Quote:
Originally Posted by FryeDwight
SOYLENT GREEN (1973). Time and Pop culture references have somewhat diluted this, but still not a bad watch. The "Going Home" scene with Heston and Edward G Robinson is very well acted and quite moving. Read MAKE ROOM! MAKE ROOM! by Harry Harrison. ***
|
Never seen it. Once I knew
the ending, it's been hard to bother seeing it. I saw
the demise scene of Robinson on youtube, very well done. I like film noir and sci-fi, so I'd probably like it. But that whole overcrowded NY thing is really a drag to see.
Murder on the Orient Express (1974)
7/10
Not really a horror film, but has a murder.
Various folks are traveling on
the Orient Express, traveling through Eastern Europe when there is a murder on
the train!
The train is delayed on
the tracks by a snow slide, and a famous detective Hercule Poirot (Albert Finney) is tasked to solve
the murder before
the unpleasantness of foreign police arrive.
I was expecting a lot of over-the-top goofy performances by
the all-star cast of Lauren Bacall, Ingrid Bergman, Sean Connery, John Gielgud, Vanessa Redgrave, Michael York, Jacqueline Bisset, Anthony Perkins and Wendy Hiller, but that was not
the case. There is a slight tongue-in-cheek nature to
the film, but
the characters play it straight, though they might be slightly caricature.
First there's a visual montage of a famous kidnapping murder, modeled after
the famous Lindbergh Kidnapping. Then there's a slow introduction of
the travelers,
the murder, and then most of
the film involves
the interviewing of everyone on
the train. Hints of how it relates to
the murder slowing evolves. This processes isn't entirely enjoyable nor riveting, though Lauren Bacall (Harriet Belinda Hubbard) provides some snarky lines.
One notable scene is a one-take one-shot interview of 59-year-old Ingrid Bergman, playing
the missionary Greta Ohlsson,
the character she insisted on playing. It is a captivating scene, within
the context of
the film, where we do notice it's length, a scene that won Bergman a Best Supporting Actress Oscar award.
All-in-all, I don't know that it's satisfying as a mystery, as
the exposition is a bit rigid, and almost impossible to anticipate (
the exposition, that is). There are no character interactions that precipitates
the murder. And so
the unfolding of
the cards are rather matter of fact and historical, leaving
the emotion more a matter of record.