Crooked House (film)
Crooked House | |
---|---|
Directed by | Gilles Paquet-Brenner |
Screenplay by | Julian Fellowes Tim Rose Price Gilles Paquet-Brenner |
Based on | Crooked House by Agatha Christie |
Produced by | Joseph Abrams Sally Wood James Spring |
Starring | Glenn Close Terence Stamp Max Irons Stefanie Martini Julian Sands Honor Kneafsey Christian McKay Amanda Abbington Gillian Anderson Christina Hendricks |
Cinematography | Sebastian Winterø |
Edited by | Peter Christelis |
Music by | Hugo de Chaire |
Production companies |
|
Distributed by | Sony Pictures Releasing |
Release date |
|
Running time | 115 minutes |
Countries | United Kingdom United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $10 million[1] |
Crooked House is a 2017 mystery film directed by Gilles Paquet-Brenner, based on Agatha Christie’s 1949 novel of the same name. The film stars Max Irons, Terence Stamp, Glenn Close, Gillian Anderson, and Stefanie Martini. Principal photography began in September 2016, and the film aired in the UK on Channel 5 on 17 December 2017.
Plot
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (February 2019) |
The granddaughter of late Greek-British business tycoon Aristide Leonides, Sophia Leonides, visits private investigator Charles Hayward in his office. Sophia wants Charles to investigate Aristide's death, for she believes he was murdered by a member of his sprawling and idiosyncratic family. Sophia notes that Aristide's regular insulin injection had been laced with eserine from his eye drops, causing a fatal heart attack. Sophia believes this was deliberate, not accidental. Charles reluctantly takes on the case, in part because he had a brief love affair with Sophia in Cairo. Charles seeks the consent of Chief Inspector Taverner of Scotland Yard to look into the case, utilising his personal connection with Taverner, who had served with Charles's father, a decorated former Assistant Commissioner who was murdered.
At the Leonides estate, Charles interviews the various members of the family, finding motives for each of them. All of them get substantial bequests from Aristide's estate. All of them knew about the eserine: Aristide talked about how it could be used to kill him. All of them resented the way he bullied and manipulated them.
Lady Edith de Haviland was the sister of Aristide's late first wife; she moved in to care for her motherless nephews. She despised her brother-in-law as a parvenu and for his callousness towards his grandchildren. Edith stalks around the grounds, blasting moles in the lawn with a shotgun.
Aristide's elder son, Philip, hated his father for passing him over as successor to the family business, and for refusing to fund production of a screenplay Philip wrote for his wife, Magda, a fading theatre actress.
Philip and Magda provided Aristide with three grandchildren: Sophia, Eustace (a teenager crippled by polio, who believes his grandfather despised him), and Josephine (a clever 12-year-old, who spies on everyone and writes it down in her notebook).
The younger son, Roger, is managing director of a major family business, but is a failure, requiring multiple bail-outs from Aristide. His domineering wife Clemency is a plant biologist with extensive knowledge of poisons.
Aristide's second wife, Brenda, is much younger, a former Las Vegas casino dancer. The others suspect her of killing Aristide, especially Roger, who denounces her as a gold-digging slut and certainly guilty. She did administer the fatal insulin injection. Also, she is having an affair with Laurence Brown, private tutor for the Leonides children. And when Aristide's will is produced, it is unsigned. Thus he died intestate, and Brenda will inherit his entire estate.
Charles's inquiries meet with hostility from most of the family. Josephine hints that she has found clues she does not disclose, to Charles's irritation. Events take a new, horrific turn when the ladder to Josephine's treehouse is sabotaged and she falls from the tree, being hospitalised as a result. Charles suspects that this was due to Josephine's habit of spying on the other family members and the killer thus wanting to silence her.
Charles' suspicions even extend to Sophia after a new, properly signed will is discovered, leaving the estate to her. Eustace even suggests that Sophia hired Charles to investigate the murder due to their personal history, knowing he would never accuse her due to their romantic past.
After those developments, Taverner arrives in person to take charge of the case; he feels Charles' romantic history with Sophia does not make him objective enough to solve it. The discovery of love letters between Brenda and Laurence gives Taverner enough evidence to arrest them for Aristide's murder and the attempt on Josephine.
Charles, however, remains unconvinced that Brenda and Laurence are guilty, noting Brenda's childlike intelligence and Laurence's pacifist, left-wing views as making them unlikely candidates for being a murderer. Sophia and Edith seem to agree. Sophia notes that the letters could have been forged, and Edith insists on "the best lawyer" to represent Brenda and Laurence. In the meantime, however, Charles returns to London. Edith visits a London doctor, and learns she is dying of cancer. Charles returns to the estate when Josephine's nanny is fatally poisoned by hot chocolate that she had prepared for herself and Josephine.
Charles implores Josephine to name the killer, as he has worked out that she knows. Again, Josephine smugly refuses to tell, even when Charles warns her that she is in danger. Edith collects Josephine, and drives out of the estate (supposedly for ice cream), lying to get past the police at the gate.
The coroner finds that the nanny died of cyanide poisoning, Charles suspects Edith, who used cyanide to kill moles. He searches Edith's garden shed, and finds a bottle of cyanide; also Josephine's missing notebook, buried in quicklime that would have destroyed it.
Just then, Sophia tells him that Edith has left with Josephine. Charles and Sophia take off in pursuit of Edith, who left a note for Charles to find in his car. Sophia reads Edith's note: it is a confession to the murder, but Charles doesn't believe it.
Sophia then starts reading from Josephine's notebook, and discovers the horrible truth: Josephine murdered Aristide. He had stopped her ballet lessons (with insulting comments), and she was bored. Josephine also staged her fall from the treehouse, poisoned the nanny, who had begun to suspect her, and forged Brenda's love letters. Lady Edith had worked out that Josephine was the killer. She confessed to exonerate Brenda and Laurence, and perhaps to spare Josephine a life in psychiatric institutions. But Edith isn't taking Josephine for ice cream. As Charles and Sophia catch up, she drives off the edge of a quarry, killing herself and Josephine. The film ends as Charles comforts a shocked Sophia at the edge of the cliff.
Cast
- Glenn Close as Lady Edith de Haviland
- Terence Stamp as Chief Inspector Taverner
- Max Irons as Charles Hayward
- Stefanie Martini as Sophia Leonides
- Julian Sands as Philip Leonides
- Honor Kneafsey as Josephine Leonides
- Christian McKay as Roger Leonides
- Amanda Abbington as Clemency Leonides
- Gillian Anderson as Magda Leonides
- Christina Hendricks as Brenda Leonides
- Preston Nyman as Eustace Leonides
- John Heffernan as Laurence Brown
- Jenny Galloway as Nanny
- Jacob Fortune-Lloyd as Brent
- David Kirkbride as Sergeant Glover
- Tina Gray as Miss Ackroyd
- Roger Ashton-Griffiths as Mr Gaitskill
- Andreas Karras as Iannois Agrodopolous
- Gino Picciano as Aristide Leonides
Production
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (December 2017) |
The mystery drama is based on Agatha Christie's novel of the same name. Principal photography began in September 2016.[2] Part of the filming was done at King's College London's Maughan Library. Other parts were filmed at Tyntesfield, near Bristol.[citation needed] Minley Manor near Fleet, Hampshire, was used as the location for the external shots of Crooked House. Hughenden Manor and West Wycombe House were used as interior filming locations.[citation needed] The look of the movie was created by Production Designer Simon Bowles.
Music
The film's original score is by Hugo de Chaire.[3]
Changes from source material
This section possibly contains original research. (February 2019) |
Whilst the film remains largely faithful to Christie's book, there were some changes, among them:
- Charles's father, Sir Arthur Hayward, is deceased. He is referred to as an Assistant Commissioner of Scotland Yard but was murdered. Chief Inspector Taverner assumes some of the qualities and the role played by Sir Arthur.
- Charles and Sophia are no longer in a relationship. Their love affair beginning in Cairo ended when Sophia refused to introduce Charles to her family and after she found out he was spying on her for the Foreign Office due to their interest in Leonides's business affairs. The ending of the film is open-ended as to whether they will reconcile.
- Nanny is poisoned by cyanide, not digitalis.
- Lady Edith addresses her confession note to Charles instead of Taverner.
- Lady Edith does not leave the second letter for Charles and Sophia outlining Josephine as the killer. Instead, Charles finds Josephine's notebook and that is used for Charles and Sophia as confirmation that Josephine is the killer.
- The ages of Philip and Roger are switched around. Philip becomes the eldest son, this forming part of his motive to kill Aristide as he had been passed over to run the family business for his younger brother, Roger.
- The story is set a decade later, in the late 1950s; one character refers to the execution of murderess Ruth Ellis in 1955.
- Charles Hayward's automobile, a Bristol 405, was not introduced until 1955.
- The conversation with the lawyer mentioned that the will was signed in 1957.
- Sophia takes Charles to a London nightclub, where Tommy Steele and the Steelmen are playing their 1956 hit, "Elevator Rock".
- The film adaptation portrays Brenda as a dancer, rather than a waitress and the book says nothing about her being American.
- In the book Josephine is knocked out with a heavy ornament; in the film she falls from her treehouse.
Reception
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 56%, based on 25 reviews, with an average rating of 5/10.[4] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 59 out of 100, based on 8 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews."[5]
References
- ^ "Crooked House". Cinando. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ Wiseman, Andreas (13 September 2016). "Agatha Christie thriller 'Crooked House' underway". Screen Daily. Screen International. Retrieved 26 September 2016.
- ^ de Chaire, Hugo (26 November 2016). "Composer on Feature Film 'Crooked House'". Hugo de Chaire. Archived from the original on 27 November 2016. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
- ^ "Crooked House (2017)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
- ^ "Crooked House Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
External links