And Then There Were None (1974 film)

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And Then There Were None
Directed by Peter Collinson
Produced by Harry Alan Towers
Written by Agatha Christie
Harry Alan Towers and Enrique Llovet (uncredited) screenplay
Starring Charles Aznavour
Stéphane Audran
Elke Sommer
Gert Fröbe
Music by Carlo Rustichelli
Cinematography Fernando Arribas
Editing by John Trumper
Gabrielle Reinecke
Mike Crowley
Release date(s) 1974
IMDb profile

And Then There Were None is a 1974 film version of the Agatha Christie mystery novel of the same name. It follows the script of the 1965 version, though this particular adaptation is set in an abandoned hotel in the Iranian desert; the film was shot in the Shah Abbas Hotel in Iran during its pre-revolution days. The film's run time is an hour and thirty-eight minutes and it is the first film version of the novel to be filmed in color.

This version is generally loathed by the fans of the book due its nearly incomprehensible changes to the plot, the characters and is notable for some truly bizarre miscasting,despite generally positive reaction to Charles Aznavour's performance. The film is considered one of the worst adaptations of Agatha Christie's works.[citation needed]


[edit] Credits

  • Director: Peter Collinson
  • Writers: Agatha Christie (novel), Harry Alan Towers and Enrique Llovet (uncredited) (screenplay).
  • Producers: Harry Alan Towers (producer) Harry Benn (associate), Tibor Reves (associate), Juan Estelrich (associate), Josè Maria Tapiador (designer), and Nicholas Wentworth (manager).
  • Musicians: Carlo Rustichelli (uncredited) and Bruno Nicolai
  • Cinematographer: Fernando Arribas
  • Editors: John Trumper, Gabrielle Reinecke, and Mike Crowley
  • Sound: Mike Le Mare (supervising sound editor), Peter Offer, Trevor Pyke (re-recorder), Ivan Sharrock (production mixer)

[edit] Cast

And Then There Were None was led by a stellar cast, including

Co-starring

[edit] External links

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