Film Review
Having scored notable successes with their first two big budget Agatha
Christie adaptations -
Murder on the Orient Express
(1974) and
Death on the Nile (1978) -
producers John Brabourne and Richard B. Goodwin embarked on a third,
this time dispensing with the services of Hercule Poirot and instead
allowing Miss Marple to apply her inimitable crime-solving
abilities. In the 1960s, Margaret Rutherford had played the
aged amateur sleuth, to the great dissatisfaction of Christie.
This time, Angela Lansbury takes on the role and gives a fair imitation
of the Miss Marple we known and love from Christie's novels, although
she is clearly too young and too starry for the part and looks pretty
sinister with all that make-up.
In contrast to the preceding Poirot films,
The Mirror Crack'd is a formulaic
and self-indulgent affair that might have worked better as a TV
movie. Director Guy Hamilton shows little of the inventiveness
and style of his previous films, such as the superlative
Goldfinger
(1964), and appears merely to be going through the motions. The
script is generally awful (albeit with the occasional
brilliant riposte) but the star-studded ensemble somehow manages to pep it
up and gives great value. Elizabeth Taylor and Kim Novak's cat
fights provide most of the entertainment value, even if these are
pretty tangential to the plot. Taylor sparks off well with her
equally ageless co-star Rock Hudson, and even rekindles some of the
magic of their previous on-screen pairing, in George Stevens'
Giant
(1956).
Edward Fox makes a far more sympathetic and convincing sleuth than
Lansbury and you can't help wishing that Miss Marple had been gently
airbrushed out of this film to allow him to take centre stage. If
the film had been made today, Fox would doubtless have been invited to
make a long-running television series featuring his character:
Inspector Craddock Investigates, or
some such. Whilst not a patch on the unsurpassed BBC Miss Marple
adaptations,
The Mirror Crack'd
is an enjoyable Christie romp, good enough for a dull Sunday afternoon
but clearly not in the same league as the far superior Poirot
films.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Guy Hamilton film:
Evil Under the Sun (1982)
Film Synopsis
The peace of the quaint English village of St Mary's Mead is disturbed
by the arrival of a Hollywood film crew who are about to start work on
a production of Mary Queen of Scots. The star of the film is
Marina Rudd, a faded movie star who hopes, with the help of her
director husband Jason, to make a big comeback after the nervous
breakdown she suffered several years ago. During a reception at
the Rudds' manor house, Marina greets a swarm of well-wishers, one of
whom, Heather Badcock, professes to being a lifelong fan of hers.
Shortly after meeting her idol, Heather dies suddenly, apparently
killed by a poisoned cocktail given to her by Jason Rudd.
As he begins his investigation, Inspector Craddock from Scotland Yard
enlists the help of his aunt, Miss Maple, who has a reputation as an
amateur sleuth. It soon looks as though Heather's death may have
been an unfortunate accident. The intended victim appears to have
been Marina Rudd...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.