the kinds of people the film is about.

I don't think that the film's classic status is about "vicarious cruelty" on the part of those of us who rate it so highly, but rather our understanding of the shared humanity of those people the movie is about. That the story begins early in the Christmas season speaks volumes. Intentional? I don't see how it couldn't have been. The holiday is never mentioned, yet the absence of those positive, upbeat feelings one associates with it,--a certain lack of gratitude on the part of its major characters, or their inability to appreciate the good things in life they do have--is central to the film's plot, and in this, given our time of year, a lesson for us all.

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I wish we could keep this going all year around, however the nature of how we live in even the "new and improved" modern world makes this impossible.

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Yes, that is true. Its good when you come around though, telegonus. You at once have great insights and a certain old-world graciousness in expressing them.

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As to abuses against women, Psycho's Norman Bates puts 'em all to shame (alas, no LOL emoji to deploy). Psycho deals with all this, carries abuse and control to a different level from where the power brokers of today take it. He's their deprived/depraved country cousin who never got a chance.

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I expect Hitchcock would look about the sexual harrassment explosion of 2017 in his "home town of Hollywood" as well in accord with his thematic interests.

Think about how the men treat the women even in the "romances" of:

Rebecca
Suspicion
Notorious
Rear Window
To Catch a Thief
Vertigo
Marnie

There are a lot of male bullies in those movies, a lot of victimized women and...and Hitchocck got THIS, too...several of them ended up coupled and married at the end of the movie.

Norman Bates -- ironically -- doesn't openly harrass Marion Crane at all. But he peeps on her naked. And he kills her.

In fact...I take that back. Some of Norman's snarling insults at Marion in the parlor("What do you know about caring?...people always mean well, they cluck their thick tongues..") though expressed "from Mother," could very well be Norman's own sexual anger being expressed.

The closest to the Hollywood baddies of course, is Bob Rusk, primarily in the way he corners and badgers Brenda Blaney for a lunch date even BEFORE he moves on to psychopathic rape and murder. You can tell that poor Brenda has experience with the "normal" version of Rusk(a masher, not a rape-killer) and the scene is one any woman can relate to, at that point. Trying to turn him down without angering him, etc.

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Yes, Rusk is more a "typically modern psychopath" than the comparatively sedate, sedentary, indoorsy Norman Bates, or for that matter most of Hitchcock's bullies, abusers and killers, who functioned in a different movie universe from the one Hitchcock chose to delve into near the end of his career.

Robert Walker's Bruno Antony was in sissy territory twenty years earlier, with his egregiously anti-macho mannerisms. Even "willowy" Norman Bates looked formidable by comparison. Yet Bruno was in many ways an only slightly modified Hollywood movie homosexual, such as they existed at all back then, and I think this was obvious to most sophisticated filmgoers in 1951.

Bruno was rather a bully, too, albeit an effete one. His dealings with Guy were aggressive and didn't give the poor fellow much of an alternative plan, especially after Bruno murdered his wife. The gay "Olympians" of Rope struck me as more amorphous, actually, this in spite of the story being a channeling of the Leopold-Loeb case of the Twenties they don't strike me as all that brilliant, much less the "geniuses" the young killers were said to be in the real life case.

This brings me, at the festive time of year, to the issue of how many Hitchcock films were based, loosely or closely, on real life cases and events. I wouldn't be surprised if the number is far higher than either of us realizes. Was there a "Merry Widow murderer"? I doubt there was one as portrayed by Joseph Cotten in Shadow Of A Doubt, but likely there was some fellow who went around murdering older women for their money that the film is broadly based on.

The two biggies with Bergman, Spellbound and Notorious? Maybe, though I know of no such real life cases. Where shrinks are concerned, though, if one looks hard enough one shall probably find a story like the one told in Spellbound, without the ski marks and Leo G. Carroll, of course. Wasn't The Paradine Case based on something that actually happened? Again, broadly speaking.

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Yes, Rusk is more a "typically modern psychopath" than the comparatively sedate, sedentary, indoorsy Norman Bates, or for that matter most of Hitchcock's bullies, abusers and killers, who functioned in a different movie universe from the one Hitchcock chose to delve into near the end of his career.

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Well, Frenzy was, famously, Hitchcock's first and only R film(Psycho has an R now, but was M when re-released in 1969 after the code came in .) So Rusk is an R-rated psycho, who does sexual things in a graphic(though stylized manner) and whose strangling is shown in full view.

Except the R-rated side of Rusk was contrasted -- in most of his other scenes -- by a kind of back-slapping bravado. Unlike Bruno(who put people off) or Norman(nervous and withdrawn), Rusk was "everybody's pal." Bob's your uncle...and it makes him very dangerous.

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Robert Walker's Bruno Antony was in sissy territory twenty years earlier, with his egregiously anti-macho mannerisms. Even "willowy" Norman Bates looked formidable by comparison. Yet Bruno was in many ways an only slightly modified Hollywood movie homosexual, such as they existed at all back then, and I think this was obvious to most sophisticated filmgoers in 1951.

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Its a fascinating performance. I often feel like I'm shortchanging Robert Walker's great work in Strangers when lingering on Norman(or the more brutal Rusk, for that matter.) Walker just OWNS Strangers from his first few lines of dialogue. The gay thing is certainly there, sometimes more strongly than others, but he goes OTHER places, too. A rather comic alien feyness. A certain macho bravado (like about his drinking "Oh, I've got a cure for that!") But its Walker's ENERGY as Bruno in that opening scene that always grabs me. He practically overpowers Guy.

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Bruno was rather a bully, too, albeit an effete one.

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Note in passing: weakish as Bruno seems at first, he "rings the bell" at the fairgrounds(proving his strength) and is clearly winning the fight with Guy on the carousel at the end before it crashes. Bruno has reserves of strength in him that we don't see til its too late. And he's "male macho wolf" personified attracting Miriam to her death(a long shot of Bruno standing with legs spread and looking at Miriam is breath-taking in its overt sexual come-on -- from a MAN.)

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His dealings with Guy were aggressive and didn't give the poor fellow much of an alternative plan, especially after Bruno murdered his wife.

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I've always felt that Bruno's "foolproof criss-cross murder plan" was rather bogus. As the story proves, if you do '"the other guy's murder" and the other guy HAS NO ALIBI -- the cops go after the other guy IMMEDIATELY. You almost wonder if Bruno planned it that way.


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The gay "Olympians" of Rope struck me as more amorphous, actually, this in spite of the story being a channeling of the Leopold-Loeb case of the Twenties they don't strike me as all that brilliant, much less the "geniuses" the young killers were said to be in the real life case.

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Well, their "brilliant" plot(in Rope) is exposed and falls apart rather quickly under Stewart's questioning -- part of what Rope is telling us, I think, is that people who think they are superior often aren't, they are deluding themselves. I can't say Leopold and Loeb were that much more brilliant -- they ended up on trial and convicted. But I don't know the case.

I enjoy Rope both for "the stunt" and for the sheer horrific nature of both the initial killing(of an innocent young man "just to do it") and the Fascistic rationales given by the killers AND Stewart for doing it. This kind of arrogance continues on today; the young Columbine killers had it(well, one of them -- the other was his pawn.)

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Rope does have its charms. For me, John Dall sells the gay thrillkill aspect of the story,--is there a way saying this more "tastefully"?--while Farley Granger is like his mopey partner. He was a downer in this one. Dall matched Jimmy Stewart's character in his mental energy and alertness. The Production Code prevented Hitchcock (or any director) from making a film in which homosexuality as a specifically stated lifestyle could be figured into the story. Hitchcock made the best of a bad situation; and yet there's a pattern of this in his filmography, as Hitchcock liked to test the limits of what was possible in films back in the day.

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Rope does have its charms. For me, John Dall sells the gay thrillkill aspect of the story,--is there a way saying this more "tastefully"?--while Farley Granger is like his mopey partner.

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I've read of these "dyad" killing buddy-pairs, and evidently one is always the more dominant one, and the more legitmate psychopath. I know this was the case with the young Columbine killers and I think that was the case with Leopold and Loeb. Dall is the "force" in this killer team -- fairly close to Bruno Anthony in his fey way, but more of a "superior being" type. It remains interesting that Farley Granger went from playing a gay Hitchcock villain to a straight Hitchcock hero within three years.

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He was a downer in this one. Dall matched Jimmy Stewart's character in his mental energy and alertness.

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Yes, I think it was written so that Dall was actually the "lead villain" and Granger almost his sidekick. Except: mopey Granger was actually the killing machine and HE's the one looking to kill Stewart sooner rather than later at the end. Interesting, I thought.

Slight personal downside: Some of Dall's vocal and physical mannerisms in Rope remind me of Dan Ackroyd in his snooty "Trading Places" persona. But then some people feel that Robert Walker in Strangers gives off a "Bill Murray vibe." We work from who we know NOW.

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The Production Code prevented Hitchcock (or any director) from making a film in which homosexuality as a specifically stated lifestyle could be figured into the story.

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I found an article somewhere from 1948 when Rope was released. The key thing about it was that Rope had been banned from showings on all military bases -- and in some cities.
The article, being written IN 1948, was mysterious about why --
suggesting that it was the film's violence, macabre premise(dinner served from a chest with a body) and sympathetic discussions of Fascism were "worthy of banning."

But as I recall, between the lines one felt: Rope was banned because the two killers were pretty clearly GAY. All-male military bases might well have been put off limits.

I don't know how much the banning affected the box office or Rope.

I do know that Rope was the one Hitchcock movie I had to wait the longest to see. I recall no TV showings in the 60s and 70s; it came out in the "Lost Hitchcock" packages of the 80's. Perhaps the single take stunt didn't work with commercials, but perhaps its gay themes were "too much for TV."

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Hitchcock made the best of a bad situation; and yet there's a pattern of this in his filmography, as Hitchcock liked to test the limits of what was possible in films back in the day.

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Though Hitchcock ended up under fire for too many likely gay villains -- the Rope pair, Bruno, Leonard in NXNW, likely Mrs. Danvers and possibly(the actor more than the role) Norman Bates -- I think that, yes, he was always trying to push that envelope and gay characters were banned. This even as Hitchcock worked among gays in the Hollywood community all the time, and certainly hired them for acting and writing and other tasks.

And I've always liked to push the envelope a bit and suggest that some of his women-hating HEROES(James Stewart in Rear Window, Cary Grant in To Catch A Thief) might have had some preferences that neither they nor we saw "overtly." These men settled down with women in the end(the same woman on those occasions) but, again -- with a certain antipathy. And I know "women-hating" is too strong a term; perhaps bored and put off by, would be better.

Meanwhile, it wasn't just gays that Hitchcock pushed the envelope on. Its as if he perused the Hays Code and kept going after it: pre-marital sex; extra-marital sex; too-violent violence(the killings in Lifeboat, Spellbound and Rope, long before Psycho.) Nudity(in Psycho.) The villain getting away with it(Saboteur, Vertigo.) The cheating wife getting to keep her lover(Dial M.) And more that I've forgotten.

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This brings me, at the festive time of year, to the issue of how many Hitchcock films were based, loosely or closely, on real life cases and events. I wouldn't be surprised if the number is far higher than either of us realizes.

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Indeed. And some of his fictional killers "mixed and matched" SEVERAL
real killers.

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Was there a "Merry Widow murderer"? I doubt there was one as portrayed by Joseph Cotten in Shadow Of A Doubt, but likely there was some fellow who went around murdering older women for their money that the film is broadly based on.

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Yes, I think there was such a man. For real. Who inspired the writing of Uncle Charlie.

Lars Thorwald in Rear Window as based on one or more real killers. A Dr. Crippen for one, I think(Hitchcock got into this with Truffaut.)

The Rope guys: Leopold and Loeb.

Norman Bates: Ed Gein(famously, but not MUCH really -- Texas Chainsaw and Silence of the Lambs hooked into him better.)

Bob Rusk: Neville Heath(whom Barry Foster rather resembled), John Christie(played by Richard Attenborough one year before Frenzy in 10 Rillington Place), and some guy called "Jack the Stripper."

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Then there are those real life cases that could almost BE Hitchcock projects: the Boston Strangler comes to mind (O.J.'s a maybe, as I think it would work better as a Hitch project without the race angle that there's no getting away from where the actual case is concerned).

The low budget 1964 exploitation thriller The Strangler was apparently, despite its being set in L.A., "inspired" by the still open Boston Stranger case of the period. Victor Buono as the fat mama's boy killer was inspired casting, though not IMHO right for what have had to have been a more rugged type to have pulled off all those murders.

From the same period there's an underground cult classic, Who Killed Teddy Bear, in which Sal Mineo played a psycho killer (and very well) that was as creepy as Psycho if not nearly so good. It has its fans. Alas, I've seen it just once. There may be a Boston Strangler connection to this otherwise very New York (and New York filmed) movie. Mineo was a first rate actor, and I suppose this was "his" Norman Bates part. It's too bad the movie, which is very good, isn't better.

More recently, as the times have changed so much over the last forty to fifty years I find it difficult to image a famous real life crime that would make a good Hitchcock project, by which I mean alternate universe style. JonBenet comes to mind, but I feel that the case is too damn heartbreaking to ponder as something that could be fashioned as a mainstream movie. The very idea of someone, anyone, making money off the case turns me off.

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Then there are those real life cases that could almost BE Hitchcock projects: the Boston Strangler comes to mind

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The film of The Boston Strangler came out right before the R rating came in, as I recall, or perhaps had one of the first ones. I wasn't allowed to see it. I did get to see Frenzy(which could have been called The London Strangler) a few years later, probably because of Hitchcock's cachet.

Funny thing: the central rape-murder in Frenzy was more graphic than any of the truncated scenes of such in The Boston Strangler. Perhaps fictionalizing the crime made it less sensationalistic and insulting to real victims' real families.

The Boston Strangler famously gave Tony Curtis a late-breaking chance to prove his considerable chops as an actor -- with a putty nose and a draining-out of any sex appeal. The final interview scenes that got into his reasons for sex killing -- and had him "mime" an actual killing in a chilling moment -- were MORE than anything Psycho or Frenzy gave us.

I don't feel that it was a particularly classic movie, though. It had the "clunky" feeling of many late sixties movies that were more of the old era than the new. The first R rated movies often were made by people who didn't know what to do with the rating.

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The low budget 1964 exploitation thriller The Strangler was apparently, despite its being set in L.A., "inspired" by the still open Boston Stranger case of the period. Victor Buono as the fat mama's boy killer was inspired casting, though not IMHO right for what have had to have been a more rugged type to have pulled off all those murders.

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A more rugged type like the very fit Tony Curtis(who surprisingly, COULD play rugged.)

Its been noted that had he been "discovered" back in 1960, Victor Buono would have been a perfect fit for a movie version of the Norman Bates of Robert Bloch's novel. But I doubt Hitchcock would have used him -- the part needed an identifiable marquee star. And Hitchcock liked his leads -- hero OR villain -- to be trim and good looking.

Still, Buono is worth thinking about as Bloch's Bates on screen. He seems a bit too cultured and "Shakespearean" an actor for the rural backwater schlub that Bloch's Norman was -- even as Bloch's Norman was very well read and deep into the occult. But it is hard to think of too many bankable overweight male stars in Hollywood at anytime. Discussions of Bloch's Bates on screen have often centered on 1960 Rod Steiger as a good choice -- he played a Mother-dominated Mr. Joyboy in The Loved One in 1965. But that's about it.

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Yes, and Steiger was hilarious in The Loved One, arguably the best thing in the movie,--well, okay, friends--along with every scene Jonathan Winters was in.

Did It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World start the all-star over the top big budget comedy craze of the middle to late Sixties? It seems that way. The Loved One was a smaller scale version of same, with things like The Great Race, Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines and The Russians Are Coming (etc.) following.

As this isn't Hitch-related I should probably drop it, but you mentioned Steiger as Joyboy. He was one of the many go-to guys for all-star/multi-star pictures of the era, usually not comedies. I'm trying to think of the nearest Hitchcock came to making that kind of film.

For comedy, I suppose The Trouble With Harry, allowing for neither John Forsythe nor Shirley MacLaine beging famous when the film was made. The supporting cast was stellar; for a supporting cast.

Psycho had a fair number of prominent names, as did the earlier Vertigo. North By Northwest has three. It's worth mentioning that so does Strangers On A Train. One that was top heavy with either hot players or prestigious ones: The Paradine Case (and Rebecca, too). The Birds has many prominent names in major parts.

FWIW: there's no way Rod Steger or, for that matter, Victor Buono, was going to play Norman Bates. Hitchcock would use a plain or strange looking actor for a secondary villain, such as Norman Lloyd in Saboteur, but not for a truly major role,--unless it was Charles Laughton.

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(O.J.'s a maybe, as I think it would work better as a Hitch project without the race angle that there's no getting away from where the actual case is concerned).

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. JonBenet comes to mind, but I feel that the case is too damn heartbreaking to ponder as something that could be fashioned as a mainstream movie. The very idea of someone, anyone, making money off the case turns me off.

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Me, too. Your two examples remind us that, as far as real life cases go, real life often summons up elements that Hitchcock -- as an "entertainer"(less Frenzy) -- did not want to confront. The racial aspects of OJ on the one hand; the "sexualization of a child"(in the pageants) of Jon Benet.

There is also the issue that OJ swore he never did it and "got off"(the criminal trial) and now lives in freedom; and that they never really have proved who killed Jon Benet. These are frustrating elements to any crime story. At least in Psycho and Frenzy, we KNOW whodunnit, and we watch them captured(if not killed.)

I do believe that I saw The Boston Strangler on a list of projects that Hitchcock turned down over his career. He remarked on the film "In Cold Blood" that if he had made it, he would have spent more time meeting the Clutter Family members who are so ruthlessly killed (which is rather his strategy in Psycho -- we KNOW Marion Crane.)

In short, it seems to me that for Hitchcock to tackle "true crime" related tales -- he had to have done them once they had been massaged into very fictionalized and plotty "new versions": Rope, Psycho, Frenzy -- and Rear Window -- bear little resemblance to the true crimes that inspired them.

Note in passing: to help Barry Foster prepare for the role of Bob Rusk, Hitchcock lent the actor a small collection of books about serial killers like Neville Heath and John Christie. Creepy homework. Creepy to think that Hitchcock owned those books.

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From the same period there's an underground cult classic, Who Killed Teddy Bear, in which Sal Mineo played a psycho killer (and very well) that was as creepy as Psycho if not nearly so good. It has its fans. Alas, I've seen it just once. There may be a Boston Strangler connection to this otherwise very New York (and New York filmed) movie. Mineo was a first rate actor, and I suppose this was "his" Norman Bates part. It's too bad the movie, which is very good, isn't better.

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Here's an ecarle "context jump":

Sal Mineo was nominated for Best Supporting Actor in 1960, the year that Martin Balsam WASN'T (for Arbogast.)

Chill Wills was in that race(for The Alamo) and ran some egregious ads asking all his "cousins" to vote for him.

Groucho Marx took this ad in Variety:

"Dear Chill Wills. Very pleased to be your cousin. However, I am voting for Sal Mineo. Sincerely, Groucho Marx."

But, I digress(and oh, Peter Ustinov won, for Spartacus.)

I have heard of, but not seen "Who Killed Teddy Bear?"(which duplicated the titles of every Burke's Law episode: "Who Killed BLANK?") I think I confused it FOR a Burke's Law episode. Now I am interested in seeing it.

It occurs to me that Sal Mineo could have been on the short list to play Norman Bates. He was a bit "ethnic" for the character, but had that boyish shy thing going on.

And of course, Sal Mineo met an untimely Psycho-ish death -- stabbed to death in West Hollywood. Peter Bogdanovich -- a Mineo friend -- said that while Mineo was gay, the murder was a random robbery, not lifestyle related, as was rumored by some. And the killer got out of prison, eventually.

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Yeah, children and true life crime are an awful mix for a mainstream movie,--anything aiming for a large audience--and it's a good thing that (so far as I know) no such film exists.

An exception,--cuz the kid's evil: The Bad Seed. That's an odd one, what with the grownups pathetic, dying sad deaths, the child the most wholesome looking and (on the surface) acting of the entire cast. Now THAT one was a shocker, and for my money, due to its subject matter, it still is. One Hitchcock connection (in the cast): Henry Jones. He appeared in many Hitch TV episodes and in at least one Hitchcock feature film.

Alas, poor Sal (Mineo), he wasn't the Hitchcock type. Aside from his too ethnic looks he came off as working class, a poor kid from the tenements, and those were the kind of parts he played. Yet Cary Grant grew up just as tough he acquired a sophisticated veneer, and that's something Mineo never sought.

Mineo's obvious, well known gayness factored into the mystery of Who Killed Sal Mineo. There was even a novel based on his murder. Yet sometimes things like gayness, which on the surface, would seem like an obvious clue, something worth pursuing in the Mineo murder, the irrelevancy of all this, the essentially prosaic nature of his murder,--by prosaic I mean routine, unexciting, as in "these things happen to the best of us"--was the big fact, the gigantic elephant in the living room in his case: and the elephant was the size of a mouse!

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The two biggies with Bergman, Spellbound and Notorious? Maybe, though I know of no such real life cases. Where shrinks are concerned, though, if one looks hard enough one shall probably find a story like the one told in Spellbound, without the ski marks and Leo G. Carroll, of course. Wasn't The Paradine Case based on something that actually happened? Again, broadly speaking.

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With all of these forties cases, you rather "got me." I'm just not sure. Paradine Case seems "real" in the characters and play out.

Notorious was an original screenplay but not based on anyone I'm much aware of.

Spellbound may well have been based on some "case files" that fed both the Edwardes book and the movie.

Sidebar: I've read that James Stewart and Grace Kelly in Rear Window were based on real people: war photographer Robert Capa for Jimmy; some famous fashion woman for Grace. Capa and the woman had a real-life affair, maybe married.

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In a strange way, Norman's a lot more like the rest of us, in his relative powerlessness and impoverishment; as to how much money he has in the bank, where he can go, what he can do with his life.

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Yes.

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Sam's in a similar predicament but he can get girls. Both young men are trapped.

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Yes, too. I suppose the problem for Sam is that he can get girls(like the gorgeous Marion) but then has to reveal that he is too impoverished and debt-ridden to "go the distance" to marriage, children, etc.

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I suppose most people are to one degree or another or Psycho wouldn't have such a broad appeal.

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I'm afraid so. After those movies about well-off people -- To Catch a Thief, Vertigo, NXNW -- Hitchcock here returned to the workaday world of The Wrong Man, and connected with probably every lonely, entrapped, and debt-ridden member of his 1960 audience.

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Yes, and on Hitchcock's TV series, the half-hour one I'm watching fairly regularly these days, there is an embarrassment of riches of ordinary people in debt, in bad relationships, in need of some kind of help, old and young alike.

It does seem that Alfred Hitchcock and his staff on his TV series were alert to what was going on in America (and elsewhere) in the Fifties. That show is hardly escapist. One sees more of the likes of Carmen Mathews and Constance Ford than Grace Kelly or Audrey Hepburn in the leading female roles; and of the male players, more regular guys of the kind that were the specialty of actors like Steve Brodie, Dick York or even the handsome though "deglamorized" Robert Horton.

As to all this, Psycho plays more like an extended, pushing the envelope Hitch half-hour than a typical Hitchcock movie. What does it have in common with North By Northwest, To Catch A Thief and The Trouble With Harry? Not much, I'd say. The major difference is that while the Hitchcock half-hour often dealt with criminal types it as often as not steered clear of extreme pathology where crime was concerned. More often, ordinary people who do bad things out of desperation or "amateurs" and small timers with little on the ball.

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Yes, and on Hitchcock's TV series, the half-hour one I'm watching fairly regularly these days, there is an embarrassment of riches of ordinary people in debt, in bad relationships, in need of some kind of help, old and young alike.

It does seem that Alfred Hitchcock and his staff on his TV series were alert to what was going on in America (and elsewhere) in the Fifties. That show is hardly escapist.

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True. The black and white series was mirrored, roughly in the black and white Wrong Man and Psycho, made four years apart during the series' half hour run.

I expect that Hitchcock knew -- even in the "placid fifties" -- of the desperation and yearnings of repressed Americans -- and English folk(some episodes were set in England), and he knew that these concerns would "hook" an audience seeking some drama with bedrock reality to it.

You're watching episodes I haven't seen in years, telegonus, but I recall that many an episode opened with a wife killing a husband(Barbara Bel Geddes in Lamb to the Slaughter) or a husband killing a wife(David Wayne in One Mile to Go). I picture Americans in entrapped marriages rather enjoying those fantasies.

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One sees more of the likes of Carmen Mathews and Constance Ford than Grace Kelly or Audrey Hepburn in the leading female roles; and of the male players, more regular guys of the kind that were the specialty of actors like Steve Brodie, Dick York or even the handsome though "deglamorized" Robert Horton.

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Hitchcock often complained that, for his movies, he had to cast glamourous stars. When he couldn't GET stars, he cast more realistic people like the ones in Frenzy and Family Plot, but those were exceptions to the rule. I think in the movies, Hitchcock relied on the character people (like Harold J. Stone and Martin Balsam) to supply the reality. And his TV leads.

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As to all this, Psycho plays more like an extended, pushing the envelope Hitch half-hour than a typical Hitchcock movie.

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For all of the other influences on Psycho(Diabolique, Sunset Boulevard), perhaps it was the William Castle pictures that most suggested to Hitchcock, "Hey, I could film this with my TV crew!" What were his TV episodes, after all, but real classy B movies?

But for all of critic Dwight MacDonald's complaint, "This is just one of his TV shows, with padding," Psycho clearly had elements of perversity, violence, sex and CINEMA that his TV show couldn't approach.(The shower scene took 7 days to film; he could have shot two entire episodes of his TV series in that time, half hours.)

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What does it have in common with North By Northwest, To Catch A Thief and The Trouble With Harry? Not much, I'd say.

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Nope. As that so-so movie "Hitchcock" tried to impart, Hitchcock felt the need to get down and dirty and competitive with the horror mongers, at least for one film. Well, two(The Birds.)

Though the LA Times critic wrote this of Psycho: "It is his most unpleasant film since The Trouble With Harry, though that was unpleasant in a different way." Thus some linkage between the two films, perhaps the too brusque and non-worshipful treatment of dead bodies.(And wait'll he got to Frenzy!)

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The major difference is that while the Hitchcock half-hour often dealt with criminal types it as often as not steered clear of extreme pathology where crime was concerned. More often, ordinary people who do bad things out of desperation or "amateurs" and small timers with little on the ball.

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Though I recall about ten or so serial killers in the Hitchcock series, many of them after Psycho, there wasn't much he could do to ..show what they could do. So he steered clear of those tales.

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I think that a fair number of the serial killer type episodes of the half-hour were comedies, with, it's worth adding, dark undercurrents.

The first season The Creeper, a Suspense radio entry to begin with, is downright spooky and very serious. One I watched the other night, with Hume Cronyn and I forget the name of the actress who played his sister,--no, not wife Jessica-- felt quite lighthearted and frankly didn't work for me. There was one on early tonight/this morning that featured elderly women who kill.

Overall, the half-hours aimed for a kind of British-style comfortableness (sic) and did it very well. They made murder feel almost like a joke. The plotting was often intricate, the dialogue often witty in a brittle sort of way.

It's worth mentioming yet again that this was a show produced and hosted by Hitchcock that was basically a very good in investment for him. His staff (Joan Harrison, Norman Lloyd) did the heavy lifting, and they made shows in their boss's style.





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I think that a fair number of the serial killer type episodes of the half-hour were comedies, with, it's worth adding, dark undercurrents.

The first season The Creeper, a Suspense radio entry to begin with, is downright spooky and very serious. One I watched the other night, with Hume Cronyn and I forget the name of the actress who played his sister,--no, not wife Jessica-- felt quite lighthearted and frankly didn't work for me. There was one on early tonight/this morning that featured elderly women who kill.

Overall, the half-hours aimed for a kind of British-style comfortableness (sic) and did it very well. They made murder feel almost like a joke. The plotting was often intricate, the dialogue often witty in a brittle sort of way.

It's worth mentioning yet again that this was a show produced and hosted by Hitchcock that was basically a very good in investment for him. His staff (Joan Harrison, Norman Lloyd) did the heavy lifting, and they made shows in their boss's style.





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That it was set early in the Christmas season and the holiday doesn't figure in the story speaks volumes,--maybe--as the season of joy isn't joyous for all; nor, least of all for the kinds of people the film is about.

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As I type this, it is the week between Christmas and New Years -- which The Apartment most touchingly explored as a time of loneliness for the "have nots"(not just financially, but in terms of love and/or family ties.)

Psycho is indeed not overt about this, but it is THERE. That "December 11" title gets the work done.

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I don't think that the film's classic status is about "vicarious cruelty" on the part of those of us who rate it so highly, but rather our understanding of the shared humanity of those people the movie is about.

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Agreed! I think we come to express a certain shared empathy to the plight of Marion, Sam, Norman and Lila. Even cool loner Arbogast has always had me wondering -- THAT's how he gets to spend Xmas? Who is waiting at home for him?

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That the story begins early in the Christmas season speaks volumes. Intentional? I don't see how it couldn't have been.

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True. Hitchcock was a pretty meticulous dude. I can see his thought process:

"Oh, there are Xmas decorations in the Phoenix process shot...I can't pay for the second unit to go back...I won't substitute LA footage...I guess I'd better put a December date on the screen...but I don't have Christmas in the movie. Well...all the better to communicate the desolation of the film."

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The holiday is never mentioned, yet the absence of those positive, upbeat feelings one associates with it,--a certain lack of gratitude on the part of its major characters, or their inability to appreciate the good things in life they do have--is central to the film's plot, and in this, given our time of year, a lesson for us all.

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Yes, that "lack of gratitude and failure to appreciate the good things in life" is perhaps what makes Psycho somewhat of a moral tale on Hitchcock's part. Sam comes to regret his whining in the hotel room about his financial plight -- he WILL marry the gorgeous , caring Marion. Marion comes to regret stealing the money. Hitchcock's message is: "Make the best of the good things you do have...especially you handsome and beautiful ones."

There is also the dark irony that Arbogast and Lila(in particular) think that Marion disappeared over the money. It proved not to matter at all to Norman...of course, he never knew about it.

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I never saw the original 'Murder on the Orient Express', so maybe I wouldn't be disappointed by the remake. Ya think?

I've also never seen the remake of the original Psycho. I guess it was due for a remake because younger audiences just do not appreciate black and white. And a lot of young people were not familiar with the story anyway.
For me though, it would be like going to a museum to see a new version of the Mona Lisa. Hey, look, they repainted it in all bright colors. She's wearing pink lipstick.! lol

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I never saw the original 'Murder on the Orient Express', so maybe I wouldn't be disappointed by the remake. Ya think?

I've also never seen the remake of the original Psycho.

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Well, you've covered all the sequels -- might as well make it a "complete set."

Personally (on influence of others that I have read) I am more comfortable with a remake of a great story well told that inferior sequels that continue the great story in ever-declining new storylines.
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I guess it was due for a remake because younger audiences just do not appreciate black and white. And a lot of young people were not familiar with the story anyway.

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Both of those reasons were offered for the remake -- particularly the one about black and white.

Also the director, Gus Van Sant -- rather like a lot of us -- had an obsession with Psycho and felt it would be a great experiment to try to do the film "shot by shot, line by line" from the original, rather than massively changing the story as such remakes as The Manchurian Candidate and The Truth About Charlie(Charade) did.

Van Sant had been trying, and failing, for years to get Universal to give him the remake rights(he had the idea of Timothy Hutton as Norman and Jack Nicholson as Arbogast at one time) but only when he got an Oscar nomination for Good Will Hunting did he have the clout to get those rights -- because he signed up with one of the most powerful organizations on the Universal lot: Imagine Entertainment(Ron Howard and Brian Grazer.)

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For me though, it would be like going to a museum to see a new version of the Mona Lisa. Hey, look, they repainted it in all bright colors. She's wearing pink lipstick.! lol

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Yeah...that's what it was like. The colors chosen (and shot by a very respected DP, Chris Doyle) were rather pink and orange and green pastels.

I call Van Sant's Psycho "The Experiment that Succeeded by Failing." AS an experiment, it is very interesting. Same shots, same lines -- new actors, new age. Could it all work exactly the same? No, not really. And Van Sant chickened out and cut some lines, cut one entire scene(the church scene with the Sheriff and wife), added some things(Norman masterbating at the peephole; weird insert shots when Arbogast dies, of a sexy woman and a calf. Huh?).

Its worth a watch. The best contribution is that of composer Danny Elfman -- reorchestrating Bernard Herrmann's great score and FORCING it to fit with shots cut at new rhythms or removed. Great technical work by Elfman.

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I wasn't yet born when the 1974 version came . I had heard of title, and read a non-Poirot Agatha Christie story, but didn't know the twist (or punchline).

I'm a big whodunit fan, though. I've read Sherlock Holmes, etc.

I really enjoyed the movie. They didn't "action it up" like the Sherlock Holmes movies. It was slow and methodical, and very well acted.

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Glad you liked it!

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