Murder
on the Orient Express ** ½ / *****
Directed
by: Kenneth
Branagh.
Written
by: Michael
Green based upon the novel by Agatha Christie.
Starring:
Kenneth
Branagh (Hercule Poirot), Penélope Cruz (Pilar Estravados), Willem Dafoe
(Gerhard Hardman), Judi Dench (Princess Dragomiroff), Johnny Depp (Edward
Ratchett), Josh Gad (Hector MacQueen), Derek Jacobi (Edward Henry Masterman),
Leslie Odom Jr. (Dr. Arbuthnot), Michelle Pfeiffer (Caroline Hubbard), Daisy
Ridley (Mary Debenham), Marwan Kenzari (Pierre Michel), Olivia Colman
(Hildegarde Schmidt), Lucy Boynton (Countess Elena Andrenyi), Manuel
Garcia-Rulfo (Biniamino Marquez), Sergei Polunin (Count Rudolph Andrenyi), Tom
Bateman (Bouc).
The best thing about the new version
of Murder on the Orient Express is Kenneth Branagh’s performance as Agatha
Christie’s infamous detective Hercule Poirot. Sporting the best mustache I have
ever seen, Branagh somehow finds new dimensions to play in Poirot – even for
those of us who have seen Albert Finney’s Oscar nominated turn in the 1974
original film, and who had a mother who watched a lot of David Suchet as
Poirot, and as such, watched a lot himself. Branagh’s Poirot is almost a tragic
figure – he certainly is a sad one – pining over his lost love, and admitting
that his curse is that he can only “see things the way they ought to be”, so
when something is amiss, it sticks out. This makes much of his life miserable –
but makes him a great detective. But despite being this sad figure, it’s still
a joy to watch Branagh in this role – he’s funny and clever, and has Branagh
swinging for the fences again, in a role a worthy of him, for the first time in
I’m not sure how long (yes, he’s very good in Dunkirk – but that’s a different
kind of performance). If they announced tomorrow, a new movie or television series
with Branagh as Poirot, I’d be enthused.
The problem with the new version
of Murder on the Orient Express however is that Branagh, the director, doesn’t seem
to put as much care into the storytelling as he does in crafting his own
performance – or growing that mustache (please tell me it was real). After a
crackerjack start at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem the film never really finds
it footing again once we are on board the titular train. Part of the problem is
that there are so many character (this version even combines two together to
help) – but with 15 other major characters, played by one of the best ensembles
you can hope for, the result is that most of the cast is underutilized.
Essentially, they all get introduced with one character trait, and stay that
way. It isn’t that some of them aren’t having fun – Michelle Pfeiffer is a man
hungry widow certainly seems to be having a blast, as does Judi Dench as an
elder Princess, but the movie does a poor job of keeping the characters sorted
out. Every time Manuel Garcia-Rulfo’s Marquez shows up, you wonder who the hell
he is for example – and for a long stretch of the movie, you forget that there
is even a Count and Countess on the train. Other great performers are barely utilized
– poor Olivia Colman and Willem Dafoe – and some are given little to work with
other than their costumes – to be fair, Daisy Ridley and Leslie Odom Jr. both
look amazing in those costumes, but you wish there was more there. There’s a
problem in your Murder on the Orient Express adaptation when Johnny Depp’s
Ratchett has more screen time that practically anyone note named Hercule.
Perhaps some of these flaws could
be forgiven in an overall better film. After all, you have a great Poirot here,
the costumes and art direction are superb, and Branagh and cinematographer Harris
Zambarloukos do what they can to try and open up the story a little – hard to
do when the story is confined to a train, and that train is stopped in its
tracks alongside a mountain. But the biggest problem with the film is that it
screws up precisely the part of the movie where you cannot screw up – the finale,
the “solution” to the murder – which is stories like this is always the key
moment, and always takes a long time, because the plot is so elaborate that
Poirot needs to explain it for a good 15 minutes or so. First of all, the way
he even comes to figure everything out is never really explained – he’s putting
pieces together that the audience didn’t have, which doesn’t seem fair – and second,
his big long explanation is muddled and confusing. It leaves you scratching
your head – and I knew the solution before I saw the movie.
No comments:
Post a Comment