Apr 05, 2016 08:06
travel,
television,
agatha christie,
maeve dermody,
burn gorman,
miranda richardson,
roddy mcdowall,
david suchet,
june duprez,
toby stephens,
diana rigg,
pauline moran,
early 20th century,
walter huston,
judith anderson,
marsha fitzalan,
barry fitzgerald,
peter ustinov,
denis quilley,
philip jackson,
charles dance,
colin blakely,
aidan turner,
carolyn pickles,
douglas booth,
hugh fraser,
movies,
james mason,
anna maxwell-martin,
old hollywood,
maggie smith,
sam neill,
literary,
russell tovey
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Comments 2
Sure, it's not a cozy detective story as some of Christie's books. The film is so dark and grim. Leaves you feeling empty and like there's no hope.
I remember watching it for the first time when I was a kid, I was pretty scared. To be honest, probably, it's the only film that really scared me. No thriller or horror has ever made me feel this way.
I liked 2015 adaptation a lot. I thought the final scene was too long though.
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