Assassinio sull'Orient Express

Titolo originale: Murder on the Orient Express
Regia: Sidney Lumet |
Anno: 1974
Origine: United Kingdom |
Generi: Dramma Thriller Mistero
Tag: based on novel or book | repayment | detective | passenger | investigation | orient express | snow | whodunit | train | murder mystery | 1930s |
Cast: Albert Finney | Lauren Bacall | Martin Balsam | Ingrid Bergman | Sean Connery | Anthony Perkins | Jean-Pierre Cassel | Wendy Hiller | Vanessa Redgrave | Jacqueline Bisset | John Gielgud | Richard Widmark | Michael York | Colin Blakely | Rachel Roberts | George Coulouris | Denis Quilley | Vernon Dobtcheff | Jeremy Lloyd | John Moffatt | Vic Tablian | Leon Lissek | Andrew Andreas | David de Keyser |

Il detective Hercule Poirot deve rientrare a Londra da Istanbul, dove si trova. Qui incontra il suo vecchio amico Bianchi, che lavora come dirigente della Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits e gli trova un posto sul vagone-letto di prima classe dell'Orient Express. Durante la seconda notte del viaggio il treno attraversa una regione dei Balcani sotto un'abbondante nevicata e la mattina seguente uno dei viaggiatori, il ricco uomo d'affari americano Samuel Edward Ratchett, viene trovato morto nel suo scompartimento, ancora chiuso dall'interno, ucciso da dodici colpi di pugnale. Il treno è bloccato dalla neve e Poirot, su richiesta di Bianchi, assume le indagini del caso, con la collaborazione del dott. Constantine, un medico che si trovava a bordo di un'altra carrozza del treno.

Approfondimenti

Colonel Arbuthnot praises the trial by jury system and how being judged by twelve people is the most [...] D
When Poirot is bantering with the British officer on the Istanbul ferry, he reports feeling no preju [...] D
In her 1991 autobiography, Vanessa Redgrave described her outrage when Sidney Lumet suggested to the [...] D
Although the producers agreed to all of the other suggestions from casting director Dyson Lovell, th [...] D
The final toast between the principals served two purposes: After two hours of role playing, it allo [...] D
Colin Blakey and Denis Quilley would appear in another Agatha Christie film adaptation, Evil Under t [...] D
The actual Orient Express trains were no longer in existence at the time of shooting. However, the r [...] D
After Poirot finds the white kimono in his luggage, and brings it into the car, where Bianchi, Docto [...] D
84-year-old Agatha Christie attended the movie premiere in November 1974. It was the only movie adap [...] D
Anthony Perkins and Martin Balsam had previously appeared together in Psyco (1960). D
In the murder sequence, Princess Dragomiroff (Wendy Hiller) can be seen dropping the mysterious "lad [...] D
Sound mixer Peter Handford pioneered the use of radio mikes in a feature film on this production. Th [...] D
A set of lyrics was composed for the main title theme but was never used. The first line went, "Silk [...] D
Lauren Bacall and Ingrid Bergman were famous for starring alongside Humphrey Bogart in many 1940s mo [...] D
The film takes place in December 1935. D
Agatha Christie stayed at Room 411 at the Pera Palace Hotel in Istanbul, Turkey, where she allegedly [...] D
A ticket in 1896 from Constantinople to Paris cost approximately $1,800.00 (inflation adjusted to 20 [...] D
In the final flashback scene, five of the thirteen conspirators (Mrs. Hubbard, Mary Debenham, Counte [...] D
After nearly forty years' work in English-language movies, Ingrid Bergman's Swedish accent was so sl [...] D
The Orient Express was the first long-distance train to operate in Europe with sleeping and dining c [...] D
Mrs. Hubbard mentions several times that she was married twice. Lauren Bacall was really married twi [...] D
The poem that the Princess' maid reads aloud is "Kennst Du das Land" by German poet Johann Wolfgang [...] D
The photo gallery on the German DVD by Kinowelt includes one photo hinting at a scene not used in th [...] D
After several disappointing movie adaptations, Agatha Christie initially refused to sell the movie r [...] D
There is a frequent mention of the place "Shimoga" in this movie. At the time that the novel was wri [...] D
During promotion and publicity junkets, many of the stars admitted, independently of one another, th [...] D
Sean Connery appeared in this movie with Albert Finney, who joined the James Bond film franchise whe [...] D
With so many suspects in the plot, and none of them expendable, director Sidney Lumet decided that t [...] D
Albert Finney's summation at the movie's climax runs eight pages. D
Upon accepting her Oscar for this movie, Ingrid Bergman apologized to fellow actress Valentina Corte [...] D
Lauren Bacall and Sir John Gielgud appeared in another Agatha Christie movie: Appuntamento con la mo [...] D
When she has finished giving her evidence, Poirot (Albert Finney) thanks Mrs. Hubbard (Lauren Bacall [...] D
In 1974, John Gielgud also worked with Ingrid Bergman when he directed her on-stage in "The Constant [...] D
Although the film opens with a wealth of onscreen text during the credits and subsequent montage of [...] D
The Pera Palace Hotel in Istanbul, Turkey was one of several hotels that the luxury train company, C [...] D
Ingrid Bergman played the title role in Il segreto della vecchia signora (1973), and Lauren Bacall p [...] D
Culture clash and multiple language barriers are an essential thread of the story's fabric; indeed, [...] D
In 1929, a westbound Orient Express train was stuck in snow for five days at Çerkezköy, appro [...] D
This movie boasts fifty-eight Oscar nominations and fourteen wins (not including two honorary wins) [...] D
When Paramount Pictures acquired the U.S. distribution rights, it was necessary to create new main a [...] D
In contrast to the novel, in which the passengers admit to Poirot's accusation, and then expand upon [...] D
In the novel, there was no way for Agatha Christie to specify which twelve hands delivered the fatal [...] D
The mention of a woman falling to her demise is eeriely prescient of the death of American Kiki Pres [...] D
Wendy Hiller, Vanessa Redgrave, and Colin Blakely appeared in A Man for All Seasons (1966). D
In bed, Beddoes (John Gielgud) reads the fictional novel "Love's Captive" by Mrs. Arabella Richardso [...] D
Mafioso Casetti/Ratchett masterminded the kidnapping of the Armstrong baby, but his henchman committ [...] D
Virtually all of Ingrid Bergman's Oscar-winning performance is contained in one scene: her interroga [...] D
While at first glance a traditional murder mystery, the resolution of this movie is one of few in th [...] D
Richard Rodney Bennett's Academy Award-nominated score is a tour de force, the centerpiece of which [...] D
Poirot's summation scene, from his laying out of the evidence on the table to his final line of dial [...] D
Albert Finney, who was then 37 years old, was the third choice for the much-older Poirot. The role w [...] D
Wendy Hiller was not first choice for the role of Princess Dragomiroff. Director Sidney Lumet initia [...] D
The saloon car in which the final scene takes place is modeled after the 1929 Côte d'Azur Pullman [...] D
Since Albert Finney required many hours of make-up procedures before shooting each day, and because [...] D
Vanessa Redgrave (Mary Debenham) later played Agatha Christie in Il segreto di Agatha Christie (1979 [...] D
Five of the primary cast members were starring in stage plays by night as this movie was being shot [...] D
The youngest of the twenty cast members was Jacqueline Bisset (Countess Andrenyi), who was 30 years [...] D
A steam engine and four cars, the Baggage, Restaurant, Sleeping, and Pullman, made up he film's Orie [...] D
Beddoes is bringing Ratchett his amber moon for breakfast when he finds him murdered. An Amber Moon [...] D
According to Sidney Lumet, Paramount Pictures decided to release this movie on a Sunday in only two [...] D
Of the seventeen cast members, four are American, one is French, and one is Swedish. The eleven othe [...] D
Ingrid Bergman, Anthony Perkins, and Jean-Pierre Cassel appeared in Le piace Brahms? (1961). D
Seven of the thirteen characters from the Calais Coach can be seen in the kidnapping sequence that o [...] D
There are two references to Alfred Hitchcock's La signora scompare (1938), in which Vanessa Redgrave [...] D
Academy Award winner Wendy Hiller was only 62 when she played the elderly Russian aristocrat, Prince [...] D
One of the earliest clues that something is not usual is when it is stated that the sleeping compart [...] D
The Cordon Bleu chef aboard the Orient Express, seen preparing elaborate gourmet meals for the wealt [...] D
The luxury food that is inspected and carried aboard the train early in the movie had been stolen fr [...] D
John Moffatt (Chief Attendant) provided the voice of Poirot in the BBC audio dramatization of "Murde [...] D
Throughout the 20th century, Compagnie International Wagon-Lit ran multiple routes that used "Orient [...] D
Although Anthony Perkins mentions Persia, in March, 1935 (some months before the film timeline), Rez [...] D
Albert Finney, Vanessa Redgrave, Ingrid Bergman and John Gieguld appeared for certain scenes only on [...] D
Colonel Arbuthnot uses the phrase "three-pipe yarn," a takeoff on a phrase used by another fictional [...] D
When Ratchett fails to answer the door on the morning after his murder, Pierre (Jean Pierre Cassel) [...] D
The "fourteen thousand dollars and twenty-seven cents" that Greta Ohlsson raises in America would be [...] D
There are two musical references to Shirley Temple movies: (1) in the restaurant where Bianchi (Mart [...] D
During the murder sequence, John Gielgud becomes so carried away in his knifing of Ratchett that he [...] D
As in Psyco (1960), Anthony Perkins plays a man who lost his mother at an early age, and who has dif [...] D
At the station in Istanbul, a cart full of oranges is deliberately upset by the driver operating a h [...] D
The first of four Agatha Christie movie and television productions featuring Sir John Gielgud. D
The Orient Express in the 1930s as now, with the exception of twenty-first century train suites, pas [...] D
This movie may hold the record for the largest number of major acting awards for its cast. Of the fi [...] D
In an interview, co-producer Richard Goodwin said that Vanessa Redgrave "would spend all of her lunc [...] D
Three cast members, Colin Blakely, Denis Quilley, and George Silver, appeared in other Agatha Christ [...] D
One of only two plots that Agatha Christie derived from a real-life event. The other was Assassinio [...] D
The sedative brought in by Sir John Gielgud is said to be Valerian. Valerian root is an old herbal r [...] D
Sir Sean Connery had appeared in another movie that featured the Orient Express: A 007, dalla Russia [...] D
In the opening moments, a local shepherd is seen. He wears a traditional woolen cloak that has been [...] D
Richard Rodney Bennett was originally hired to arrange 1930s tunes for the soundtrack, but persuaded [...] D
Richard Widmark and Lauren Bacall appeared together in The Cobweb. D
Vernon Dobtcheff (The Concierge) has appeared alongside two different Poirots: Albert Finney here, a [...] D
The final scene, in which Poirot relates his solution to the crime, had to be shot countless times, [...] D
The character of Bianchi, played by Martin Balsam, was originally conceived in the novel as a French [...] D
There are many re-pairings from several other movies: Martin Balsam and Anthony Perkins were in Psyc [...] D
During principal photography, shooting schedules were intricately plotted, as three actors and two a [...] D
When this story takes place, the Orient Express and CIWL, Compagnie Inernationale des Wagons-Lits (I [...] D
Included among the American Film Institute's 2005 list of 250 movies nominated for AFI's 100 Years o [...] D
Agatha Christie's story was inspired by the notorious kidnapping, and subsequent murder, of famous a [...] D
One clue to the mystery's solution is the fact that several of the passengers in the Calais Coach, n [...] D

Connessioni

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Domande

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Errori

After the conspirators stab Ratchett, Pierre "cleans up". He puts the blankets back over Ratchett's [...] D
The film takes place in 1935, but many of the extras (in the Turkish restaurant, at the railway stat [...] D
As Poirot indicates that he knows the owner of the handkerchief, he draws an H on the window behind [...] D
In the end credits, Wendy Hiller is credited as Wendy Miller. D
How does the train still have electricity for so long after stopping? All the lights are on, but the [...] D
When Poirot uses the hat box to decode the burnt paper, in one shot Poirot places his small burning [...] D
The train departs Istanbul with four cars: baggage car, restaurant car, sleeping car, and pullman ca [...] D
Poirot frequently makes reference to "the night of the murder", as if it took place some time ago. H [...] D
In Istanbul we hear a muezzin giving the standard Muslim azan (call to prayer) in Arabic: "Allahu Ak [...] D
The film takes place in 1935. Not only is the French locomotive incorrect, but it bears an SNCF numb [...] D
During the interrogation of Colonel Arbuthnot, the reflection of a boom mic can be seen in the glass [...] D
When the rescue locomotive arrives to push the snow away, (time frame 2:04:17) you can see the snow [...] D
After Mr Beddoes stabs Ratchett, the knife is seen to be clean and shiny. D
The film uses a French Railways (SNCF) Class 230G locomotive, including at the departure from Istanb [...] D
When showing the theoretical recreation of the murder, although Ratchett has been supposedly stabbed [...] D
When Poirot sees the woman in the kimono passing by, the woman leaves through a door. When she close [...] D
As Poirot goes to leave the car after announcing his solution to the murder, Pierre is shown opening [...] D
At the train station, the oriental women wearing kimonos are clearly made up as Japanese, but can be [...] D
When Poirot gives Ratchett the cigar lighter and they start to talk, Ratchett's left arm is resting [...] D
The musicians in the restaurant in Istanbul are wearing fezzes. The film is set in 1935, ten years a [...] D
Colin Blakely is credited as "Colin Blankey" in the opening credits. D
When the conductor's uniform is discovered in a suitcase, the hat changes positions between shots. D
Just after leaving Istanbul, the train is filmed running alongside a road (clearly filmed from some [...] D
Just after Poirot sips his liqueur (the green drink) in the dining car, a blurry white sedan can be [...] D
When Col. Arbuthnot is explaining his "relationship" with Miss Debenham, he refers to his wife as hi [...] D
The rescuing locomotive appears to be a Class 141R, a type of locomotive built in the USA, and not i [...] D
When Poirot and Bianchi are discussing the Armstrong case, Poirot describes Colonel Armstrong as a " [...] D
When Hardman introduces himself to Foscarelli and Beddoes, he tells them to "call me Dick", indicati [...] D
Whilst passengers are boarding the train, you can hear through the speakers in several different lan [...] D
Early in the film, when the Count and Countess walk past the window of the train car, the scenery ou [...] D
Some of the extras who play beggars at the train station look directly at the camera and smile and l [...] D
The British officer who escorts Poirot on the ferry thanks him for saving the honor of the British g [...] D
At the train station, we see Atatürk's (founder of independent and modern Turkey) poster on the w [...] D
When Hercule Poirot is interviewing Edward Beddoes about Signor Foscarelli, the valet puts his glass [...] D
Ingrid Bergman was nearly 60 when she made the film. Her character is a very devout spinster. Yet he [...] D

Frase

Colonel Arbuthnott: Does that answer your question [...] D
Hercule Poirot: In the Far East? Beddoes: Oh, no [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Ladies and gentlemen, we now come [...] D
Hercule Poirot: How long have you been interested [...] D
Bianchi: Forgive me, ladies and gentlemen. Greta [...] D
A.D.C.: Ah, here's your ticket, Monsieur Poirot. I [...] D
Hercule Poirot: [referring to a monogrammed handke [...] D
Hercule Poirot: The obvious implication is that th [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Did you leave your room? Greta Oh [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Cassetti was responsible for her m [...] D
Mrs. Hubbard: For my daughter... and my granddaugh [...] D
Hercule Poirot: The bottle is more distinguished t [...] D
A.D.C.: The crossing should be pleasant. The Bospo [...] D
Princess Dragomiroff: Now, you wish *me* to confes [...] D
Hercule Poirot: You never smile, madame la princes [...] D
Colonel Arbuthnott: Get your hands off Miss Debenh [...] D
Hercule Poirot: What is the princess's Christian n [...] D
Mrs. Hubbard: My second husband said always to ask [...] D
A.D.C.: I hope we did the right thing booking you [...] D
Bianchi: Oh, yes, I know. We are both envious of t [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Forgive a Freudian question - do y [...] D
Colonel Arbuthnott: May we go? Hercule Poirot: Yo [...] D
[the sound of a distant train whistle] Bianchi: I [...] D
Hercule Poirot: [Bianchi has a visibly nauseated r [...] D
Foscarelli: Vigliacco. [spits] Hildegarde: Schwe [...] D
Hercule Poirot: If all these people are not implic [...] D
Mrs. Hubbard: Well, my second husband, Mr. Hubbard [...] D
Bianchi: Ah, for the pen of a Balzac. For three da [...] D
Hercule Poirot: What is your profession? Ratchett [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Was that usual? Beddoes: Oh, quit [...] D
[last lines] Countess Andrenyi: [to Mrs. Hubbard] [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Only by interrogating the other pa [...] D
Colonel Arbuthnott: That's a bloody irregular ques [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Forgive me, Miss Debenham, I must [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Ladies and gentlemen, you are all [...] D
Countess Andrenyi: As is my custom on night trains [...] D
Colonel Arbuthnott: It's a USED peep cleaner! D
Colonel Arbuthnott: He was interested in the fut [...] D
Ratchett: Sit down, sir. Sit down. Hercule Poirot [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Ah! "Godmother"! Now you have acci [...] D
Mrs. Hubbard: [to Bianchi] Don't you agree the man [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Signor Bianchi, it is for you, as [...] D
Colonel Arbuthnott: Are you suggesting that I'm fo [...] D
[after the case has been concluded, Bianchi gives [...] D
Bianchi: You mean you saw the man? You can identif [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Mr. Ratchett, I have made enough m [...] D
Beddoes: Oh, yes, sir, the Italian person. Hercul [...] D
Pierre: The whistle means that help is near, madam [...] D
Dr. Constantine: The murderer is with us now! D
Colonel Arbuthnott: Can you give me your solemn oa [...] D
Hercule Poirot: There would be little point then i [...] D
[first lines] Ferry conductor: Your ticket, pleas [...] D
Bianchi: Why did you not ask her if she had been t [...] D
Mrs. Hubbard: So, now there's a man in my room! I [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Tout de même, I must thank the [...] D
Hercule Poirot: America's foremost tragic actress, [...] D
Colonel Arbuthnott: Miss Debenham is not a woman! [...] D
Foscarelli: Hey, what are you reading, Mister Bedd [...] D
Princess Dragomiroff: I have no need for the nurse [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Our last interrogation will be som [...] D
Mrs. Hubbard: What's the matter with him? Train-si [...] D
Mary Debenham: [observing Poirot after he sneezed] [...] D
Dr. Constantine: [referring to Pierre] He had the [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Bianchi, Doctor, has it occurred t [...] D
Greta Ohlsson: I vas - I international group for g [...] D
Hercule Poirot: Has it occurred to you that there [...] D
Greta Ohlsson: I was born backwards. That is why I [...] D
Ferry conductor: Welcome aboard, Colonel Arbyoo... [...] D
Dr. Constantine: [touches the back of Beddoes head [...] D
Hardman: Ratchett asked them for an American bodyg [...] D
Hercule Poirot: What became of the younger daughte [...] D
Hercule Poirot: We know the true identity of Mr. R [...] D
Hercule Poirot: This is not an inquisition, only a [...] D
Ratchett: [holding out a cigar] I wonder if you co [...] D
Mrs. Hubbard: If you need aspirin, I always carry [...] D

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