Film Review
With four popular Agatha Christie adaptations already under his belt
George Pollock was well placed to direct a fifth, based on the crime
writer's most frequently plagiarised novel,
Ten Little Indians. This was
the second screen adaptation of the novel - René Clair had
previously directed a superlative version,
And Then There Were None
(1945). Clair's film provided a high benchmark for all subsequent
adaptations and right from the start it is clear that Pollock's humdrum
little film isn't going to make the grade, despite the presence of some
very capable actors in the cast and some superior production values.
The tone of the film is very different from Pollock's previous Agatha
Christie films, all of which featured the incomparable (no other
adjective will do) Margaret Rutherford as spinster sleuth
extraordinaire Miss Marple. The humour that made these previous
films so enjoyable is singularly lacking in Pollock's
Ten Little Indians and this is a
sorry omission. Attempts to sex up Christie's novel with some
half-hearted action interludes and a dash of suggestive eroticism
(hence the casting of recent Bond girl Shirley Eaton in the female
lead) generally fall flat and the gimmicky "Whodunit break", where the
narrative is suspended for a full minute just before the denouement to
give the audience time to take stock and solve the mystery, is as
ludicrously cheesy as it sounds.
After a torturously slow beginning things begin to pick up around the
film's midpoint, once the acting lightweights have all been culled (and
not before time). Stanley Holloway, Dennis Price and Wilfrid
Hyde-White are equally plausible suspects (some atmospheric lighting
helps to make each of them chillingly sinister) and their combined
efforts are more than a match for the lacklustre writing and direction,
not to mention the soppy (and not very convincing) romance between
Eaton and Hugh O'Brian. This being the swinging sixties no
producer was going to subject the audience to the grimly nihilistic
ending of Christie's original novel, so we have to make do with the
inferior alternative that Christie concocted for her stage play.
It's a feeble conclusion to a film that has moments of brilliance
scattered too thinly to make it remotely memorable.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Eight complete strangers arrive at an isolated mansion situated high up
in the snow-capped mountains. They include a singer, an actress,
a judge, a private detective, a doctor, a general, a secretary and a
man posing as another man who recently killed himself. They are
greeted by two domestics, the Grohmanns, but their mysterious host, Mr
Owen, is curiously absent. After dinner, the assembled party
listen to a recorded message from their host accusing each of them of
having committed a crime for which he or she will soon be
punished. Any thought that they are being subjected to a macabre
practical joke is dispelled when, one by one, the guests are
murdered. The odd thing is that the manner of their deaths
appears to match a nursery rhyme about ten little Indians...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.