Murder on the Orient Express (2001 film)

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Murder on the Orient Express
Directed by Carl Schenkel
Produced by Marion Rosenberg
Written by Stephen Harrigan
Starring Alfred Molina
Meredith Baxter
Leslie Caron
Peter Strauss
Music by Christopher Franke
Cinematography Rex Maidment
Distributed by Ardustry Home Entertainment LLC
Release date(s) April 22, 2001
Running time 100 min.
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
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IMDb profile

Murder on the Orient Express is a 2001 made-for-television movie, based on the 1934 novel by Agatha Christie, featuring Hercule Poirot. This version is set in the present day and has a smaller cast than the novel or 1974 film had. The original music score was composed by Christopher Franke. The film's tagline is: "Agatha Christie's whodunit speeds into the twenty-first century."

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[edit] Plot summary

Hercule Poirot is travelling on the Orient Express. While on the journey, Poirot meets a very close friend Bouc, who works for the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits. The train is stopped when a landslide blocks the line on the second night out from Istanbul, and American millionaire Samuel Edward Ratchett is found stabbed to death the next morning.

Since no footprints are visible around the train and the doors to the other cars were locked, it seems that the murderer must still be among the passengers in Ratchett's car. Poirot and Bouc work together to solve the case. They are aided by Pierre Michel, the middle-aged French conductor of the car.

A key to the solution is Ratchett's revealed involvement in the Armstrong tragedy in America several years earlier, in which a baby was kidnapped and then murdered. (The fictitious Armstrong case was apparently inspired by the real-life kidnapping of Charles Lindbergh's baby son.)

[edit] Cast

[edit] Other versions

[edit] External links